Immigration and job creation | 移民与就业岗位的创造 - FT中文网
登录×
电子邮件/用户名
密码
记住我
请输入邮箱和密码进行绑定操作:
请输入手机号码,通过短信验证(目前仅支持中国大陆地区的手机号):
请您阅读我们的用户注册协议隐私权保护政策,点击下方按钮即视为您接受。
FT英语电台

Immigration and job creation
移民与就业岗位的创造

The labour market is softer than it appears
劳动力市场比表面看起来更疲软。
00:00

Good morning. The stock market has decided (for now) that a 50bp cut was the right choice. The S&P 500 hit a record high yesterday. But these things take more than one day to shake out. Stay tuned as the news digests.

We’re taking a brief break on Monday. Rob is doing a triathlon this weekend, while Aiden frantically looks for housing. We’ll be back in your inbox on Tuesday. Wish us luck: robert.armstrong@ft.com and aiden.reiter@ft.com. 

Immigration and the US labour market

During the Fed’s post-cut press conference on Wednesday, when asked about the current level of job creation, chair Jay Powell said this:

undefined

Powell is broadly right — if the labour force grows because of high immigration, and there is not a commensurate increase in employment, unemployment goes up. But he’s being imprecise. Immigration is difficult to measure. Illegal immigration, by nature, is not well documented. The employer and household surveys used to gauge the labour force do not include immigration status. This all makes it difficult for the Fed, and everyone else, to quantify the impact of immigration on employment. 

Certainly, US immigration has been historically high recently. In 2019, the Congressional Budget Office estimated that there would be 1mn new migrants, on net, in 2023; in 2023, it revised that number to 3.3mn. The change was driven in large part by a surge in migrants without legal worker status, but also from an increase in asylum seekers and refugees who were given work permits while they await court hearings.

undefined

That surge has significantly increased the US labour force, as Powell suggested. But the new migrants are also working and being included in employment surveys. So immigration impacts both the numerator and the denominator in the unemployment rate equation. Some estimates suggest that higher unemployment among the migrant population is increasing the overall unemployment rate, but “those effects, given the size of the labour force, are modest — it is most likely only increasing the unemployment rate in the half-tenths”, said Wendy Edelberg of the Brookings Institution, formerly of the Fed and the CBO. 

Immigration makes it particularly hard to estimate the break-even level of job growth, the number of jobs the US economy needs to create each month to avoid a rise in unemployment. Before the pandemic, population projections from the CBO, the Bureau of Labor Statistics and the Social Security Administration had the break-even job growth at around 100,000. But with the surge in migration and the growth of the labour force, that number is closer to 230,000, according to estimates from Brookings.

That has several implications. In 2023, people were positing that the job market was overheating, with an average of 251,000 new jobs added per month. That worry was probably overhyped, given high immigration. But it also means that the current labour market, which added 89,000 jobs in August and 104,000 in July, may be much worse than it appears. The Fed may be alert to this, and it may help explain the decision to make a jumbo 50bps rate cut. 

The surge in migration was also one of the reasons why the Fed was able to bring inflation back to target. With more workers to throw at a heating- up economy, companies were able to keep meeting high demand. And they were able to do so without increasing competition for labour, which would have increased wage inflation. According to Claudia Sahm of New Century Advisors, the uptick in migration is a problem, but ultimately “a good problem to have”:

undefined

It also may be why we have seen an increase in unemployment in the absence of a recession. New migrants not only grow the labour force, but they also increase aggregate demand for goods and services. From David Doyle at the Macquarie Group:

undefined

Recent data from the US Customs and Border Protection suggests that the level of migration is starting to decline. But the fact remains that we are likely far below break-even job growth. If job creation does not increase in the coming months, the Fed may have to cut rates more aggressively than it currently projects, or tolerate a higher unemployment rate than it has in the past. 

(Reiter)

One good read

Paranoia.

版权声明:本文版权归FT中文网所有,未经允许任何单位或个人不得转载,复制或以任何其他方式使用本文全部或部分,侵权必究。

我们是否正处于核复兴的边缘?

为什么小型核电站会对可再生能源构成巨大威胁?

内塔尼亚胡与伊朗的战争:“对他来说,这是私人恩怨”

在哈马斯于10月7日发动袭击后,这位以色列总理的政治生涯似乎已经走到尽头。但如今,他正推动着一场自己多年来一直主张的冲突。

玛格丽特•米切尔:通用人工智能不过是“氛围和蛇油”

人工智能伦理领域的先驱之一解释了为何人类需求应成为科技发展的核心驱动力。

谁能在伊朗问题上影响特朗普?

从JD•万斯到“猩猩”,MAGA忠诚支持者和军方领导人正争夺在椭圆形办公室的影响力。

为什么华尔街害怕一个33岁的政治局外人

进步派候选人佐赫兰•马姆达尼搅动了纽约市长选举,城市精英们想要阻止他。

以色列空袭伊朗伊斯法罕核设施,特朗普权衡是否介入战争

美国总统认为欧洲领导的停火谈判无效。
设置字号×
最小
较小
默认
较大
最大
分享×