1. The strong trend of people entering the jobs market and getting jobs remains intact.
Here’s a nice graph put together by Kevin Drum at Mother Jones showing both a linear and curvilinear trend line (which are nearly identical) (red) with the prime age employment to population ratio (blue):
The trend is intact and quite positive, despite the one month decline.
2. Involuntary part-time employment is near 25 year low levels.
The below graph is of involuntary part time employment as a share of the entire labor force, from which I have subtracted 2.7% to norm the rate at zero:
Involuntary part time employment — the primary addition forming the basis of the broad U6 underemployment rate — has dropped to levels only seen for two months in the 2000s expansion, and exceeded for 3 years at the end of the 1990s internet boom.
3. But the percent of those who aren’t even looking for work but want a job remains slightly elevated and has started to increase.
The below graph is of those “not in the labor force who want a job now” as a percent age of the entire labor force, from which I have subtracted 3.15% to norm the recent low from March to zero:
This has never returned to either 1990s or 2000s levels, and has risen in the last 5 months. It might just be noise, or it might not.
4. Goods-producing employment has been soaring.
This graph comes from Matt O’Brien at the Washington Post. Goods producing jobs have recently risen at 35 year highs:
This is mainly due to two things: (1) the post-2016 recovery in the Oil Patch; and (2) truck and railcar production. The latter is *extremely* pro-cyclical, as a mere slowdown in growth at the final goods levels means a sharp downturn in the orders for new trucks and railcars to support that growth.
One important note of caution about this trend: in the past, even a two month sequential decline in the rate of growth of goods producing jobs has usually meant a sharp cyclical slowdown at minimum. I counted only 3 occasions in the last 50 years where that was not the case.