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  • 2011-07-01 (xsd:date)
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  • Gov. Rick Scott claims Florida led country in job growth in May (en)
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  • With nearly a million Floridians struggling without jobs in the wake of the Great Recession, Gov. Rick Let's get to work! Scott has the right message. And May's job numbers gave him a new talking point. On June 23, 2011, as news media gathered at the state Capitol for his signing of a tort reform bill, he repeated it: In May we generated more jobs than all the rest of the country combined: 28,000 jobs in May for the state, 54,000 for the entire country. The unemployment rate in May dipped to 10.6 percent, a near two-year low after five straight months of improvement. Brag-worthy, right? But we were curious: Just how good was May for job creation in Florida? We checked with Scott's office and the federal Bureau of Labor Statistics, which tracks employment across the country. According to a standard measure of employment in April and May, Scott nailed the numbers -- Florida gained 28,000 jobs. (Ohio was second, gaining 12,000 jobs.) That standard look comes from a monthly survey of businesses to ask how many jobs they have. (It's different from the survey that informs the unemployment rate, which is a survey of households.) The business survey helps economists estimate a total number of jobs — in a county, in a metro area, in a state, in the nation. Those numbers can be sliced and diced any number of ways, but Scott picked a useful, mainstream measure: total nonfarm employment that had been seasonally adjusted. Farms are commonly excluded because that workforce swings so dramatically (you don't need many farm workers if there's no harvest this week). And it's helpful to look at estimates that have been seasonally adjusted because formulas make up for differences between months such as the number of weeks, holidays and seasonal employment patterns. Feeling pretty good about Scott's grasp of the situation, we chatted with a few economists. And that's where it got weird. It turns out that while seasonal adjustment is typically a useful tool to make meaningful comparisons over time — allowing you to compare jobs progress during, say, a long, holiday-heavy December with a short February — there are some pretty good reasons it wasn't so helpful in May. Seasonal adjustment formulas are constantly updated based on recent years, to take into account normal over-the-month change. David Denslow, a research economist at the University of Florida, pointed out that when you have enormous changes, as with the recent housing boom and bust (remember that?) and the Deepwater Horizon oil spill, seasonal adjustment becomes extraordinarily difficult. So, what did the unadjusted survey numbers show? According to estimates that weren't adjusted for the season, Florida didn't gain 28,000 new jobs from April to May — it actually lost 3,000 jobs. Across the country, the United States added 682,000 jobs when not adjusted for the season (compared to 54,000 jobs when adjusted). The differences here are critical to note. So we'll repeat ourselves. Depending on the two calculations: • Florida gained 28,000 new jobs ... or lost 3,000 jobs. • The country as a whole gained 54,000 new jobs ... or gained 682,000. A Bureau of Labor Statistics economist said the bureau attempted to minimize the affect recent events might have had on the seasonal adjustment calculation by putting more weight on earlier years than the more recent, irregular years. In essence the irregular years do still have some influence on the seasonal adjustment factors for this year, however, by putting more weight on its history, the influence will be diminished, said Jonathan Hamburg, an economist who works with state and local statistics. Still, Denslow said, the significantly different stories the two stats tell raise some real questions. We're so used to seasonally adjusted numbers as the gold standard for comparing one month to another, we ran Denslow's concern by another economist who regularly chats with PolitiFact, Gary Burtless with the centrist-to-liberal Brookings Institution. One resolution of the problem, he said, is simply to mention both sets of statistics to your readers and leave it for them to decide whether it is fair to say Florida 'generated more jobs than all the rest of the country combined' in a month when the best BLS estimate suggests the actual number of Florida jobs declined while the actual number of jobs in the nation as a whole increased . But he acknowledged we may all consider that a copout. So he pressed on to explain that with seasonal adjustment being the difference between job gains and losses, even a small error in the Bureau of Labor Statistics formula could make the governor’s claim wildly off base. It may be true, and perhaps revisions in the raw data or the seasonal adjustment factor may someday increase the probability that it is true, he said. But based on the evidence at hand, I would say the governor has made a very silly claim. Where does this leave us? Scott accurately repeated an official statistic. But there's also a strong argument that the wild economic ride of recent years has made it challenging to accurately account for seasonal changes. Two economists we talked to say this undermines the credibility of Scott's claim — though we should note two others didn't mention the issue. But in light of a common federal statistic that shows the state may have actually lost jobs in May, the governor should have been more measured in his public trumpeting. We rate his statement Half True. (en)
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