The BLS announced Friday that the US economy added 295,000 jobs in
February, bringing the unemployment rate to 5.5 percent, a new low for
the recovery. The leading stock indexes immediately plunged. The Dow
lost 1.5 percent, the S&P 500 1.4 percent, and the NASDAQ 1.1
percent. Why the negative reaction to such good news?
The answer may lie in an obscure economic indicator known as the non-accelerating inflation rate of unemployment,
or NAIRU. The NAIRU gets its name from the fact that when unemployment
hits that level, the rate of inflation begins to accelerate. Market
participants know that the Fed has a dual mandate to maintain full
employment and price stability, and some of them interpret that to mean
that it will begin to raise interest rates as soon as the unemployment
rate hits the NAIRU. As the chart shows, that could happen any
time now. The Congressional Budget Office estimates that the NAIRU is
currently 5.39 percent, within easy reach of February’s current
unemployment rate of 5.5 percent. >>>Read more
Follow this link to view or download a brief slideshow with additional charts of the latest US employment situation
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