This morning’s Job Opening and Labor Turnover Survey (JOLTS) for December (1 million+ more job openings than there are folks looking for work), once again tells us that, contrary to popular political opinion, the U.S. labor market is in no way hurting from the strategic movement of some production to the world’s lower-cost labor markets.
Frankly, I’m forever amazed at how folks will subscribe to, recite even, the talking points of their political party, without so much as a glimpse at the actual data.
Oh, and by the way, the lamenting over the mirage that the U.S. economy (and its labor market) has been a net loser due to trade and labor offshoring is a weapon both political parties (see quote at the bottom) love to wield with force. Despite its huge departure from long-term reality, it seems to really work!
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Highlights
Job openings continue to accelerate much faster than hiring, up 3.1 percent in December to a 7.335 The gap between openings and hires is now 1.428 million, a new record and up from 1.304 million Year-on-year comparisons further underscore the dislocation with openings up 29.4 percent vs only Given how difficult it is for employees to fill openings, the number of layoffs & discharges in the month Growth in new jobs has been outmatching growth in the labor market which is a classic formula for a
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