When the latest report
on the employment situation arrived last week, most commentary focused
either on job creation (a healthy 200,000) or the unemployment rate (unchanged
at 3.9 percent). Beneath the surface, though, there were many other signs of
growing strengths and remaining weaknesses in U.S. labor markets. One of these
was a strong uptick in the number of people holding multiple jobs. Is that a
good sign, or a bad one?
The idea that multiple job holders are a sign of crisis is
fueled in part by stories like one in the New York Times about school teachers who work second
jobs to make ends meet:
There are times when my lower back hurts, my feet hurt, my hands hurt. I have calluses on my hands that I shouldn’t have. You really don’t have much in the way of free time, and when you do, you’re consumed by housework, but you basically just sit on the couch like a big blob, and then I feel guilty about doing that. (Shauntel Highley, English teacher/window washer, Vinita, Okla.)
Some business analysts, too, are wary of the rise in
multiple job holders. As Komal Sri-Kumar puts it in a piece for Business Insider,
In a robust economic recovery, the number of full-time workers should be rising, and the number of workers employed part-time or holding multiple jobs, should decline. The rise in the number of multiple job holders is troubling, and is yet another signal that there is still slack in the labor market.
Yet, if we look at the data, the rise in multiple jobholders
looks less dire than these accounts suggest. The first thing we learn is that
although multiple jobholders are not rare, they are not as common as the
impression you might get the media. Currently, multiple jobholders account for
just 4.8 percent of the labor force. These include 2.6 percent who hold a
part-time job in addition to a full time job — a pattern called FT/PT — and
another 1.1 percent who piece together two or more part time jobs, or PT/PT.
Smaller numbers work two full-time jobs or hold multiple jobs that are
unclassified because they vary in hours from week to week.
The second thing the data tell us is that not every multiple
jobholder is a hardship case. The BLS does not report people’s reasons for
holding multiple jobs on a monthly basis, but an occasional
survey, taken in 2004, sheds some light on the question. At that time, 25.6
percent of those surveyed said they needed the job to meet regular expenses or
pay off debt — the answer we would expect a moonlighting teacher like Shauntel
Highley to give. Another 21.3 percent appeared motivated mainly by the value of
the second job itself rather than the money it brought in. These included
people who took a second job to gain experience, to build a business, or
because they enjoyed the work. A third group, 38.1 percent of the total, simply
said they wanted the extra income without saying why. Maybe they, too, needed
the money desperately, or maybe they wanted to take a cruise or buy a fancier
car. The remaining 15 percent gave other unspecified reasons or no reason.
The third thing we find is that the different categories of
multiple jobs give different signals regarding the health of the labor market.
As the following chart shows, the FT/PT category rises in good times like the
mid-2000s and the present, and falls in hard times like the years following the
2008 financial crisis. Over the quarter century for which data are available,
there is a substantial negative correlation between FT/PT jobs and the
unemployment rate (R = -0.50). The number people with a full-time job and
another part-time on the side rises when the unemployment rate falls, and falls
when the unemployment rate rises. The smaller PT/PT category, in contrast,
shows no statistically significant correlation with the overall unemployment
rate over the period covered in the chart (R=0.02).
It seems, then, that the more typical case for a
full-time — part-time worker is less one of desperation than of the more
nuanced situation illustrated by this anecdote from USA Today:
Michael Alfaro, 49, of Coloma, Mich., toils full-time as an executive customer service representative for an appliance manufacturer. And on most evenings and some weekends, he works the late shift — 6 PM to 10 PM or 4 PM to midnight — in the electronics department of a local department store.
Alfaro decided to take the gig last November to whittle down about $37,000 in debt, including credit card, and student and personal loans. But he also was spurred by the struggles of area retailers and other businesses to find employees.
“It encouraged me,” he says.
Alfaro’s case fits the common pattern identified in the 2004
BLS survey — that of someone working a second job to get extra money. We could
say that is “hardship” in the sense that if wages everywhere were higher, maybe
the Alfaro’s of the world would not need to run up as much debt or take a
second job to pay it off. That characterization fits the situation of many teachers, especially in states where salaries are not keeping up with inflation. However, it does not fit Sri-Kumar’s belief that
rising FT/PT jobholders are a sign of economic weakness. Rather, those data are
a sign of strength. It is the robust labor market that gives workers like
Alfaro a chance to catch up on their debt before the next downturn comes, at
which point the opportunity for a second job might disappear altogether.
Previously posted on Medium.com
Thank you for your common-sense and data-driven response to the emotional (back pain) and anecdotal article typical of the politically-driven newspaper-of-record, trying to make a crisis out of some very sensible decisions to lower debt or gain experience or learn skills on the side. Here on Lopez Island, I'm missing your bridge skills but I'm reading your Economics (Combined Version) text this year, the best single-volume Economic textbook I've seen.
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