In: Economics
Unemployment, employment and the labor force participation rate have been in the news lately. Analyze these three statistics since 2000. What are the trends? Explain. What does each statistic tell you that the other statistics do not tell you? Unemployment has multiple measures – which one is best and why? Make sure you use at least one graph in your answer. Answer with explanation and detail.
Answer :-
From April to July 2017, the number of employed youth 16 to 24
years old increased
by 1.9 million to 20.9 million, the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics
reported today.
This year, 54.8 percent of young people were employed in July, up
by 1.6 percentage
points from a year earlier. (The month of July typically is the
summertime peak in
youth employment.) The unemployment rate for youth was 9.6 percent
in July, down by
1.9 percentage points from July 2016. (Because this analysis
focuses on the seasonal
changes in youth employment and unemployment that occur each spring
and summer, the
data are not seasonally adjusted.)
Labor Force
The youth labor force--16- to 24-year-olds working or actively
looking for work--grows
sharply between April and July each year. During these months,
large numbers of high
school and college students search for or take summer jobs, and
many graduates enter
the labor market to look for or begin permanent employment. This
summer, the youth
labor force grew by 2.4 million, or 11.6 percent, to a total of
23.1 million in July.
The labor force participation rate for all youth was 60.6 percent
in July, little
different from a year earlier. (The labor force participation rate
is the proportion
of the civilian noninstitutional population that is working or
looking and available
for work.) The summer labor force participation rate of youth has
held
fairly steady since July 2010, after trending downward for the
prior two decades. The
summer youth labor force participation rate peaked at 77.5 percent
in July 1989.
The July 2017 labor force participation rate for 16- to 24-year-old
men, at 62.3
percent, continued to be higher than the rate for young women, at
58.8 percent. The
rate for young women edged up from last July, while the rate for
young men was
essentially unchanged. Whites had the highest youth labor force
participation rate in
July 2017 at 62.1 percent. The rate was 55.9 percent for Blacks,
47.4 percent for
Asians, and 56.6 percent for Hispanics. The rate for Asians
increased by 4.3 percentage
points from last July, while the rates for Whites, Blacks, and
Hispanics showed little
change.
Employment
In July 2017, there were 20.9 million employed 16- to 24-year-olds,
slightly higher
than the summer before. Between April and July 2017, the number of
employed youth rose
by 1.9 million, in line with the change between April and July
2016. The employment-
population ratio for youth--the proportion of the 16- to
24-year-old civilian
noninstitutional population with a job--was 54.8 percent in July
2017, an increase of
1.6 percentage points from the prior year.
The July 2017 employment-population ratios for young women (53.4
percent), Blacks
(46.9 percent), and Asians (42.7 percent) increased over the year.
The ratio for young
men edged up to 56.1 percent. The ratios for young Whites (57.2
percent) and Hispanics
(50.9 percent) were little different from the summer before.
In July 2017, the largest percentage of employed youth worked in
the leisure and
hospitality industry (26 percent), which includes food services. An
additional 19
percent of employed youth worked in the retail trade industry, and
12 percent worked
in education and health services.
Unemployment
Unemployment among youth rose by 458,000 from April to July 2017,
compared with an
increase of 611,000 for the same period in 2016.
In July 2017, the youth unemployment rate, at 9.6 percent, was 1.9
percentage points
lower than last July. This represents the lowest summer youth
unemployment rate since
July 2000. The number of unemployed youth, at 2.2 million in July
2017, declined by
431,000 from a year earlier. Of the 2.2 million unemployed 16- to
24-year-olds, 1.6
million were looking for full-time work in July 2017, down 305,000
from July 2016.
In July 2017, the unemployment rates for both young men (10.1
percent) and women
(9.1 percent) were lower than the summer before. The July 2017
rates for young Whites
(8.0 percent) and Blacks (16.2 percent) declined over the year,
while the rates for
young Asians (9.9 percent) and Hispanics (10.1 percent) showed
little change.
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The most commonly cited measure, known as "U-3," tracks the
percentage of people who are actively seeking work. To be
considered unemployed according to the U-3 definition, an
individual must have looked for a job within the last four
weeks.
However, U-3 and U-6 are by far the most useful and the most cited
measures.
U-3 -- Total unemployed, as a percent of the civilian labor force
(official unemployment rate).
U-6 -- Total unemployed, plus all persons marginally attached to
the labor force, plus total employed part time for economic
reasons, as a percent of the civilian labor force, plus all persons
marginally attached to the labor force.