Job openings keep swelling, to a record 7.136 million in August which
easily exceeds Econoday's consensus range. The rise underway is
underscored by an upward revision to July which is now well up at 7.077
million vs an initial 6.939. Also underscoring the surge is the
comparison with last August which was at 6.044 million for an 18.1
percent gain.
The comparison that's most critical here is the
number of unemployed actively looking for work, a number that is also
compiled by the Labor Department and which stood at 6.234 million in
August before moving sharply lower in the September employment report to
5.964 million. This gap between job openings and job seekers, which
first opened up earlier this year, is hard evidence that labor is
scarce.
Other readings in today's JOLTS report for August include
a modest gain in the number of hires, to 5.784 million vs July's 5.713
which also is far below the number of openings. The number of quits are
closely tracked in this report as an early indication of wage inflation.
But there's no indication that workers are being pulled to higher
paying jobs as quits slipped in the month to 3.577 million from July's
3.608 million.
Jerome Powell concedes that it's a mystery why
wages haven't been going up very much as demand for labor grows and the
supply of labor declines. Yet sooner or later, the law of supply and
demand is bound to assert itself, at least this is the risk that the Fed
is guarding against in its rate-hike regime.
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