Shifts in US employment may drive gains in labor productivity -Treasury

By Andrea Shalal

WASHINGTON (Reuters) -Shifts in U.S. employment over the past two years toward sectors with higher wages and productivity, and higher average hours worked, may drive further gains in labor productivity going forward, two top Treasury Department economists said on Friday.

The U.S. recovery from the COVID-19 pandemic has seen employment recovering “much faster” than after recent recessions, Ben Harris, assistant secretary for economic policy, and Tara Sinclair, deputy assistant secretary for macroeconomics, said in an analysis.

Assessing U.S. economic developments two years after President Joe Biden’s COVID relief package, the American Rescue Plan, Harris and Sinclair said the labor market recovery had been “exceptionally strong,” the economy was now over 5% bigger than before the pandemic began and core inflation was lower than in many major advanced economies.

“Acknowledging that other advanced economies faced different economic shocks — notably, our European partners were more adversely affected by Russia’s war against Ukraine — the evidence shows that the U.S. economic recovery has been quite strong,” they wrote. “Data suggests that the actions taken by the Biden administration meaningfully contributed to the pace of recovery and strength of the labor market.”

The posting coincided with a release of new Labor Department data showing a slight increase in the U.S. unemployment rate to 3.6% in February and higher-than-expected payroll gains, with hiring concentrated in a narrower range of industries.

Harris and Sinclair did not address the fresh data, but noted significant differences in employment statistics among Group of Seven economies in the early phase of the pandemic, largely due to differences in how those economies supported workers and businesses during the shutdowns.

In the United States and Canada, unemployment insurance was most suited to rapid, large-scale support. Meanwhile many European economies leveraged social safety nets, often in a way that led to continued employment in official statistics.

Despite differences in the initial response, employment rates were now low across the G7 nations, they said.

But labor productivity growth in the United States had outpaced that of Europe and Japan, possibly because the U.S. unemployment insurance system allowed greater movement of labor relative to systems that preserved employer attachment.

“In general, U.S. employment has reallocated from lower wage industries to high-wage and higher productivity industries. U.S. employment has also shifted to industries with higher average hours worked, implying a stronger recovery in hours relative to employment. This reallocation of labor may drive further gains in labor productivity going forward,” they said.

(Reporting by Andrea Shalal; Editing by Chizu Nomiyama and David Gregorio)