The One Job Metric You Need To Watch

International Business Times

Published Aug 01, 2014 01:05PM ET

The One Job Metric You Need To Watch

By Greg Morcroft - Tucked in among all the data in the latest jobs report released Friday is one troubling metric that throws cold water on what looks like sustainable job growth. That statistic is called, in economics, the employment to population ratio, and it quantifies the proportion of the 15-to-64-year-old working-age population that is employed.

Economists eye the employment-to-population ratio to gauge the nation's ability to maintain job growth and further quantify the strength of the recovery. Because the financial crisis and the recession so dramatically affected the labor market, economists have been watching the metric closely to discern any tipping points in hiring.

And in the latest report, there's still plenty of reason for concern. The data seem to suggest that while the U.S. is finally creating a pattern of 200,000-plus new jobs per month, a growing labor force is still at the mercy of corporations queasy about adding jobs.

According to Friday's report, "The participation rate has been essentially unchanged since April. The employment-population ratio, at 59.0 percent, was unchanged over the month but has edged up by 0.3 percentage point over the past 12 months."  

However, broken down by demographic sectors including race, gender and age, the results show a wide range of labor market conditions.