by Charles Hugh-Smith
It’s difficult to have a meaningful national debate about economic
policy when “headline numbers” are juiced to make things appear rosier
than reality.
Since unemployment statistics are either suspect or blatantly
bogus, we must look for other less manipulated statistics for some
modicum of truth. Key statistics of employment, income and
production are vital propaganda tools for the status quo, and the
temptation to adjust them to manage perceptions is apparently
irresistible.
Here in the U.S., unemployment statistics are a travesty of a mockery of a sham:
Real Unemployment Rate Rises To 11.4%, Difference Between Reported And Real Data Rises To Record (Zero Hedge)
Guggenheim On The US Jobs Growth “Mirage”
In China, output is routinely juiced to fantasy levels:
Chinese Province ‘Busted’ For Fake Data; Exaggerated 2013 Output By Over 150% (Zero Hedge)
To get some semi-accurate sense of China’s actual output, as opposed
to official propaganda, skeptics look to electricity consumption as an
imperfect but better-than-lies gauge of actual economic activity.
Here in the U.S., longtime correspondent B.C. suggests we look at
withholding taxes as a more accurate measure of employment than the
ginned-up official numbers.Withholding taxes are payroll taxes, and
as such they are a direct measure of payrolls and earned income.
(Self-employed people who don’t issue themselves monthly or weekly
paychecks pay their withholding taxes quarterly.)
In other words, withholding taxes (i.e. Social Security, Medicare and
estimated income taxes) are a very broad and accurate measure of the
earned income of both employees and self-employed.
Since many high-earning professionals such as attorneys and
accountants are self-employed, the earnings reported by the
self-employed are significant. The self-employed have some control over
when and how they report earnings, and many chose to report income in
late 2012 rather than in 2013 to avoid the tax increases that kicked in
on January 1, 2013.
This accounts for the spike in wages and withholding taxes in late 2012.
Here is a chart of wages/salaries and withholding receipts:
Wages/salaries have trended up since early, but growth has flattened recently. Withholding taxes are declining.
Here are employment and withholding receipts. Civilian
employment has increased by some 2.5 million jobs since January 2012,
but withholding receipts are actually lower than January 2012. This
strongly supports what many others have already observed: the
substitution of lower-wage part-time jobs for full-time employment. It’s
difficult to conjure up any other explanation for employment rising and
payroll taxes declining. Massive cuts in wages would have the same
consequence, but there is no evidence of widespread reductions in hourly
wages.
Here are employment and wages/salaries. We see the same basic dynamic here: the number of jobs continues increasing but wages/salaries are trending flat to down.
The con being played here is the assumption that more jobs means
more wages which means things are getting better and better in every
way, every day. If payroll withholding taxes are declining, and
wages/salaries are flatlined, things are not getting better and better
in terms of earned income flowing into household bank accounts, purses
and wallets.
About 20 million working-age adults have supposedly dropped out of
the U.S. labor force (and therefore become zombies who are not counted
in tallies of unemployment) since January 2001. This is roughly
comparable to the entire workforce of Italy (22.8 million) or South Korea (25 million).
If we drop another 15 million unemployed from the labor force, the
unemployment rate will fall to near-zero. “Unemployment rate drops to
1%” will make a warm and fuzzy headline, but it won’t mean there are
more jobs or higher earned incomes. An official account of the economy
based on 20+ million unemployed people not counted as unemployed is a
shameful lie.
Record 90.5 Million Out Of Labor Force As Half A Million Drop Out In One Month (Zero Hedge)
It’s difficult to have a meaningful national debate about economic
policy when perceptions and “headline numbers” are juiced to make things
appear rosier than reality.
My new book The Nearly Free University and The Emerging Economy (Kindle eBook)is available at a 20% discount ($7.95, list $9.95) this week. Read the Forword, first section and the Table of Contents.
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