August BLS Report Omits Key Data Revealing Future Worker Challenges, including Immigration and Robotics

Guest Post by Joe Guzzardi

Shortly after the Bureau of Labor Statistics released its August report which showed that the economy had created a middling 130,000 new jobs, the White House issued an effusive statement.

Pointing to record low unemployment rates for black Americans, 5.5 percent, and for Hispanics, 4.2 percent, the White House report written by the Council of Economic Advisors boasted, “The Trump Administration’s pro-growth policies continue to move workers off the sidelines and develop an even more prosperous economy.

But the monthly BLS reports often lose their glow when analyzed with greater scrutiny. In August, for example, government jobs increased by 34,000; low-paying education and health care added 32,000, and professional and business services increased by 37,000. Even though August reflected solid and welcome wage growth in many employment sectors, building a retirement nest egg on the incomes of any of those mostly hourly wage jobs is nearly impossible.

The August pattern of most new employment coming in low-paying jobs has repeated itself month after month all too often and dates back to previous Republican and Democratic administrations. The BLS data poses an interesting question. That is, will the economy provide enough jobs to match the current annual population growth, the 4 million young Americans who turn 18 each year, and the more than 1 million immigrants who receive lifetime-work permits upon being granted permanent residency?

Dire predictions that robotics will displace tens of millions of workers and slash employment by as much as 30 percent by 2030 must also be considered. Even if dramatically overstated, those forecasts still have a ring of truth about them. The United States is not providing a clear pathway for future generations to move forward toward a middle-class lifestyle.

Although immigration as a variable in the labor pool is rarely discussed as part of the headline mainstream media coverage, a quick look at the numbers proves that it should be. For nearly three decades, immigration totals have exceeded the historical 250,000 intakes by, on average, more than four times or in excess of 1 million each year.

Over the last 30 years, the federal government has granted millions of employment authorization documents that allow new arrivals to compete with citizens and existing immigrants for low- and high-skilled employment. The federal government doesn’t keep hard and fast guest worker totals, but the estimate is between 750,000 and 1 million annually. Immigration critics have long decried guest worker programs as cheap labor vehicles that hurt vulnerable Americans, but enhance corporations’ bottom lines.

Nearly every foreign national that gets to the U.S. interior, including illegal Southwest Border crossers, will eventually receive work permission. In early September, the Department of Homeland Security announced that it was releasing into the interior about 200 aliens each day. As immigration parolees, they’ll soon become work-authorized or enter the underground economy.

Here’s a little more math: assuming about 250 working days in the federal calendar times 200 caught and released migrants per day, that translates into 50,000 more work permits per annum. To Beltway-enclosed elitists, the total is trivial, but to down-on-their-luck Americans, 50,000 represents another significant challenge to overcome.

Expansionists often make emotionally charged arguments on behalf of maintaining immigration at its annual level of more than 1 million, or lobby for higher totals. But based on the aggregate accumulated data over the last 30 years, no intellectually credible case can be put forward to keep immigration going at its current pace.

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9 Comments
Steve
Steve
September 11, 2019 8:00 am

The US and most countries need more and more consumers to keep the economy growing or at least stagnant. At some point (a point I believe we’ve already passed) there are diminishing qualities of life and increasing negatives like pollution, traffic, demands on infrastructure. We have to learn to live with less growth. We are like bacteria in a petri dish. When the available agar runs out the systems collapses and dies. Like it or not we can’t sustain infinite growth on a finite planet.

Vote Harder
Vote Harder
  Steve
September 11, 2019 9:11 am

The petri dish runneth over.

Ingsoc
Ingsoc
September 11, 2019 9:13 am

They need to put all members of congress on minimum wage. As a matter of fact, the only thing that stops them from getting paid what they’re really worth is the minimum wage law.

Vote Harder
Vote Harder
  Ingsoc
September 11, 2019 9:14 am

Replace them with robots, they would do a better job anyway.

Dutchman
Dutchman
  Vote Harder
September 11, 2019 10:32 am

The already act like programmed robots.

gatsby1219
gatsby1219
  Dutchman
September 11, 2019 7:38 pm

You spelled bribed wrong.

flash
flash
September 11, 2019 9:57 am

No worries . Yang Bang Bucks is on the way. Human capital will be retired to spending leisure days trolling twitter and posting selfies on Instagram , when not hawking 1000 dollar jars of dirty bath water.
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BL
BL
September 11, 2019 11:20 am

August BLS Report omits the TRUTH/REALITY, fixed it fer ya. No different from any other month here in the USA!USA!USA! of NO reality.

Llpoh
Llpoh
September 11, 2019 8:19 pm

Where are all the manufacturing jobs that were promised via the tariffs? Bwahahahahaha! I told ya so.

1) it takes a longish time to create manufacturing plants.
2) any new plants will be highly automated and will require very few employees.

Those are the facts of it. And when you combine those factoids with the absurdity of the state and federal laws in place and being enacted (EPA, California declaring contractors to be employees, state taxes, fed taxes, OSHA, local taxes, etc ad vomitoria), do you really think that companies are in a rush to bring plants to the USA?

Thailand, etc., look very enticing when judged against the reality of doing business in the US. That is where the work will go in substantial part.