Weak Jobs Data, Moderate Growth

 | Sep 06, 2013 10:39AM ET

Private payrolls increased in August by 152,000 vs. the previous month, a gain that was unexpectedly low. Once again the latest macro data point dispensed a surprise, which is typical. This time it disappointed the crowd, and by more than a trivial degree. Some analysts will jump on the news as a dark sign. It may prove to be… in time. But the fact remains that private payrolls continued to rise by 2%-plus on a year-over-year-basis through last month. That’s in line with the annual pace we’ve seen in recent months. In fact, each of the last three monthly updates for private payrolls show annual growth rates of 2% or better—the best consecutive trio of annual changes since last year’s fourth quarter. In other words, nothing much has changed. The private sector is still creating jobs on a net basis and at the rate that’s prevailed for much of this year. If anything, the rate has improved a touch.

This news will probably be lost in the rush to focus on the latest number and how it compares with the previous month. That’s certainly a more dramatic comparison — it always is. Indeed, as the chart below reminds, the monthly changes bounce around a lot, which is rich material if you're looking for economic drama. But the monthly numbers have a long history of misleading us. Revisions and other short-term distortions are no help if you’re looking for comparatively reliable signals about the big picture.