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In July, No Slackening in U.S. or Canadian Jobs Recovery Pace

Alex Carrick
In July, No Slackening in U.S. or Canadian Jobs Recovery Pace

Two-Thirds of U.S. Jobs Gain from Two Sectors

July was an excellent month for jobs creation in the United States. According to the Bureau of Labor Statistics (), total employment in America last month rose by +943,000 positions.

In July, No Slackening in U.S. or Canadian Jobs Recovery Pace Text Graphic

Furthermore, the prior month’s gain has been revised considerably higher. June’s increase was originally reported as +850,000 jobs. It is now appearing in the Employment Situation Report as +938,000. That’s a bonus of +83,000 jobs.

Therefore, net jobs in June and July were each just a little shy of +950,000. The jobs recovery ratio (a.k.a., the ‘claw-back’ ratio), which refers to the proportion of February to April 2020’s huge drop in staffing (when the coronavirus flare-up first paralyzed economic activity), has improved to 75%, or three-quarters.

The seasonally adjusted (SA) unemployment rate has tightened to 5.4%. In the prior month, it was 5.9% and a year ago, 10.2%. The not seasonally adjusted (NSA) unemployment rate now sits at 5.7%, down from 6.1% in June and much better than the 10.5% recorded in July 2020.

Something important to note, though, is that the jobs jump in July wasn’t particularly widespread. It came mainly in just two sectors, ‘leisure and hospitality’ and ‘government’. Net employment in the former rose by +380,000, and in the latter, by +240,000. Their combined increase of +620,000 was about two-thirds of the +943,000 climb in total employment.

In ‘leisure and hospitality’, hotel and motel employers took on +74,000 new hires and bar and restaurant owners welcomed back +253,000 helpers.

The ‘government’ increase in employment was all at the local level and tied to recruitment in the educational field.

The construction sector participated sparingly in the latest month’s hiring spree. July’s number of onsite workers rose by only +11,000. Construction’s NSA unemployment rate is now 6.1% compared with 8.9% at the same time last year.

The manufacturing sector’s NSA unemployment rate has dropped to 4.2% versus 8.6% twelve months ago. Manufacturers added +27,000 workers to their payrolls in July.

As an interesting aside, the U rate in ‘leisure and hospitality’ now stands at 9.0%. It was a horrendous 25.0% in July 2020.

Graph 1: U.S.: Month-to-month Total Jobs Creation

The U.S. total jobs count in July 2021 was +5.2% year over year (i.e., versus a weakened level in July 2020). The latest month-to-month change was +0.6%.
Latest data point is for July, 2021.
Data sources: Payroll Survey, U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS).
Chart: ÌìÃÀÓ°Ôº.

Table 1: Monitoring the U.S. Employment Recovery – July 2021

The jobs recovery ratio (a.k.a., the ‘claw-back’ ratio), which refers to the proportion of February to April 2020’s huge drop in staffing (when the coronavirus flare-up first paralyzed economic activity), has improved to 75%, or three-quarters.
Data source: Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS).
Chart: ÌìÃÀÓ°Ôº.

Graph 2: U.S. Employment July 2021 – % Change Y/Y
Based on Seasonally Adjusted (SA) Data

The big drops in employment last year are now contributing to larger than normal percentage gains this year. The base or denominator in the y/y % change calculation will remain restrained for a while.
The latest data points are for July, 2021.
Data source: Payroll Survey, Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS).
Chart: ÌìÃÀÓ°Ôº.

Wages Warrant a Wary Eye on Inflation

If you’re someone who’s keeping a wary eye on inflation, know that the latest year-over-year increases in compensation have been more spirited than was the case pre-pandemic. For all jobs, July’s increase was +4.0% hourly and +4.6% weekly. Construction workers as a subset of ‘all jobs’ received +3.7% both hourly and weekly.

For ‘all jobs’ but leaving out bosses and concentrating only on production workers, the y/y paycheck gains in July were +4.7% hourly and +5.3% weekly. Those are hefty hikes. For construction workers, omitting supervisors, the advances were +4.4% hourly and +4.7% weekly.

Canada Switches to Full-time Job Gains

Canada’s total employment in July rose by +94,000 jobs and, in a radical departure from June’s pattern, almost all the increase (+83,000) was in full-time as opposed to part-time work.

Canada’s jobs claw-back ratio, versus Spring 2020’s loss, has reached a commendable 92%.

The SA unemployment rate in Canada moved down from 7.8% in June to 7.5% in July. In July 2020, it had been 10.9%.

Besides the ‘headline’ U rate, Statistics Canada publishes what it has labelled an R3 U rate. R3 is calculated using the same stricter methodology concerning who is really, truly looking for work as is adopted by the BLS. R3 NSA U in July was 6.2%, not much different from the 5.7% figure for the U.S.

Again, though, the construction sector was a bystander amidst the jobs creation fervor. In fact, the number of onsite jobs north of the border in the latest month contracted by -4,000.

Canadian manufacturing added +9,000 jobs in July, but it was ‘accommodation and food services’ with the biggest bulge, +35,000 jobs.

Provincially, Quebec, Manitoba and British Columbia stand out for having low unemployment rates presently: 6.1%, 6.1% and 6.6% respectively.

B.C. and Ontario have achieved the largest year-over-year percentage increases in employment, +7.9% and +7.1% respectively. The Canada-wide y/y jobs change has been +6.1%. (In the U.S., total employment is +5.2% y/y.)

Graph 3: Canada: Month-to-month Total Employment Change

Cdn total employment in July 2021 was +6.1% y/y and +0.5% y/y. The big y/y change was due to a low 'base' effect. July 2020's COVID-impacted figure (i.e., the denominator in the % change calculation) was deeply depressed.
Latest data point is for July, 2021.
Data sources: Household Survey, Statistics Canada.
Chart: ÌìÃÀÓ°Ôº.

Table 2: Monitoring the Canadian Employment Recovery ‒ July 2021

Canada's recovery ratio, versus the scary plunge from February to April of last year, has improved to 91.8%.
Data source: Statistics Canada.
Table: ÌìÃÀÓ°Ôº.

Table 3: Canada’s Provincial Labour Markets – July 2021

Ontario is currently accounting for the largest portion (45.2%) of the national year-over-year jobs increase. In second spot is Quebec (18.4%), but it's only barely ahead of B.C. (18.0%). Alberta is in fourth (11.1%). By way of comparison, the shares of Canada's total population are: Ontario, 38.8%; Quebec, 22.5%; B.C. 13.5%; Alberta, 11.7%. ... Ontario and B.C. are 'punching above their weight' in jobs creation.
Data Source (seasonally adjusted figures): Statistics Canada.
Table: ÌìÃÀÓ°Ôº.

Graph 4: Canada’s Provincial Labour Markets – July 2021

In July 2021, British Columbia was the only province to record an unemployment rate (6.6%) lower than the total Canada figure (7.5%) and a year-over-year jobs increase (+7.9%) greater than the country-wide performance (+6.1%).
Data Source: Statistics Canada.
Chart: ÌìÃÀÓ°Ôº.

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Alex Carrick is Chief Economist for ÌìÃÀÓ°Ôº. He has delivered presentations throughout North America on the U.S., Canadian and world construction outlooks. Mr. Carrick has been with the company since 1985. Links to his numerous articles are featured on Twitter , which has 50,000 followers.

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