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It's Jobs Friday and all eyes are on government workers. Will the Trump administration's layoffs finally show up in the latest jobs report? Today on the show, we look at the numbers for federal workers and who's trying to hire them. Related listening: Can ... we still trust the monthly jobs report (Apple / Spotify) The last time we shrank the federal workforce (Apple / Spotify) A 'Fork in the Road' for federal employees (Apple / Spotify) How local government is propping up the U.S. labor market For sponsor-free episodes of The Indicator from Planet Money, subscribe to Planet Money+ via Apple Podcasts or at plus.npr.org. Fact-checking by Sierra Juarez. Music by Drop Electric. Find us: TikTok, Instagram, Facebook, Newsletter. Learn more about sponsor message choices: podcastchoices.com/adchoicesNPR Privacy Policy
It's the first Jobs Friday of the new year, and there's good news! The unemployment rate ticked down slightly to 4.1%, and the economy added 256,000 jobs. So, for the last month of 2024, the jobs market finished pretty strong.Today on the show, we look at the indicators from this month's jobs report that give us a snapshot of where our economy's headed. We look at how men are potentially reversing a decades-long trend of declining labor force participation, how people who are unemployed are staying that way for longer and how a lot of Americans saw their wages rise in 2024. PLUS ... we reveal the winner of our Indicator of 2024!Related episodes:Help us pick the indicator of the year! Getting more men into so-called pink-collar jobsFor sponsor-free episodes of The Indicator from Planet Money, subscribe to Planet Money+ via Apple Podcasts or at plus.npr.org. Music by Drop Electric. Find us: TikTok, Instagram, Facebook, Newsletter. Learn more about sponsor message choices: podcastchoices.com/adchoicesNPR Privacy Policy
The Inside Economics team is pleased to welcome Glenn Hubbard, Nonresident Senior Fellow at AEI and former chairman of the President's Council of Economic Advisers, to the podcast. Dante kicks things off with a summary of this week's "surprising" employment report. Glenn offers his opinions on the Trump administration's policy proposals and their potential effects on the economy. The group successfully navigates the statistics game through hints and joint effort. Click here for the NYT article referenced Guests: Glenn Hubbard, Nonresident Senior Fellow at the American Enterprise Institute and Dante DiAntonio, Senior Director of Economic Research, Moody's AnalyticsHosts: Mark Zandi – Chief Economist, Moody's Analytics, Cris deRitis – Deputy Chief Economist, Moody's Analytics, and Marisa DiNatale – Senior Director - Head of Global Forecasting, Moody's AnalyticsFollow Mark Zandi on 'X' and BlueSky @MarkZandi, Cris deRitis on LinkedIn, and Marisa DiNatale on LinkedIn
Dante joins the podcast to discuss the October employment report. The impact of recent strikes and hurricanes weighed on the headline jobs figure, but everyone agrees that underlying job growth remains strong. Cris and Mark debate the reasons why productivity growth in the U.S. has outpaced the rest of the world, but Dante remains skeptical that recent productivity success is sustainable.Guest: Dante DeAntonio, Se nior Director of Economic Research, Moody's AnalyticsHosts: Mark Zandi – Chief Economist, Moody's Analytics, Cris deRitis – Deputy Chief Economist, Moody's Analytics, and Marisa DiNatale – Senior Director - Head of Global Forecasting, Moody's AnalyticsFollow Mark Zandi on 'X' @MarkZandi, Cris deRitis on LinkedIn, and Marisa DiNatale on LinkedIn
It's Jobs Friday! It's that time of the month where we check in on the American worker.In September, 254,000 jobs were added to the US economy and the unemployment rate ticked down very slightly to 4.1%. It's unexpectedly strong, and relieving news for workers after a pretty lackluster summer.But ... given how the labor market cooled over summer, is the labor market still on thin ice? And if there were to be a plummet in jobs, could anything be done to speed up the recovery? Today on the show: How it's easier to break the economy than to fix it, and whether we can escape from the patterns of the past.Related Episodes: The Sahm Rule With The Eponymous EconomistHow much would you do this job for? And other indicators For sponsor-free episodes of The Indicator from Planet Money, subscribe to Planet Money+ via Apple Podcasts or at plus.npr.org. Music by Drop Electric. Find us: TikTok, Instagram, Facebook, Newsletter.Learn more about sponsor message choices: podcastchoices.com/adchoicesNPR Privacy Policy
Mark and Cris are joined by Dante and Michael Strain, Director of Economic Policy Studies at the American Enterprise Institute. Dante kicks things off with a detailed summary of the stronger than expected U.S. employment report for September. Buoyant wage growth and upward revisions to July and August's numbers confirm that the economy remains healthy. The discussion then pivoted to the presidential election with Michael making a strong case for status quo economic policies and divided government.Check out Michael's Strain's Book: The American Dream Is Not DeadGuest: Michael R. Strain - Director of Economic Policy Studies, American Enterprise Institute (AEI)Guest: Dante DeAntonio, Senior Director of Economic Research, Moody's AnalyticsHosts: Mark Zandi – Chief Economist, Moody's Analytics, Cris deRitis – Deputy Chief Economist, Moody's Analytics, and Marisa DiNatale – Senior Director - Head of Global Forecasting, Moody's AnalyticsFollow Mark Zandi on 'X' @MarkZandi, Cris deRitis on LinkedIn, and Marisa DiNatale on LinkedIn
Andrew Wilkinson and Jose Torres sit down to talk about last Friday's Jobs report and the painful de-inversion that occurred across the 2- and 10-year Treasury maturities. Historically, the development has been met with an economic downturn and traders are certainly taking notice with risk assets off their recent highs. Still, the weaker-than-expected employment figures carried some strength under the hood, namely an increasing labor force, slipping joblessness and accelerating wages which is keeping the Fed on track for 25 in September rather than 50.
The Inside Economics crew gathers in Southern California for an early morning reaction to the August jobs report, which they all concur is “pretty good”. They discuss the implications of slowing job growth for the Fed's upcoming meetings as well as the presidential election. Finally, they all give their odds for a recession occurring in the next year—Cris remains the bear of the group. Guest: Dante DeAntonio - Senior Director, Economic ResearchHosts: Mark Zandi – Chief Economist, Moody's Analytics, Cris deRitis – Deputy Chief Economist, Moody's Analytics, and Marisa DiNatale – Senior Director - Head of Global Forecasting, Moody's AnalyticsFollow Mark Zandi on 'X' @MarkZandi, Cris deRitis on LinkedIn, and Marisa DiNatale on LinkedIn
Carl Quintanilla and Jim Cramer set the stage for Friday's key jobs report, exploring market reaction to Thursday's weaker-than-expected ADP payroll report. Hear what Cramer had to say about a September Fed rate cut. Nvidia also in the mix after shares fell 11% in two days. The chip giant denied reports stating it has received a subpoena from the Justice Department. The anchors also discussed Vice President Kamala Harris' 28% capital gains tax proposal -- and billionaire investor Mark Cuban telling CNBC the Democraticpresidential nominee is "pro-business." Also in focus: Verizon buys Frontier Communications for $20 billion in cash, President Biden reportedly plans to block the Nippon Steel-U.S. Steel deal, J.P. Morgan downgrades China, Ford auto sales, Tesla's self-driving boost, CNBC's official NFL team valuations. Squawk on the Street Disclaimer
Nick Bunker from Indeed joined the podcast to break down July's surprisingly weak employment report. The team put forward their favorite interjections before breaking down the report into causes for concern, potential measurement issues and (a few) reasons for cautious optimism. The discussion turned to the “Sahm Rule” as the group pondered whether the recent rise in the unemployment rate is signaling a recession. Mark and Marisa both claimed victory in the Statistics Game before the podcast ended with the team putting forward their current recession probabilities. (4:00) July Employment Report (22:58) Labor Market Issues(51:00) Stats Game(1:02:50) Recession RisksToday's Guest: Nick Bunker, Director of North American Economic Research at IndeedFollow Nick Bunker: @Nick_BunkerHosts: Mark Zandi – Chief Economist, Moody's Analytics, Cris deRitis – Deputy Chief Economist, Moody's Analytics, and Marisa DiNatale – Senior Director - Head of Global Forecasting, Moody's AnalyticsFollow Mark Zandi on 'X' @MarkZandi, Cris deRitis on LinkedIn, and Marisa DiNatale on LinkedIn
It's Jobs Friday and the jobs report is in! There's more jobs! ... but not as many as expected. And there's a teensy bit more unemployment and slower wage growth. But there's an upside ... Plus, healthcare is growing like gangbusters and how immigrants affect American-born workers.Learn more about sponsor message choices: podcastchoices.com/adchoicesNPR Privacy Policy
Inside Economics regular Dante DeAntonio joins the podcast to discuss the April jobs report. It was something of a surprise, but a happy one, at least for Dante and Mark. The job market remains strong, but is cooling, opening the window just a bit for the Fed to begin cutting rates. But Cris and Marisa weren't so sure, worried that the report may signal the start of a more serious slowdown.Follow Mark Zandi @MarkZandi, Cris deRitis @MiddleWayEcon, and Marisa DiNatale on LinkedIn for additional insight.
Bloomberg Surveillance hosted by Tom Keene and Paul Sweeney April 4th, 2024Featuring: Rebecca Patterson, former Chief Investment Strategist at Bridgewater Associates, joins to talk about what we can expect from jobs on Friday and CPI next week Meghan Swiber, Director of US Rates Strategy at Bank of America, joins to talk about recent Fed speak and what we've heard from Jay Powell, and whether we'll actually see a rate cut in 2024 Larry McDonald, founder at The Bear Traps Report, on his new book "How to Listen When Markets Speak" Bloomberg's Lisa Mateo with her Newspaper Headlines Get the Bloomberg Surveillance newsletter, delivered every weekday. Sign up now: https://www.bloomberg.com/account/newsletters/surveillance See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
The Inside Economics team dissects yet another upside surprise in the February jobs report and ponders the mixed messages between the payroll and household surveys. Employment is coming in hot but the unemployment rate rose to its highest level in over a year and wage growth cooled. The team theorizes on why the two surveys are so at odds with each other lately. Finally, they each opine on whether the data are leaning more toward a higher risk of recession or “no landing”. Surprisingly, they're all in agreement.Follow Mark Zandi @MarkZandi, Cris deRitis @MiddleWayEcon, and Marisa DiNatale on LinkedIn for additional insight.
Stocks have turned lower this afternoon as markets digest the jobs report. 275,000 jobs were added in February – which was more than expected. Wages ticked up, but less than forecasted. And the unemployment rate jumped to 3.9%. Looking at the weekly market numbers, the S&P 500 is the only of the major averages set to finish the week with a gain. Plus, Bitcoin is on pace to close out a strong week with a new record, crossing $70,000 for the first time ever.
Father calls us to unconditional love and be protected against pride.
The jobs report is in! And both the rate of employment AND unemployment went up in August. How does that happen? Plus, how disabled people are doing in the labor market.For sponsor-free episodes of The Indicator from Planet Money, subscribe to Planet Money+ via Apple Podcasts or at plus.npr.org. Music by Drop Electric. Find us: TikTok, Instagram, Facebook, Newsletter.
Jobs Friday and Legend of Goldilocks.www.watchdogonwallstreet.com
Farm employment numbers are historically very hard to track. Partly because they fluctuate a lot from season to season, partly because a large portion of farm workers are undocumented. They're also not included in the monthly job numbers, which means we hardly ever talk about them on Jobs Friday. But today we're bringing you "Farm Jobs Friday" as we zoom in on three big trends in farm employment. For sponsor-free episodes of The Indicator from Planet Money, subscribe to Planet Money+ via Apple Podcasts or at plus.npr.org. Music by Drop Electric. Find us: TikTok, Instagram, Facebook, Newsletter.
DoubleLine's Eric Dhall and Mark Kimbrough run down market performance for July before diving into a recap for the week of July 31-Aug. 4. For the month, equities (00:54) delivered a pretty nice return while over in fixed income (2:12), the U.S. Treasury curve had a somewhat interesting period, and the Agg finished down a few basis points. Commodities had a healthy run (3:51), led by a gangbusters energy sector and a green agriculture sector. On the week (5:49), equities were down, and the long end of the Treasury curve was up. Over in Macro Land (8:51), the week delivered quite a few prints, including senior loan officers' outlook for tightening lending standards, an upside surprise in second quarter productivity (12:12) and a Jobs Friday (16:44) report that sparks talk of a “full-employment recession.” This week's Fedspeak (20:52) coverage includes speculation of the “Barbie” box office buoying prospects for an economic soft landing. Next week's prints (22:22) will include CPI and PPI numbers as well as the University of Michigan Consumer Sentiment Index, one of the metrics Fed Chair Jerome H. Powell has been keeping an eye on. This episode was recorded before market close Aug. 4, 2023.
The US economy added more than 200,000 jobs in June. But are these good jobs? Today, we look at some ways to answer this question, and what it takes to transform a job from bad to good.For sponsor-free episodes of The Indicator from Planet Money, subscribe to Planet Money+ via Apple Podcasts or at plus.npr.org.
Capping a holiday-shortened trading week, Carl Quintanilla and Jim Cramer discussed what Friday's key March employment report could mean for the markets, with weekly jobless claims coming in well above the expected 200,000 level. As for the consumer: Costco posted its first monthly same-store sales decline in almost three years -- and shares of Levi Strauss down sharply despite a quarterly beat. The anchors reacted to Ike Perlmutter's comments to the Wall Street Journal: The former chair of Marvel Entertainment told the paper he wasn't laid off by Disney – he was fired. Also in focus: Movers heading into the holiday weekend, plus what FedEx's CEO said to Jim about the economy more than six months after telling him he sees a recession ahead. Squawk on the Street Disclaimer
Join us for a special two-part series of How to Find + Land a Good Job in the Nonprofit Sector This Year. This week is for individual job seekers. Jon and Becky are joined by Brooke Hodnefield and Tim Foot from Slingshot Group. Alongside our nonprofit hiring expert friends, we're exploring cultures of hiring, where to start your journey, how to flex your network for good, and practical advice to keep moving forward. Tune in to get re-energized around your job search
Apprenticeships: not just for medieval guilds, but also useful in today's tight labor market! More employers in fields such as healthcare are turning to apprenticeship programs to train new hires for critical roles.For sponsor-free episodes of The Indicator from Planet Money, subscribe to Planet Money+ via Apple Podcasts or at plus.npr.org.
The monthly employment data is out today, where it's expected that U.S. job and wage growth was solid in December, though rising interest rates could slow momentum this year. Lightcast's Rucha Vankudre breaks down the numbers. Plus, the ongoing standoff within the Republican party over Kevin McCarthy's bid to become House Speaker continues. Raymond James' Ed Mills gives the latest. And, stock futures are mixed as the Fed signals that they may not be done with their campaign to tame inflation. Palisade Capital Management's Dan Veru and Rose Advisors as Hightower's Patrick Fruzzetti explain how to play the markets.
My appearance in the Brady Bunch box on Fox Business this morning. Is the Fed going to “get it?” Inventory in the real estate market, or lack thereof. Hedge fund B.S. China and the dragon with teeth. The Three Amigos summit. Biden goes to the border. Who is going bankrupt today?
Strong numbers but starting to slow. Good firing vs. bad firing. Where is Ari Gold? Caps on Russian oil. Thanksgiving rewind at Walmart. Car loan rates skyrocket. Climate reparations?? AOC continues to get owned by Elon.
Social Security Disability Insurance helps support millions of Americans, but it's a slow-moving program that rejects most people who apply. This Jobs Friday: The 10 million working-age people who are neither working nor seeking a job — and they're living with a disability. For sponsor-free episodes of The Indicator from Planet Money, subscribe to Planet Money+ via Apple Podcasts or at plus.npr.org.
They're going to move em' on the heels of the “Phony Jobs Number….”We'll discuss all the details including a variety of charts and markets.The analysis found in these videos is appropriate for both beginning Traders and experienced Traders alike.We look at only technical analysis using charts from various time frames using various vehicles. We use only the Candlestick charts and moving averages to determine our next best case scenario. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
It's Jobs Friday, which means today is all about employment. The July Non-Farm Payroll numbers will be out today, with job growth expected to slow as the Fed continues hiking rates in an effort to reduce inflation. Apex Financial President Lee Baker gives his thoughts on what to expect. Plus, one area of the labor market experiencing major hiring headwinds is tech, as Alphabet, Amazon, Apple, Microsoft, and Spotify tapping the brakes on hiring. ZipRecruiter Chief Economist Julia Pollak explains what this means for the broader U.S. economy. And, what is the job market saying about a possible recession? Ally Invest Chief Strategist Lindsey Bell weighs in.
It was already going to be a significant Jobs Friday before the West awoke to news of the assassination of former Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe, perhaps his country's most significant postwar leader, certainly its most consequential in the 21st century. U.S. payrolls did grow by 372,000 during June, beating the consensus forecast and pushing pause on talk of an imminent recession. Yields surged and stocks sagged this morning, as investors now anticipate a 75 basis point rate hike when the Federal Open Market Committee meets July 26-27. Like other risk assets, Bitcoin is holding its ground in recent trading, tracking toward its best weekly since March. Raoul Pal is here with Maggie to break it all down and put it back together again. Want to submit questions? Drop them right here on the Exchange: https://rvtv.io/3asy4mL. To view today's charts click here: https://media.realvision.com/wp/20220708204027/20220708_RVDB_Charts.pdf Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Gen Zers, it's time to put the TikTok away and revamp those cover letters. With murmurs of an upcoming recession, what does this mean for the newest entrants into the labor market?
Some recession we're having, huh? A surprisingly positive jobs report for the month of June may defy fears of a looming economic slowdown. Payrolls increased by 372,000 jobs, above expectations. CNBC's Steve Liesman and SoFi Head of Investment Strategy Liz Young discuss the robust labor market with Joe Kernen and Melissa Lee. Elon Musk and Twitter are still dancing around a possible deal; The Washington Post reports that Musk's proposed $44B bid to buy the social media platform could be in jeopardy. Axios' Sara Fischer and Cowan merger strategist Aaron Glick say that Twitter's board is the one that could be flexing its power – Musk faces a billion-dollar break-up fee if he walks away. And, the latest from the mother of meme stocks: GameStop's latest move to reinvent the brick and mortar video game retailer puts its CFO and other corporate employees out of jobs. In this episode:Sara Fischer, @SaraFischerSteve Liesman, @SteveLiesmanLiz Young, @LizYoungStratJoe Kernen, @JoeSquawkMelissa Lee @MelissaLeeCNBCKatie Kramer, @Kramer_Katie
This episode is also available as a blog post: http://confoundedinterest.net/2022/07/08/slowing-jobs-friday-shows-decline-in-jobs-added-real-avg-hourly-earnings-growth-now-3-25-yoy-not-the-strongest-economy-in-history/
The Nasdaq Composite led stock indexes to the downside on Jobs Friday, as an expectations-beating report on the May employment situation has investors believing the Federal Reserve will continue its aggressive monetary tightening program. Jim Bianco of Bianco Research has long held that the “Fed Put,” in place since 2008-09, is now dead, killed by inflation. Bianco joins Real Vision's Ash Bennington to talk about today's jobs report, the market's response, and where the Fed goes from here. We also hear from Peter Zeihan about what constrained food and energy markets mean for the geomacro environment. Want to submit questions? Drop them right here on the Exchange: https://rvtv.io/3ma3PmD. Watch the full conversation featuring Peter Zeihan and Maggie Lake here: https://rvtv.io/3asGNoM. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
The United States added 390,000 jobs in May. Today, we go behind the scenes to find the surprisingly delightful secrets to how the Bureau of Labor Statistics collects that number.
An Alabama sheriff said Wednesday that a jail official visited a murder suspect in prison before helping him escape last week and that her actions suggest their plan had been in the works for some time. John Stolnis offers the latest on this fascinating story. Ukrainian fighters battling Russian forces in the tunnels beneath Mariupol's immense steel plant refused to surrender in the face of relentless attacks, with the wife of one commander saying they had vowed to “stand till the end.” Clayton Neville reports on this for us. The Senate will vote next week on legislation that would codify abortion rights into federal law as Democrats mount their response to the Supreme Court's leaked draft decision that would overturn the landmark Roe v. Wade ruling. Linda Kenyon checks in from Capitol Hill to bring the details. For the past year, America's job market has run like a well-engineered machine, adding an impressive average of 540,000 workers a month despite a punishing inflation rate, Russia's ruinous war against Ukraine, a still-risky pandemic, jittery financial markets and the prospect of much higher borrowing costs. CNBC's Jessica Ettinger stops by to preview "Jobs Friday". There is little credible information about the new Disinformation Governance Board. And that has made it an instant target for criticism. We'll talk to the reporter who broke the story of the board's existence - Politico's Daniel Lippman. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
The Bureau of Labor Statistics has finally added American Indian and Alaska Native labor data to its monthly jobs numbers. Why it's important and how the Minneapolis Fed proved it was possible.
The January jobs report exceeded the expectations of many. Will the better-than-expected numbers merit the return of our old friend the airhorn?
The stocks of Snap and Amazon are surging after the companies' strong earnings reports, rebounding the market from yesterday when Facebook dragged it down. Scott Mushkin of R5 Capital joins to discuss the future for the stocks. Plus, it's jobs Friday, and this report could show job losses for the month of January, for the first time since December of 2020. We discuss expectations and the broader hiring market with Evan Sohn of Recruiter.com. And UK energy prices could increase by more than 50% after the regulator approved a price hike. Brian takes a deep dive into why this is happening and how it will impact families.
Making sense of a disjointed report. Food prices continue to skyrocket. Trump's immigration idea coming back. Munger interview. Covid observations. Great ruling in Boston. Legal vs. Just.
Today's jobs report found that workers received a small raise last month. And, yes, higher pay is great for attracting workers and boosting morale, but sometimes it can even pay for itself.
A new report out from FTSE Russell shows that many countries' Nationally Determined Contributions to climate change may be falling short of the Paris Climate Agreement. The CEO of FTSE Russell joins from Glasgow to discuss. Plus, the October jobs number is out today. RBC's Tom Porcelli joins with his expectations. And Insider Buying is back—Brian brings you the top five stocks seeing the most insider purchasing action this week.
It's Jobs Friday, and we blow our first air horn in months! Albeit, a slightly muted one. Last month, the economy added more jobs than expected. But there are still millions of people staying out of the workforce. Why?
TOPICS by TIMECODE2:12 US Air Force says a plane evacuating Afghan refugees had 5 hijackers onboard. Biden is waiving anti-terrorist immigration prohibitions to keep some “refugees”4:46 Robo-Dogs Get Weapons as Waymo Cars Keep Getting Lost on Dead End Street. The future? What could possibly go wrong? What happens when humans in military are replaced by robots?15:33 FDA wants to get rid of salt (mandating reductions), DeBlasio gets rid of Thomas Jefferson statue25:33 Listener stuck in Italy writes of conditions there and in other EU countries30:20 “No Jab, No Job” is GLOBAL Policy — 10% to be FIRED Friday in Italy. As Italians take to the streets in fury, AP labels them neo-Fascists. Governments at war with their own people, creating Greater Depression and chaos39:21 Canadian Pastor Artur Pawlowski given massive fine but no jail45:52 Biden Offers “Retail Therapy” for Broken Supply Chain. Who's writing this imbecile's script? Walmart & Target are “essential” again. He offers them as a solution to SUPPLY shortages and SHIPPING disruptions.56:03 Biden's Mandate BLUFF: 3 Parts, One is a Bluff. Listener asks: “how is Biden Exec Order a bluff”? Which companies are being coerced, which ones are cooperating unnecessarily? What are the grounds for challenging? What is the best chance of getting an exemption? 1:09:17 Record 4.3 MILLION “Quit”. They're shutting down shipping to shut down supply lines. Southwest Airlines pilot writes. CEO is a WEF (Davos) club member and this is what he has heard about how many pilots are unvaxed and refusing. Also railroad employee on company's planned vax terminations. 1:19:32 Texans who've already been fired for being unvaxed ask “what about our jobs” as GoFundMe takes away funding for lawsuit appeal by RN fired in April by Houston hospital (first in country to start firings)1:28:36 Religious Exemption WINS — in NY! So NY Dept of Education works with Union to block further challenges1:37:44 Rogan vs Sanjay Gupta? An Amazing Revelation. Gupta's account makes it sound like he won — BUT the most amazing thing was NOT what was said or debated, but what happened before the show began 1:50:14 CovidGate: FDA Hides Data, Refuses FOIA. Dr. Peter McCullough, MD sues to get info FDA is hiding. Same things we've seen with ClimateGate.1:59:47 Maine Public Health Director tries to cover up that TrumpShots have a higher death rate than COVID2:06:48 Clot Shots End Professional Athletes Careers. Brandon Goodwin, Atlanta Hawks NBA. Vinny Curry, NY Jets NFL. (Curry had cut a pro-TrumpShot PSA)2:11:22 Pfizer forces entire Brazilian town to get jab because — they want a LONG TERM study. It's still experimental after a year2:21:05 UK health data shows 90-99% safety/efficacy — BUT, the footnote says they have NO data, NO studies to support it & LOW confidence in the numbers2:45:43 Greta Thunberg uses UN's “Rights of the Child” convention to get the UN to challenge countries over her climate fantasies.Find out more about the show and where you can watch it at TheDavidKnightShow.comIf you would like to support the show and our family please consider subscribing monthly here: SubscribeStar https://www.subscribestar.com/the-david-knight-showOr you can send a donation throughZelle: @DavidKnightShow@protonmail.comCash App at: $davidknightshowBTC to: bc1qkuec29hkuye4xse9unh7nptvu3y9qmv24vanh7Mail: David Knight POB 1323 Elgin, TX 78621
TOPICS by TIMECODE 2:12 US Air Force says a plane evacuating Afghan refugees had 5 hijackers onboard. Biden is waiving anti-terrorist immigration prohibitions to keep some “refugees” 4:46 Robo-Dogs Get Weapons as Waymo Cars Keep Getting Lost on Dead End Street. The future? What could possibly go wrong? What happens when humans in military are replaced by robots? 15:33 FDA wants to get rid of salt (mandating reductions), DeBlasio gets rid of Thomas Jefferson statue 25:33 Listener stuck in Italy writes of conditions there and in other EU countries 30:20 “No Jab, No Job” is GLOBAL Policy — 10% to be FIRED Friday in Italy. As Italians take to the streets in fury, AP labels them neo-Fascists. Governments at war with their own people, creating Greater Depression and chaos 39:21 Canadian Pastor Artur Pawlowski given massive fine but no jail 45:52 Biden Offers “Retail Therapy” for Broken Supply Chain. Who's writing this imbecile's script? Walmart & Target are “essential” again. He offers them as a solution to SUPPLY shortages and SHIPPING disruptions. 56:03 Biden's Mandate BLUFF: 3 Parts, One is a Bluff. Listener asks: “how is Biden Exec Order a bluff”? Which companies are being coerced, which ones are cooperating unnecessarily? What are the grounds for challenging? What is the best chance of getting an exemption? 1:09:17 Record 4.3 MILLION “Quit”. They're shutting down shipping to shut down supply lines. Southwest Airlines pilot writes. CEO is a WEF (Davos) club member and this is what he has heard about how many pilots are unvaxed and refusing. Also railroad employee on company's planned vax terminations. 1:19:32 Texans who've already been fired for being unvaxed ask “what about our jobs” as GoFundMe takes away funding for lawsuit appeal by RN fired in April by Houston hospital (first in country to start firings) 1:28:36 Religious Exemption WINS — in NY! So NY Dept of Education works with Union to block further challenges 1:37:44 Rogan vs Sanjay Gupta? An Amazing Revelation. Gupta's account makes it sound like he won — BUT the most amazing thing was NOT what was said or debated, but what happened before the show began 1:50:14 CovidGate: FDA Hides Data, Refuses FOIA. Dr. Peter McCullough, MD sues to get info FDA is hiding. Same things we've seen with ClimateGate. 1:59:47 Maine Public Health Director tries to cover up that TrumpShots have a higher death rate than COVID 2:06:48 Clot Shots End Professional Athletes Careers. Brandon Goodwin, Atlanta Hawks NBA. Vinny Curry, NY Jets NFL. (Curry had cut a pro-TrumpShot PSA) 2:11:22 Pfizer forces entire Brazilian town to get jab because — they want a LONG TERM study. It's still experimental after a year 2:21:05 UK health data shows 90-99% safety/efficacy — BUT, the footnote says they have NO data, NO studies to support it & LOW confidence in the numbers 2:45:43 Greta Thunberg uses UN's “Rights of the Child” convention to get the UN to challenge countries over her climate fantasies.
Sure, some seniors took the pandemic as an opportunity to ride an RV into the sunset, but there's a darker story unfolding in today's jobs report. Today's show looks at the challenges many older worker can face as they try to reenter the workforce.
In this week's episode, KBRA Chief Strategist Van Hesser discusses: 1. The jobs market is tight, but not strong, and on Jobs Friday it's important not to equate the two. We'll explain. 2. Some investors believe corporate credit risk has been structurally improved. We'll examine the argument. 3. Where did all the growth go? Economic growth forecasts for Q3 have plummeted. Does that come as a surprise to you?
The Bureau of Labor Statistics recently released the jobs report for July. The economy added nearly one million jobs. An economist helps us analyze these numbers.
This episode is also available as a blog post: http://confoundedinterest.net/2021/07/02/jobs-friday-unemployment-rate-rises-and-labor-force-participation-rate-remains-the-same-despite-headline-850k-jobs-added-philly-feds-harker-pushes-for-fed-taper/
It's Jobs Friday! It's not exactly the jobs report we wanted, but there were some bright spots. On the Indicator, we discuss the rise in self employment.
On this "Jobs Friday", Carl Quintanilla, David Faber and Morgan Brennan discussed market reaction to the much-anticipated employment report, which shows the U.S. added 559,000 jobs in May -- doubling April's numbers but still below consensus estimates. The unemployment rate fell to 5.8%. Labor Secretary Marty Walsh joined the program in a "First on CNBC" interview about the jobs report and what's ahead for the recovery, inflation and infrastructure talks. "Meme stocks madness" once again in the spotlight: Shares of AMC Entertainment volatile after tumbling on Thursday. CEO Adam Aron is urging shareholders to back his plan for the company to issue 25 million more shares. The anchors reacted to what Aron said about the plan to Trey Collins, host of the "Trey's Trades" YouTube channel. On the crypto front, Bitcoin falls after Elon Musk tweets a breakup meme. Sources telling David that a SPAC backed by Bill Ackman's Pershing Square confirms it is in talks to buy a 10-percent stake in Universal Music Group. Also in focus: Stock winners and losers including GM, Ford and Wells Fargo – and a preview of Squawk on the Street's return to the NYSE on June 7.
Unemployment is still above 6%, but companies across the US are saying they can't find people to fill their jobs. What's going on?
It's Jobs Friday! The February jobs report shows signs of recovery, but there's still a long way to go. We talk to three experts about their indicators on how things will change and when.
The US economy created 49,000 jobs last month, according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics. That's a lot less that people had hoped and shows that the recovery has slowed.
For the first time since April, the American economy lost jobs. Today, we break down the December jobs report and the slowing economic recovery.
(00:44) - Welcome, Music and Disney World, and Virginia vs Virginia Tech Football. (28:33) - Chris Previews NFL Week 14 Slate. (1:12:17) - Chris' Football Mailbag. (1:21:33) - Chris and Macon Mailbag: Switching Jobs, Macon vs Meg Fight and Best Day of Year. Sign up for your DraftKings account at https://www.draftkings.com/sportsbook and use promo code : Greenlight Green Light with Chris Long: Subscribe and enjoy weekly content including podcasts, documentaries, live chats, celebrity interviews and more including hot news items, trending discussions from the NFL, MLB, NHL, NBA, NCAA are just a small part of what we will be sharing with you. http://bit.ly/chalknetwork
For the final jobs report of the year, we break down how different sectors of the economy have handled the pandemic. | Support your NPR member station here.
Fight Fight Fight on CNBC. The devil ran the election in Georgia. We must get to the bottom of this story. End of movie theaters? Taxes going up. 100 days of masks? Pandering nonsense.
Fight Fight Fight on CNBC. The devil ran the election in Georgia. We must get to the bottom of this story. End of movie theaters? Taxes going up. 100 days of masks? Pandering nonsense.
The US economy added more than 600,000 jobs in October. Team Indicator assembles the Jobs Friday Ninja squad to get their take.
Market Rally Continues, Election Uncertainty remains, Uber & Peloton Miss, Good Jobs today, Jobs Friday tomorrow See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
The U.S. is experiencing the worst unemployment crisis since the Great Depression. Meanwhile, some employers claim that they can't find the workers they need. What's going on?
President Donald Trump and First Lady Melania Trump have tested positive for the coronavirus, prompting further economic and political uncertainty just 32 days before Election Day. Former FDA Commissioner Dr. Scott Gottlieb says the President is likely to recover, but “the risk is still high.” CNBC’s Eamon Javers breaks down the whirlwind of Covid contact tracing currently underway at the White House, as well as the domestic and global political implications of the diagnoses. The House passed the $2.2 trillion Democratic coronavirus stimulus bill Thursday night, but Republicans oppose the package and bipartisan discussion continues. Plus, 661,000 jobs were created in September, a disappointing number in the last Jobs Friday before November 3rd. CNBC’s Jim Cramer joins Joe Kernen, Andrew Ross Sorkin, and Melissa Lee to discuss the many factors contributing to market movements this week. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
TikTok is really stupid. Portland peaceful protesters try to burn police alive. Watch what your kids are reading! Great construction work by the cartels. Getting worse in the city. Cuomo caves.
TikTok is really stupid. Portland peaceful protesters try to burn police alive. Watch what your kids are reading! Great construction work by the cartels. Getting worse in the city. Cuomo caves.
Will central banks cutting the overnight rate help the economy as COVID-19 leads to more uncertainty? And are the employment numbers from StatsCan really what you should be looking at each month? Plus how Canada can avoid shocks as vehicle manufacturing goes electric.
The unemployment rate for black workers is roughly twice that of white workers - and has been for half a century. Today we discuss the reasons for the gap, and how to shrink it.
Boeing released hundreds of damaging internal messages between employees, right before a new CEO steps in on Monday. The U.S. Labor Department released the jobs and unemployment numbers for the last month of the decade; Strategas’ Jason Trennert, Blackrock’s Kate Moore, AEI’s Alex Brill, former CEA Chairman Austan Goolsbee, and CNBC’s Steve Liesman digest the metrics and what they mean heading into the 2020 election. Plus, CNBC’s Wealth Reporter Robert Frank and pollster Frank Luntz have the details on the donations keeping 2020 Presidential candidates afloat, as well as which companies those donors work for. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Two reasons to blow the airhorn today: it's Jobs Friday, and The Indicator's 500th episode!
It's time for our favorite Friday of every month: Jobs Friday! This week, we look at job switching and what it reflects about the tightening labor market.
In this week's edition of jobs friday, we look into why 72% of unemployed people do not have unemployment insurance.
Jobs Friday is here! It turns out, employment in the U.S. might be healthier than we thought. Job opportunity in transportation is particularly strong, according to LinkedIn’s Dan Roth. CNBC contributor and journalist Kara Swisher has some hot takes on the streaming wars, and she shares her biggest takeaways from her interview with NSA surveillance whistleblower Edward Snowden. Plus, Leon Cooperman’s letter to Sen. Elizabeth Warren and WeWork’s increasingly dramatic decline. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
On the first Friday of every month, the Bureau of Labor Statistics releases a jobs report which includes the number of new jobs added to the U.S. economy. But how is that number calculated?
The Bureau of Labor Statistics has some predictions about the future of the US labor market.
Happy Jobs Friday! The U.S. economy created 164,000 jobs in July, and the unemployment rate remained unchanged. But to send you into your weekend with more pep, we answer some listener questions.
The monthly pace of jobs growth has slowed this year. But that's not necessarily a problem.
Happy Jobs Friday! The labor market is showing signs of slowing down. The unemployment rate is still low at 3.6 percent, but only 75,000 jobs were added in the month of May — a lot fewer than what economists expected.
Recorded May 3, 2019 See Peter at the SALT Conference at the Bellagio, Las Vegas May 7-10, 2019 https://www.salt.org/bio-schiff-peter Jobs Surge in April, Unemployment Rate Falls Today is Jobs Friday; the first Friday of the month, that we get the nonfarm payroll number. I don't know if the markets anticipated more or Donald Trump, because of course he's ready to send out a tweet when we get a better than expected number. That's what happened today; we got another number that was better than expected. Certainly the headline number - they were looking for an increase of 180,00 jobs, which would have been a bit of a reduction over last month's 196,000 jobs - which was revised down slightly to 189,000. We ended up getting 263,000 jobs, so another number with a 2-handle - a much bigger number than had been anticipated, and the unemployment number, also surprisingly dropped. Two tenths, from 3.8% to 3.6%. Hispanic unemployment actually hit an all-time record low. I expected Donald Trump to tweet about that, because obviously he's being accused of being a racist. Clearly, if he can show that, "Well, look, Hispanic unemployment is at an all-time record low, how are my policies racist, if we have a record low in unemployment among Hispanics?" He did tweet about the jobs numbers and the low unemployment numbers. Which Numbers are Fraudulent Now? But again, I reminded Trump (not that he actually ever reads my tweets, he gets so many) that when he brags about how low the unemployment rate is, the official rate, I always remind him, "Wait a minute, you are the person who accused these numbers of being fraudulent, fakes, phonies, a scam - Donald Trump as a candidate was very critical of Barack Obama's phony recovery mainly because Obama was hiding behind (what Trump said were) fraudulent statistics. Well, these are the same statistics that Donald Trump is embracing - the same statistics that he criticized. So, I guess the President no longer about all of the discouraged workers who are no longer looking for work, he doesn't care about all the people who are working part time, but would prefer to work full time, but they can't find a full time job, so they settle for a part time jobs. These are the people who are not included in that 3.6% unemployment rate. The President cared about those people when he was a candidate.
Part-time workers make less per hour than full-time workers do. That has big implications for women and mothers.
Recorded May 3, 2019 See Peter at the SALT Conference at the Bellagio, Las Vegas May 7-10, 2019 https://www.salt.org/bio-schiff-peter Jobs Surge in April, Unemployment Rate Falls Today is Jobs Friday; the first Friday of the month, that we get the nonfarm payroll number. I don't know if the markets anticipated more or Donald Trump, because of course he's ready to send out a tweet when we get a better than expected number. That's what happened today; we got another number that was better than expected. Certainly the headline number - they were looking for an increase of 180,00 jobs, which would have been a bit of a reduction over last month's 196,000 jobs - which was revised down slightly to 189,000. We ended up getting 263,000 jobs, so another number with a 2-handle - a much bigger number than had been anticipated, and the unemployment number, also surprisingly dropped. Two tenths, from 3.8% to 3.6%. Hispanic unemployment actually hit an all-time record low. I expected Donald Trump to tweet about that, because obviously he's being accused of being a racist. Clearly, if he can show that, "Well, look, Hispanic unemployment is at an all-time record low, how are my policies racist, if we have a record low in unemployment among Hispanics?" He did tweet about the jobs numbers and the low unemployment numbers. Which Numbers are Fraudulent Now? But again, I reminded Trump (not that he actually ever reads my tweets, he gets so many) that when he brags about how low the unemployment rate is, the official rate, I always remind him, "Wait a minute, you are the person who accused these numbers of being fraudulent, fakes, phonies, a scam - Donald Trump as a candidate was very critical of Barack Obama's phony recovery mainly because Obama was hiding behind (what Trump said were) fraudulent statistics. Well, these are the same statistics that Donald Trump is embracing - the same statistics that he criticized. So, I guess the President no longer about all of the discouraged workers who are no longer looking for work, he doesn't care about all the people who are working part time, but would prefer to work full time, but they can't find a full time job, so they settle for a part time jobs. These are the people who are not included in that 3.6% unemployment rate. The President cared about those people when he was a candidate.
Happy Jobs Friday! The economy is still adding jobs, unemployment remains low, and wage growth is fine. It's all good...right?
"Bring on the Trade War!" Today is Jobs Friday, but before I get to the jobs report, I want to talk a little bit about the escalation of the trade war, In fact, some stories I'm reading are that the trade war began today, or last night. A lot of the tariffs are finally being imposed. The market reacted positively; the Dow was up 100 points today. The NASDAQ was up 100 points as well, which is percentage-wise a much bigger increase - 1.34% move - so who cares about a trade war? "Bring it on! America is going to win the trade war because we've got the least to lose because we've got the biggest deficits. Dollar Sold Off Despite Trade War and Jobs Number The dollar, meanwhile, sold off today. The dollar index closed at 94, barely held the 94 handle. It traded below briefly, despite what many people consider a stronger Nonfarm Payroll report. So, the dollar went down despite the beginning of the trade war and despite the supposed strong jobs number. To me, the dollar topped out at 95; I expect us to crack below 94 next week, and if we break below 93, if we get into the 92's I am pretty sure the rally is over, technically speaking and we're heading for new lows relatively quickly. Who is the Industrial Powerhouse? Let me get back to the trade war that we are supposedly going to win. One of the most interesting things about it, is when you look at the goods each side is imposing tariffs on. When you look at that, you can see which country is the industrial powerhouse and which country is a third world country masquerading as an economic power. Here are the goods made in China that Trump wants to tax the American citizens on: Aircraft tires Scales Nuclear reactors Cranes Boat motors Bulldozers Aircraft engines Boring machines Aircraft engine parts Construction vehicles Air & gas compressors Oil & gas drilling platforms Combine harvesters Plows Industrial heating equipment Chicken Incubators Dairy milkers Plows Livestock equipment Machinery for processing meats Paper making machinery Machinery for molds, cements Printer & copy machine parts Machinery for glass products Printer & machinery for making rubber Industrial ovens Industrial magnets AC & DC generators Lithium batteries Electric transformers Radar & radio equipment Equipment for circuit breakers Television parts & video recorders LED's Electronic traffic signs Trains & rail parts Large vehicles Diesel cars & trucks Motorcycles Helicopters Microscopes Airplanes
Kessler Foundation Disability Rehabilitation Research and Employment
Today is April 1, Jobs Friday, and we’ve just issued our monthly report on Trends in Disability Employment – or #nTIDE. We’re exploring today’s nTIDE with Dr John O’Neill, director of Disability & Employment Research at Kessler Foundation. Dr. O’Neill looks at the six-month trends, finding reason to be cautiously optimistic, and describes an interesting new pilot study aimed at getting individuals with spinal cord injury back to work by intervening with vocational services during their inpatient rehab.