Last week’s July jobs report led some economists and investors to worry that recession is on its way.
The numbers included an increase of 114,000 in non-farm payrolls during July, down from 179,000 in June and far below analysts’ forecast of a 175,000 gain. And the unemployment rate rose to 4.3%, the highest level since October 2021.
Afterward, J.P. Morgan economists raised their odds for an economic contraction by year-end to 35%, from 25% previously.
July’s jobless rate triggered the Sahm rule for recession (created by former Fed economist Claudia Sahm).
The rule states that the economy is in the early stages of recession when the three-month average unemployment rate rises by 0.5 percentage points above the 12-month low for the three-month average. That’s what happened in July.
Sahm herself, now chief economist at New Century Advisors, doesn’t see a recession as having begun.
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The increased labor pool since the pandemic, stemming largely from a surge in immigration, has led official numbers to overstate the job market’s weakness, she told The Wall Street Journal.
To be sure, Sahm is concerned about the increase in the unemployment rate and the slowdown in job growth. “The risk of a recession is elevated,” she wrote on Bloomberg.
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