Home
/
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
/
Explainer: What You Should Know About the Jobs Report
Explainer: What You Should Know About the Jobs Report
Jul 15, 2025 3:49 PM

This morning the federal government released the latest jobs report. You may have noticed confusing headlines andreporting about the data, such as this story from NPR, “Job Growth Less Than Expected, But Unemployment Hits 5-Year Low.” What does that mean? Is that bad news mixed with good news?How should we interpret the jobs report?

Here’s what you need to know to understand what the job report is, what it tells us, and what it means for the economy:

What is the “jobs report”?

The “Jobs Report” is the term often used to refer to the Employment Situation Summary,a monthly report issued by the Bureau of Labor Statistics that is based onsurveys used to monitor the labor market. This report is released on the first Friday of every month.

Why is the jobs report considered so important?

The jobs report consists of several important economic indicators (statistics about an economic activity) that help employers, investors, and policymakers predict where the economy is heading. For instance, if the jobs report shows the economy is adding more jobs it’s a sign that the economy may soon be growing since more people have es and money to spend.

What’s in the Jobs Report?

The Employment Situation Summary consists of four main numbers:

Unemployment rate— The number of unemployed workers expressed as a percentage of the labor force (e.g., how many people have jobs).

Non-farm payroll employment – This numbers represents the total number of paid U.S. workers of any business, excluding the following employees: general government employees, private household employees, employees of nonprofit organizations that provide assistance to individuals, farm employees. The total nonfarm payroll accounts for approximately 80% of the workers who produce the entire gross domestic product of the United States.

Average workweek – The average number of hours per week worked in the non-farm sector. Are people are working less or more (i.e., will they have less or more money to spend)?

Average hourly earnings – The average basic hourly rate for major industries. Are average wages increasing or decreasing?

What’s the main number I should be paying attention to?

For most people, the most significant statistic in the report is whether the nonfarm payroll employment rose or fell and by how much. The economy needs to add about 180,000 new jobs just to keep up with population growth. If the number is higher than that, then employment is probably on track; if the number is lower, then the economy is probably in trouble.

Wait, why isn’t the unemployment rate the most important number?

Taken alone, the unemployment rate can be a misleading statistic. According to the Bureau of Labor Statistics, persons are classified as unemployed if they do not have a job, have actively looked for work in the prior 4 weeks, and are currently available for work. Persons who were not working and were waiting to be recalled to a job from which they had been temporarily laid off are also included as unemployed. (Receiving benefits from the Unemployment Insurance program has no bearing on whether a person is classified as unemployed.)

By this definition, the unemployment rate does not count marginally attached workers, persons not in the labor force who want and are available for work, and who have looked for a job sometime in the prior 12 months, but were not counted as unemployed because they had not searched for work in the 4 weeks preceding the survey. The unemployment rate can drop if people are discouraged from looking for a job and have not looked for employment in the last month.

According to the latest report, there are 2.6 million persons who are marginally attached to the labor force. Out of that number, 837,000 are classified as discouraged workers.

Okay, walk me through an example.

The main paragraph of the January 2014 jobs report states:

Total nonfarm payroll employment rose by 113,000 in January, and the unemployment rate was little changed at 6.6 percent, the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics reported today. Employment grew in construction, manufacturing, wholesale trade, and mining.

The 113,000 represents the number of new jobs added last month. Since, that figure falls well below the number needed for population growth (180,000 – 113,000 = 67,000), we can deduce that about 67,000 people were added to the labor market who want a job but are unable to find one.

Consumer spending accounts for between 60-70 percent of all final goods and services produced within our country in a year (i.e., Gross Domestic Product (GDP)). Most Americans need an e (and a job) in order to spend money, so the fewer people that have money to spend the slower the economy will grow. The result is that the average material well-being of Americans will remain stagnant.

The bottom line: the current jobs report shows that the economy is still a long way away from being on the right track.

Other posts in this series:

The Hobby Lobby Amicus Briefs

What is Net Neutrality?

What is Common Core?

What’s Going on in Syria?

What’s Going on in Egypt?

Comments
Welcome to mreligion comments! Please keep conversations courteous and on-topic. To fosterproductive and respectful conversations, you may see comments from our Community Managers.
Sign up to post
Sort by
Show More Comments
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
How Does Your State Rank on Human Trafficking Laws?
Does your state have the basic legal framework in place bat human trafficking, punish trafficker, and supports survivors? The Polaris Project recently released their 2013 State Ratings on Human Trafficking Laws, which examines the progress states have made in passing legislation bat both labor and sex trafficking. According tothe report: 39 states passed new laws to fight human trafficking in the past yearAs of July 31, 2013, 32 states are now rated in Tier 1 (7+ points), up from 21...
Was ‘Little House on the Prairie’ a Libertarian Fable?
Was Laura Ingalls Wilder’s Little House on the Prairie series of children’s books written as an anti-New Deal fable? The Wilder family papers suggest they were: From the publication of the first book in 1932, the series was immediately popular. And, at a time when President Franklin D. Roosevelt was introducing the major federal initiatives of the New Deal and Social Security as a way out of the Depression, the Little House books lulled children to sleep with the opposite...
Private Virtue and Public Speech
Sometimes we are not aware of the foolishness of our private speech until our words go public. This is one of the morals of the story of Philadelphia Eagle’s receiver Riley Cooper’s n-word slip. In a video taken at a Kenny Chesney concert in June, Cooper became frustrated that an African-American security guard would not allow him backstage. With a beer in his hand Cooper responded, “I will jump this fence and fight every n***ger here, bro.” Cooper’s gaffe serves...
Virtuous Bribery? Care for Prisoners in the Early Church
St. Ignatius of Antioch was martyred at the jaws of wild beasts in the Roman colosseum sometime around 110 AD. In her historical study of wealth and poverty in the early Church, Loving the Poor, Saving the Rich, Helen Rhee offers the following interesting historical tidbit with regards to how early Christians were able to minister to their imprisoned brothers and sisters who awaited martyrdom: Bribing the prison guards, which must have cost a certain amount, features frequently enough in...
Obamacare’s ‘Visiting Program’ or Violation Of Privacy?
The Gateway Pundit reports today that a provision in Obamacare’s Affordable Care Act allows for what the government is calling the “Maternal, Infant and Early Childhood Visiting Program.” What does this mean? The program is designed to award monetary grants to states that have “modest” home visiting programs currently, and would like to expand those programs. The goal, purportedly, is to increase the health of mothers and young children and things like “developing a family-centered approach to home-visiting.” es from...
Worry is a Poverty Trap
There’s some evidence that the distress associated with poverty, such as worry about where your next meal ing from, can create a negative feedback loop, leaving the poor with fewer non-material resources to leverage against poverty. In 2011, a study by Dean Spears of Princeton University associated poverty with reduced self-control. His empirical study attempted “to isolate the direction of causality from poverty to behavior,” resulting one possible explanation “that poverty, by making economic decision-making more difficult, depletes cognitive control.”...
Explainer: What’s Going on in Egypt?
Hundreds of supporters of ousted Egyptian president Mohamed Morsi were killed in Cairo this week by Egyptian security forces. The protestors, mostly members of the Muslim Brotherhood, responded by destroying Coptic Christian churches throughout the country. Here’s what you should know about what’s going on in Egypt. What is the Muslim Brotherhood? The Muslim Brotherhood, begun in 1928, is Egypt’s oldest and largest Islamist organization. Founded by Hassan al-Banna, the Muslim Brotherhood – or al-Ikhwan al-Muslimun in Arabic – has...
Chris ‘Ashton’ Kutcher on Opportunity as Hard Work
PowerBlog readers will be excused for missing this, as I suspect there are not many who frequent the MTV Teen Choice Awards. But don’t let your skepticism prevent you from watching this video of Ashton (really, “Christopher Ashton”) Kutcher’s acceptance speech, in which he exhorts the younger generation to get its hands dirty with hard work: “Opportunity looks a lot like hard work.” There are many connections to be made here with this insight, not least of which is with...
Work as Service at Wolfgang Puck Express
On a return trip from summer camp, Michael Hess’s young son was stuck at Chicago O’Hare airport on a four-hour layover. Having run out of his spending money, he soon grew hungry and called his Dad for help. His father’s mended solution: “go to any of the sit-down restaurants and ask if his dad could give them a credit card over the phone.” His son tried it, and everyone turned him down. “None would even try to figure out a...
Interview: George Gilder on ‘Knowledge and Power’
At , Jerry Bowyer interviews George Gilder on his new book Knowledge and Power (HT: AOI Observer). The long Q&A, titled “George Gilder Has A Very Big, Economy Boosting Idea” is very much worth a read. Here’s a snip: Jerry: “So the market system is the operating system at best, but it’s not the user. That the entrepreneur uses an operating system called the market economy: there’s hardware to it, there’re rails and canals and buildings and factories; there’s software...
Related Classification
Copyright 2023-2025 - www.mreligion.com All Rights Reserved