A Nerd's Eye View

Job Growth Not What it Used to Be



Last month I noted that despite local data points and expert opinions pointing to a slowdown in the retail industry, the California Employment Development Department reported that retail industry employment was growing at a fairly healthy pace. To explain this disparity, I offered the hypothesis that the "birth-death model," a statistical adjustment applied by the EDD in order to model the number of new businesses coming into existence, was overestimating the number of jobs being created by new businesses. (The prior article goes into vastly more detail, for those interested).

Today, the EDD released the January job data as well as revisions to the 2007 numbers. The revised numbers indicate that job growth in the retail sector -- and overall, for that matter -- was indeed quite a bit lower than the EDD had previously estimated.

You may recall the following chart from the earlier article. It denotes year-over-year retail job growth for each month in 2007 and is reproduced here exactly as it was, the only change being the subtle bright-red letters stating that the chart uses the initial 2007 job numbers provided by the EDD:



Now have a look at the exact same chart using the revised 2007 numbers that came out today:

There are some pretty big differences here. First, it appears that the EDD was underestimating actual retail job growth earlier in 2007. The revised numbers are higher than those initially reported. Near the end of the year, however, the EDD apparently began overestimating retail employment by greater and greater amounts. By December, the initial data showed an annual increase of 2,600 retail jobs whereas the revised December data now shows that the retail industry had lost 1,800 jobs for the year.

Here are two more charts, these indicating year-over-year changes in total nonfarm employment for San Diego:



Here, the initial data overestimated employment growth in the second half of the year by quite a margin. By December, the initial data had shown an annual growth of 14,600 jobs. The new data shows that San Diego added just 300 jobs for the year.

Those are some serious revisions, and job growth has clearly not been anywhere near as strong in recent months as had been previously reported.

January 2008 was looking better, though not by a whole lot. From January 2007 to January 2008, growth outside the housing boom beneficiary sectors was pretty decent at 17,300 jobs or 1.8 percent. But the ghost of the housing bubble still haunts the job market, as the construction industry was down by 6,400 jobs or 7.4 percent, the retail industry by 1,600 jobs or 1.1 percent, and the financial industry (including real estate) by 4,400 jobs or 5.4 percent. In total, San Diego employment was up year-over-year by 4,900 jobs or .4 percent.



These January numbers, it should be clear by now, are estimates.

-- RICH TOSCANO



A Nerd's Eye View

Rich Toscano is a financial advisor with Pacific Capital Associates*;
he also writes about San Diego real estate at Piggington's Econo-Almanac. Contact him at rtoscano@pcasd.com.

More on the Salmon:

 

Context on why the fish species has declined, and why your faucet may be responsible.

Tuesday, March 25 -- 2:04 pm

Santee School Chief Honored:

 

Lisbeth Johnson named state's 'Administrator of the Year.'

Tuesday, March 25 -- 1:49 pm

City's Recycled Sewage Explainer:

 

Why the city has resisted the idea, as told to PBS.

Tuesday, March 25 -- 1:39 pm


Sponsored By

MOST POPULAR STORIES:

SURVIVAL IN SAN DIEGO

Home Prices Down 21 Percent from Peak :

 

Prices for lowest tier in the county fell nearly 29 percent from the peak, according to Case-Shiller.

Tuesday, March 25 -- 3:15 pm

LETTERS TO THE EDITOR

Closer Than He Appears:

 

Paul Broadway isn't taking donations in his race for District 3 and his message is appealing.

Monday, March 24 -- 1:16 pm

CAFÉ SAN DIEGO

Get Involved!:

 

If you are interested in energy and climate change, there are some very significant events happening in the next few weeks.

Thursday, March 20 -- 4:51 pm

COMMENTARY: SLOP

Opera vs. Firefighters :

 

The candidates express their support, or conditioned support, or nonsupport for arts subsidies.

Monday, March 24 -- 1:22 pm

COMMENTARY: RICH TOSCANO

Case-Shiller Declines Again in January :

 

The drop in this home price indicator wasn't as bad as in the prior month -- but it was still bad.

Tuesday, March 25 -- 4:46 pm

Sponsored by

SEDC Responds to Mayor's Inquiry:

 

Memo details bonuses and additional compensation of all employees.

Friday, July 18, 2008 -- 6:37 pm

Board Member Blasts Smith:

 

'The culture of SEDC over the years has been to manipulate, cajole, ignore and intimidate the board into utter and complete silence.'

Friday, July 18, 2008 -- 5:32 pm

Smith Not Resigning:

 

SEDC president resists the call for her to step down.

Friday, July 18, 2008 -- 5:08 pm

Sponsored By

SURVIVAL IN SAN DIEGO

Another Jump for Unemployment Rate:

 

County jobless rate nears 6 percent.

Friday, July 18, 2008 -- 12:29 pm

LETTERS TO THE EDITOR

Penchant for Secrecy:

 

San Diego Unified School District legal counsel Jose Gonzales must have been in a hurry to start his vacation.

Friday, July 18, 2008 -- 3:27 pm

CAFÉ SAN DIEGO

No Problem with Defined Benefit:

 

The risks inherent and unavoidable with these plans are manageable.

Friday, July 18, 2008 -- 12:46 pm

COMMENTARY: SLOP

Resign? Yeah, Right:

 

Why resign when you can get paid $200,000-$300,000 for being fired?

Friday, July 18, 2008 -- 11:20 pm

COMMENTARY: RICH TOSCANO

Employment Goes More Negative:

 

Housing weakness spilled over into the rest of the economy in June.

Friday, July 18, 2008 -- 4:31 pm

MOST POPULAR STORIES:

Sponsored by


Home About Us Contact Us Copyright Privacy Policy Site Sponsorship
Copyright © 2008 voiceofsandiego.org. All Rights Reserved. Terms of Use Privacy Statement