The Civilian Labor Force, Unemployment Claims and Recession Risk July 3

 | Jul 04, 2014 01:17AM ET

Note from dshort: I've updated this commentary to include the latest labor force data in today's employment report.

Every week I post an update on new unemployment claims shortly after the BLS report is made available. My focus is the four-week moving average of this rather volatile indicator. The financial press generally takes a fairly simplistic view of the latest number, and the market often reacts, for a few minutes or a few hours, to the initial estimate, which is always revised the following week.

One of my featured charts in the update shows the four-week moving average from the inception of this series in January 1967.


The chart, above, however, gives a rather distorted view of Initial Claims. Why? Because it's based on a raw, albeit seasonally adjusted, number that doesn't take into account the 103% growth in the Civilian Labor Force since January 1967, as illustrated here:

this illustration ).

For a better understanding of the weekly Initial Claims data, let's view the numbers as a percent ratio of the Civilian Labor Force.

The latest percent ratio of 0.20% means that out of 10,000 workers, twenty made an initial application for unemployment insurance payments in the latest data, fractionally off the interim low set last month. The number during the past year has been hovering just above the bottom of the 0.19% to 0.67% range over the last four-plus decades. Initial Claims are substantially below the levels during the business cycles of the stagflation years of the 1970s and early 1980s.

What about Continued Claims? Here is their percent ratio to the Civilian Labor Force.


Likewise with this indicator, we're at the low end of the historic range (1.24% to 4.85%). The latest reading, 1.71%, an interim low, means that approximately seventeen persons per 1,000 are receiving continuing unemployment insurance benefits.

Unemployment Claims as a Recession Indicator

A particularly interesting feature of this Unemployment Claims ratio series is its effectiveness in the past as a leading indicator for recession starts and a virtually dead-on coincident indicator for recession ends. In both of the percent ratio charts above, I've highlighted the value at the month a recession starts. In every instance the trough in claims preceded the recession start by a few to many months, but the claims peaks were nearly identical with recession ends. Here is a table showing the actual numbers.