the DRIZZLE
Platinum Member
- Sep 6, 2007
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Drizzle, U3.
Reality is that somewhere between the U3 and U6 is probably reality. What has hte historical spread between U3 and U6 been?
UPDATE:
Took some time to track this one down. U6 seems to be about 80% higher than U3 historically. Not much deviation in this correlation. Looks like a rising tide/lowering tide correlation. Not sure how to think about this data. Right now I see it as knowable but not that important. if the tide lowers, one or the other will not all of a sudden drop without the other dropping. Maybe if one is way out of whack against historical norms, that one would correct first? Anyway, I stand by my U3 number. Sure the news can sensationalize this data. get people to be emotional about it. Yadda, yadda, yadda I just see it as data that so far has behaved exactly as it has historically.
Either way, an hour well spent looking into something I have not looked into before. BLS.GOV sucks for finding anything.
ASIDE:
Drove around alot this summer. It's amazing how much infrastructure work is being done in this country. Bridges in need of repair or replacement finally being replaced or fixed. Stimulus at work I guess. Gotta love socialistic safety nets. I can't imagine where we would be without those people working, but i can only imagine rationally that unemployment could be much worse.
MEDIA:
Why I ignore the media.... headlines like this:
Stocks: 'It's a war zone out there' - really?
Stocks get demolished
Sensationalized much?
Why not:
Stocks go on sale - Not once have I read that headline.
The answer of course is that if the media gets you emotional about something, you are more likely to read it.
IMO it's not the percent spread between U6 and U3 that matters, but the absolute spread. If hiring hypothetically picks up a lot more people will start looking for jobs and will start to be counted in the U3. The point is that you will have to add a lot more jobs than is indicated by the U3 number.
For example look at the math I did above that indicated we need about 5.5 million jobs to get to a 7.5% U3. If we assume that U6 would have to fall to 13% for U3 to fall to 7.5% we actually need 10 million jobs to get there. To do that we would need 416k jobs per month, not 232k. Do you think we will average 416k new jobs per month over the next two years?
edit: Before you answer, I should tell you that the most jobs the US has added in any single year since they started tracking in 1939 is 4.3 million. So all we need to do is have the best two years ever consecutively to get to a 7.5% U3.
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