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Thursday, August 22, 2013

Gallup Unemployment Rate Taking Off

Warren Mosler highlighted the ugly trend in the U.S. unemployment rate as measured by Gallup Inc.
gallup unemployment rate versus BLS unemployment

The Gallup data provided is the 30-day moving average of daily polling data. It is not seasonally adjusted, so I am comparing this to the non-seasonally adjusted official (Bureau of Labor Statistics) U-3 unemployment rate data. (Most people are more familiar with the seasonally adjusted version of this series, which is trending down in a straight line.)

I am still getting to grips with the R programming language, so I'm not really able to do too much statistical analysis on this right now. In any event, if you wanted to seasonally adjust the data, it would be fairly unreliable (the usual algorithms want 5-7 years history). The structural changes that have resulted from the implosion of the U.S. labour market make those adjustments even harder.

But this bears watching, as the magnitude of this divergence appears unusual for mid-year. (The seasonal spike in unemployment that occurs after Christmas appears with a lag in the Gallup data, possibly because it is a moving average.) Since the dropping unemployment rate is arguably the most plausible piece of evidence in favour of tightening monetary policy, a reversal of that trend would provide very considerable relief to the embattled bond market.

(c) Brian Romanchuk 2013

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