Where Did All The Workers Go?

Authored by Bret Swanson via The Brownstone Institute,

In a November 30, 2022, speech on “Inflation and the Labor Market,” Federal Reserve chairman Jerome Powell blamed most of the 3.5 million estimated shortfall in the US labor force on premature retirements.

He also blamed a large portion – between 280,000 and 680,000 – on “long Covid.”

In a footnote, however, Powell acknowledged a far more somber factor: an estimated 400,000 unexpected deaths among working age people. 

It’s easy to blame these deaths on Covid-19. The virus is of course one significant cause. But it’s not nearly the only cause, especially among young and middle-age workers.

We need better government data transparency to make a full assessment. Until then, we can proceed with others who track mortality for a living – life insurance companies.

The Great Divide – 2020 vs. 2021

In 2020, Covid-19 took many lives, even among select groups of middle-age people, specifically those with comorbidities such as diabetes. In 2020, Covid did not take very many lives of healthy young and middle-age people – for example, the types of people who are employed at large and mid-size companies and who have group life insurance. As you can see in the chart below, group life insurance benefit payments in 2020 were barely higher than in 2018.

In 2021, however, group life payments exploded by 20.7 percent over the five year average and by 15 percent over the acute pandemic year of 2020. Why would healthy young and middle-age people suddenly begin dying in large numbers in 2021 when they’d navigated 2020 with relative success?

Especially when we consider that in 2021, the US administered 520 million Covid-19 vaccine doses. Shouldn’t healthy people employed in good jobs with good benefits, now protected with vaccines, have fared better in 2021 than in 2020? Surely, overdoses and suicides have risen in recent years. But those causes of death are less prominent among the group life cohorts in general, and the latest data confirm these were not drivers of the group life surge. Curiously, two of the largest spikes in 2021 came from deadly automobile accidents and non-automobile accidents.

Millennial Mortality

Let’s look at a few of these young adult age groups in more detail. In the charts below, we’ve broken out total all-cause deaths into three groups – 30-34, 35-39, and 40-44. Eyeballing the age group charts alone shows that factors other than Covid-19 itself must have driven large portions of the mortality spike in young and middle-age workers. (We are using official statistics, which likely overstate Covid mortality and understate non-Covid mortality. It’s the best we’ve got for now.)

  • The most important overall point is that 2021 was far worse for young and middle-age people than 2020.
  • Another key point is that 2022 was also worse than 2020, though not as bad as 2021.
  • Mortality rates in 2022 were still dramatically higher than the pre-pandemic baseline.

In the three charts above, we estimate 2022* total deaths because November and December are still provisional and subject to upward revisions. We’ve made what we believe are reasonable projections. The % change figures are relative to the 2018-19 average. These are absolute numbers not adjusted for population growth or cohort size.

Covid-19 hit hard in 2020, especially for the old, vulnerable, and comorbid. In other words, Covid-19 took many of the most unhealthy from us in 2020. In principle, therefore, a smaller number unhealthy people might have been susceptible to Covid-19 in 2021 and 2022. High mortality years are often followed by low mortality years. After two successive high mortality years, the third year is even more likely to be low-mortality. For 2022 to be as bad, or somewhat worse, than 2020, is thus a big surprise. Last year’s milder Omicron variants make 2022’s stubbornly high mortality rate even more baffling.

All-cause mortality is crucial to understand whether public health policies are working. All-cause numbers can also help expose faulty reasoning when overly narrow, overly complicated, or overly clever analyses miss or hide important signals. For example, an analysis which purported to show lockdowns reduced Covid deaths but which neglected to show other deaths rose even more, would not reflect the totality of the policy’s effects. Likewise, a chemotherapy which shrinks tumors but kills patients may be successful in its narrow task yet fail the larger mission. Most analysts and health authorities studiously ignored all-cause over the last three years. The all-cause figures above show our Covid policies were far from successful.

For other purposes, however, it’s helpful and even necessary to drill down on specific causes. Important signals can also be lost in large groupings – Simpson’s paradox, for example, is a common statistical illusion. (Few have dug deeper, with as much specificity, as John Beaudoin, an engineer from Massachusetts who gained access to his state’s digital death records for the last eight years. He shows that specific causes of death spike and fall at important moments and periods. CDC data is not organized with such granularity. More on Beaudoin’s analysis in coming weeks…)

We know that recent years saw an upswing in drug overdoses and suicides, which accelerated with the pandemic lockdowns. Although these troubling trends cannot explain the enormous and unprecedented all-cause mortality seen above, we should attempt to account for them. Likewise, although Covid-19 did not cause all these record deaths, it was a significant factor.

Employment Aberration

So we dig deeper. If we remove both Covid-19 and unnatural deaths (homicide, suicide, overdose, etc.), we see a dramatic spike of natural, non-Covid-19 deaths among working age people beginning in the spring and summer of 2021. The CDC then stopped publishing the detailed data breaking out these particular categories.

But we know this trend continued. In fact, it got much worse. The life insurance companies told us so. On a December 30, 2021, videoconference with the Indiana Chamber of Commerce, OneAmerica CEO Scott Davison reported with shock:

“And what we saw just in third quarter, we’re seeing it continue into fourth quarter, is that death rates are up 40% over what they were pre-pandemic.”

“40% is just unheard of.”

“It may not all be COVID on their death certificate, but deaths are up just huge, huge numbers.”

Several months later, Lincoln National reported its 2021 payouts were $1.4 billion, versus $548 million in 2020, a 164 percent rise.

As you will remember seeing in our three all-cause charts, August, September, and October of 2021 showed a gigantic upward bubble – the worst ever period of concentrated young and middle-age deaths, at least in modern times.

Heart attacks, strokes, pulmonary embolisms, accidents, and many seemingly-inexplicable sudden deaths, which continued into 2022, and now in 2023. Here is the Society of Actuaries November 2022 update, which goes through June 2022.

Source: Society of Actuaries, Group Life Covid-19 Mortality Survey Report, November 2022.

It’s true that the late summer and fall period of 2021 coincided with the Delta wave in the US, which was more infectious and appeared to be more pathogenic than previous variants. (We’ve suggested the mass vaccination programs may have, by exerting extreme evolutionary pressure, driven convergence onto more infectious, vaccine-evading variants. Brand new research just published in the New England Journal of Medicine continues to bolster our escape variant thesis: Substantial Neutralization Escape by SARS-CoV-2 Omicron Variants BQ.1.1 and XBB.1.)

Federal officials and the medical establishment, you will recall, argued in 2021 that it was a “pandemic of the unvaccinated.” Even the Society of Actuaries attempts to explain away its alarming findings by implying the deaths are due to lack of vaccination. It does so with crude regressions of excess mortality and bulk statewide vaccination totals as of June 30, 2021.

But remember those 520 million vaccine doses. How can you generate far more deaths in 2021 – ascribing them to unvaccination – with a dramatically smaller number of unvaccinated people? In 2021, perhaps 20-40 percent of these group life insureds were unvaccinated. In 2020, 100 percent of them were unvaccinated, yet mortality barely rose. The math doesn’t come close to working.

The 40-44 age group, for example, suffered 21.5 percent more total deaths in 2021 than 2020. This terrible outcome occurred with less than half the so-called susceptible population due to their unvaccinated status. It’s difficult to assert robust vaccine effectiveness when both doses-delivered and deaths are skyrocketing.

On the other hand, the group life insurance data show vaccinated groups may have suffered the worse outcomes. By August, most large and mid-size companies and organizations across the country had vaccine mandates, and most employees complied. Yet these workers suffered extraordinary – indeed, totally unprecedented death rates – in 2021, especially the second half of 2021.

Source: Society of Actuaries, Group Life Covid-19 Mortality Survey Report, November 2022.

Ed Dowd, a former BlackRock portfolio manager, points to a crucial peculiarity in his book Cause Unknown. Employed people with group life insurance policies are far healthier than their overall population cohort. They typically die at a significantly lower rate, just 30-40 percent of the overall population. This is an iron actuarial law. In 2021, however, as you can see in the chart directly above, these employed Americans died at excess rates far higher than their larger pool of less healthy peers.

We could also point to fast-rising disability as a key factor in the worker shortage. Fed chair Powell blames it on long Covid. Once again, however, the timing doesn’t fit that story very well.

To overgeneralize:

In 2020, the vulnerable died of Covid at unusually high rates. In 2021 and 2022, Covid continued its assault, but the young, middle-aged, and healthy also died in aberrantly high numbers of something else.

These patterns are repeating across the high-income developed world – Germany, the UK, Japan, South Korea, Australia.

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35 Comments
Anonymous
Anonymous
January 22, 2023 3:29 pm

Where Did All The Workers Go?

The same place everyone does eventually.

zappalives
zappalives
  Anonymous
January 22, 2023 3:45 pm

Up your butthole…….

Anonymous
Anonymous
  zappalives
January 22, 2023 3:50 pm

Oh look, a poster with an anal obsession.

Says much about your predilections.

Anonymous
Anonymous
  Anonymous
January 22, 2023 5:49 pm

Zappa usually just cusses dismissively. It’s all he has, apparently.

A cruel accountant
A cruel accountant
  zappalives
January 22, 2023 10:01 pm

The workers never existed. Birth rates have been falling since “the pill” was developed. This has nothing to do with Covid. Women want “careers” and “status” not babies.

If loser women want to remove themselves from the gene pool let them. Then the real women who cherish children will have children who will also want children.

Anonymous
Anonymous
  A cruel accountant
January 23, 2023 12:10 am

You forgot abortion.

A cruel accountant
A cruel accountant
  Anonymous
January 23, 2023 2:34 pm

I did.

overthecliff
overthecliff
  Anonymous
January 22, 2023 4:57 pm

Darwin bats last.

TN Patriot
TN Patriot
  overthecliff
January 22, 2023 6:06 pm

And has a tremendous batting average.

Anonymous
Anonymous
  overthecliff
January 22, 2023 7:06 pm

Still believe in Darwin ? That’s sad.

VOWG
VOWG
  Anonymous
January 23, 2023 6:49 am

The theory overall is flawed but the fact that we can and do work towards our demise is reality.

BabbleOn
BabbleOn
January 22, 2023 3:35 pm

They went online to fling monkey shit at each other. Pays really good.
For Proof, Please see the latest Trump and Musk articles.

Colorado Artist
Colorado Artist
  BabbleOn
January 22, 2023 9:01 pm

When you pay people not to work, you will have tons of applicants

Anonymous
Anonymous
  Colorado Artist
January 23, 2023 12:12 am

High correlation between free money and election cycle.

Dying Sun
Dying Sun
January 22, 2023 3:53 pm

I appreciate the author presenting extra evidence that the clot shot is killing people, but he’s preaching to the choir. Until a substantial number of the moronic masses suffer the consequences of the clot shot, nothing is going to change. What that number is, I have no idea.

overthecliff
overthecliff
January 22, 2023 4:53 pm

Plenty of illegals coming across the border. There is no shortage of workers.Seriously, how many excess deaths will there be in the next 5 years? Scary isn’t it?

Anonymous
Anonymous
  overthecliff
January 22, 2023 6:06 pm

how many excess deaths will there be in the next 5 years?

This year they’ll redefine what “excess deaths” means by demanding everyone only use the average of the last 3 years as a baseline.

So, basically, zero.

Pete
Pete
  Anonymous
January 23, 2023 12:33 am

If the plan is working, future excess deaths will be higher than the pre-Covid past. Compare any annualized death toll to the ~2.8 million US all cause deaths in the years just before Covid. Keep that number in mind and don’t be hoodwinked by a newly defined, manufactured number. Not much different than the BS the gov’t. is dishing out about inflation. Yeah, lying with statistics is easy, especially when half the population is below average.

The Central Scrutinizer
The Central Scrutinizer
January 22, 2023 5:10 pm

[youtube

Pete
Pete
  The Central Scrutinizer
January 23, 2023 12:26 am

Had a short term boss who claimed Joan was his cousin; never could verify, though did not try to do so back then. He was a midplaced California liberal and I a mid-West conservative. Turned out he and I got along well-would have never predicted that in a million years. I think he was unique in that he did not talk down to me because of our differences-it was mostly understanding the challenges of big company politics and how to help each other get ahead. He saw something in me that was not there with anyone else in his group, apparently. Tracked him down last year-he had returned to Cali and passed away about 6 years ago. It would have been fun to have had the kind of open and honest talk that is only possible once your employment is well in the past.

The Central Scrutinizer
The Central Scrutinizer
  Pete
January 23, 2023 1:18 pm

Such associations never last, although some are long lived. I suppose such a friendship could be beneficial. I’ve always viewed them as detrimental, although I’ve never shied away from nailing the odd liberal broad…and they’re all odd.

Anonymous
Anonymous
January 22, 2023 5:50 pm

.

Anonymous
Anonymous
January 22, 2023 6:02 pm
ken31
ken31
  Anonymous
January 22, 2023 8:02 pm

They use the word hesitancy because they know it pisses me off.

The Central Scrutinizer
The Central Scrutinizer
  ken31
January 22, 2023 11:34 pm

Like you, I don’t remember ever experiencing any hesitancy. My decision was easy and immediate. Besides, they couldn’t say ” those fucking anti vax bastards” right in the title. They used up their f bomb allotment in the subtitle.

TN Patriot
TN Patriot
January 22, 2023 6:06 pm

The CDC then stopped publishing the detailed data breaking out these particular categories.

That should tell you all you need to know.

DS
DS
January 22, 2023 6:40 pm

I never heard of this Ed Dowd guy before about 2 weeks ago, now suddenly he is the “vaccine” excess death guru. Makes me wonder what his agenda is?

AKJOHN
AKJOHN
  DS
January 22, 2023 7:08 pm

He’s been talking about this stuff for almost 2 years.

hoss
hoss
  DS
January 22, 2023 7:23 pm

I ran up on him about a year ago smart dude. What his agenda is don’t know. He talks covid and deaths all the time. He don’t need book money he has plenty plenty of that. He may be like Steve Kirsch trying to get to the bottom of this clusterfnx we are in.

Steve Z.
Steve Z.
January 22, 2023 8:04 pm

In 2020 the deaths were mostly of the old and infirmed due to respiratory problems.
2021-22 it was the younger dying in large numbers of cardiovascular related diseases and non-respiratory diseases.
The poison worked beautifully as planned by the MF ers.
2023 we’ll see continued elevated deaths in the young and working class with fertility numbers crashing.

Tree Mike
Tree Mike
  Steve Z.
January 22, 2023 9:59 pm

Before the clot shot, they killed people with the flu by treating them with Remdesivir, then sticking them on a ventilator, not giving them ANY nutrition and giving them opioids until they died. By NOT treating them with STANDARD respiratory treatment. That’s why 90+% of ventilator patients died. Don’t forget, hospitals got something like $43,000 per ventilator patient.

Doc Adams
Doc Adams
  Steve Z.
January 23, 2023 12:38 am

Don’t forget that many cancers are slow to develop, though that may be a premature statement with the poison jab.

Jocko
Jocko
January 23, 2023 6:05 am

There are still plenty of workers out there, waiting for that $15 dollars and hour they demanded. Oh! Wait, that is common now, yet they still don’t want to work, and still won’t if it goes to $20 dollars and hour. Government benefits are much easier.

VOWG
VOWG
January 23, 2023 6:48 am

Shut everything down and pay people for not working and then be dumb enough to ask where did the workers go?

Jdog
Jdog
January 23, 2023 12:48 pm

It is not that there are so many less workers, it is that the bubble economy created so many jobs. The problem is, those jobs will most probably not last. The 0% interest rate bubble allowed corporations to expand beyond what they would normally do on basically free borrowed money. The incentive to do this was to show growth that would justify higher stock prices, increasing the wealth of corporate officers.
The problem is, that much of that new growth is not profitable, and will be shut down at some point in the not too distant future, taking all those new jobs with them. Once economic recession and job losses begin, they very often begin a feedback loop that continues for some time.
What complicates things for the US is the possible simultaneous loss of use of petrodollars by BRIC’s countries, which would force the Fed to keep interest rates high to prevent rampant devaluation of the dollar. When you add that to the fact that Europe is economically imploding, and facing de-industrialization the outlook for the west being able to preserve hegemony is being threatened seriously, especially if Saudi Arabia and Venezuela join BRIC’s.
IMO, the situation is bad enough for the Government to begin to look at WW3 as its only hope.