BONUS First Monday: How Did the BLS Get the Jobs Report So Wrong?

BONUS First Monday: How Did the BLS Get the Jobs Report So Wrong?

Special bonus episode. The Bureau of Labor Statistics issues massive job revisions on Friday morning. The revisions wipe out nearly 90% of previously reported gains for May and June. This raises fundamental questions about how our most trusted economic data gets calculated. In this episode, we break down how the system works. We examine why the revisions are so large. We explore what this means for understanding the real economy. Friday arrives. The BLS delivers what appears routine: 73,000 new positions added in July. But the revisions tell a different story. May's initially reported 144,000 job gains become 19,000. June's seemingly solid 147,000 drops to just 14,000. These represent 87-90% overestimates. They fundamentally alter the economic picture for those months. The BLS surveys 560,000 businesses each month. They use payroll data from the 12th of the month. But only 60-73% of those businesses respond by the initial release deadline. The remaining portion gets filled through statistical modeling. The models rely on historical patterns. This approach typically produces revisions in the 20,000-50,000 range. But throughout 2025, average monthly revisions reach 66,000. That's triple the normal size. The statistical models aren't capturing current economic conditions effectively. The problem becomes clear when economic conditions shift rapidly. Historical patterns become unreliable guides. The 2024 annual revision was the largest since 2009. What happened in 2009? The Great Recession. Another period when traditional forecasting tools struggled with rapid change. ADP is a private payroll processor. They serve 460,000 companies. They provide useful comparison data. For May, their 37,000 private-sector job estimate aligns reasonably well with BLS's revised 19,000 total. For June, ADP reports a 33,000 job loss. BLS shows a 14,000 gain. ADP's independent data helps validate the revised numbers while highlighting the magnitude of the initial errors. These numbers drive real decisions. Federal Reserve officials use employment data for interest rate policy. Investors allocate capital based on these reports. Workers make career decisions based on perceived labor market strength. When the initial data misses by 90%, everyone operates with fundamentally flawed information. The revisions expose how fragile our economic measurement systems become when conditions change faster than models can adapt. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices

Det här avsnittet är hämtat från ett öppet RSS-flöde och publiceras inte av Podme. Det kan innehålla reklam.

Avsnitt(779)

The Hidden Math Behind Every Venture Capital Fund, with former Wharton Prof. David Bell

The Hidden Math Behind Every Venture Capital Fund, with former Wharton Prof. David Bell

#733: Venture fund managers can collect years of fees before a single dollar comes back to investors — and the bar to hand over your money is lower than you'd think. David Bell spent 20 years as a ch...

17 Juli 1h 1min

Your Zip Code Is Quietly Deciding What You Buy, with former Wharton Prof. David Bell

Your Zip Code Is Quietly Deciding What You Buy, with former Wharton Prof. David Bell

#732: Where you live is already deciding what you'll buy today, before you've even made up your mind. And it turns out the customers your local stores ignore completely are often a brand's most valuab...

14 Juli 1h 2min

Is AI Making You Dumber? With Lorraine Marchand

Is AI Making You Dumber? With Lorraine Marchand

#731: What if the best way to test a new hire wasn't a resume, but a two-hour breakfast? One CEO built his entire hiring process around it — and it worked. Lorraine Marchand spent three decades in le...

10 Juli 1h 16min

Q&A: We Have $1.5 Million. Can We Stop Now?

Q&A: We Have $1.5 Million. Can We Stop Now?

#730: What does it actually mean to have "enough" — and how do you know when it's time to stop optimizing and start living? AVOIDING THE REAL ESTATE MISTAKES IN THIS FREE GUIDE COULD SAVE YOU $10,000...

7 Juli 1h 3min

First Friday: Jobs Are Cooling, Prices Are Climbing, and NYC is Freezing the Rent

First Friday: Jobs Are Cooling, Prices Are Climbing, and NYC is Freezing the Rent

#729: The U.S. added 57,000 jobs in June. Economists expected 115,000. Meanwhile, inflation hit a three-year high. The Personal Consumption Expenditures index - the Fed's favorite inflation gauge -...

3 Juli 1h 5min

Q&A: What $2.4 Million at 37 Actually Looks Like (It's Not What You Think)

Q&A: What $2.4 Million at 37 Actually Looks Like (It's Not What You Think)

#728: What do you do when you suddenly have $850,000 and no idea what to do with it? GET TOTAL CLARITY ON WHERE EVERY DOLLAR BELONGS 👉 https://affordanything.com/cornerstone On today’s Q&A, one...

30 Juni 1h

Hope Isn't a Feeling. It’s a Skill. - with Dr. Julia Garcia

Hope Isn't a Feeling. It’s a Skill. - with Dr. Julia Garcia

#727: Not sure what your next money move should be? Start with the free FiiRE Playbook 👉 https://affordanything.com/fiire Dr. Julia Garcia is a psychologist, behavioral researcher, and author of...

27 Juni 1h 20min

Q&A: She Has $884K Saved — So Why Can't She Retire?

Q&A: She Has $884K Saved — So Why Can't She Retire?

#726: Hey, we're mixing it up today with a super deep dive. We normally go fairly deep on this show, but today we're going even deeper and turning one caller's question into a case study. Download ...

23 Juni 1h 19min

Populärt inom Business & ekonomi

badfluence
framgangspodden
varvet
dynastin
uppgang-och-fall
rss-borsens-finest
avanzapodden
svd-tech-brief
rss-inga-dumma-fragor-om-pengar
bathina-en-podcast
fill-or-kill
tabberaset
rikatillsammans-om-privatekonomi-rikedom-i-livet
borslunch-2
rss-veckans-trade
rss-dagen-med-di
rss-hos-psykologen
rss-borslunch
rss-dominoeffekten
rss-dr-bjorklund