The U.S. Job Market Is Losing Its Dynamism
by Christopher Condon
6:30 AM EDT
April 7, 2015
Part of America's advantage over other economies historically has been the pace at which it both creates and destroys jobs. As they face slowing prospects or failure, companies, even whole industries, cut workers . The good news is that new businesses keep popping up to supply new jobs.
More than 7 million jobs are created, and almost as many are destroyed, every quarter in the U.S., according to Maximiliano A. Dvorkin, an economist at the Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis. That's healthy because "resources are allocated to alternative presumably better uses," he wrote in a March 27 blog post.
Except the pace of that churn is slowing.
Dvorkin found a disturbing trend affecting most of the industries that saw the largest net job gains and losses in the most recent downturn and subsequent recovery. Here's a chart tracking the trend in the construction industry:
The construction industry's rate of job creation is displayed in green, while the industry's rate of job destruction is displayed in orange.
Source: Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis
And in leisure and hospitality:
The leisure and hospitality industry's rate of job creation is displayed in green, while the industry's rate of job destruction is displayed in orange.
Source: Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis
And in professional and business services:
The professional and business services industry's rate of job creation is displayed in green, while the industry's rate of job destruction is displayed in orange.
Source: Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis
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http://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2015-04-07/the-u-s-job-market-is-losing-its-dynamism