US unemployment hit the highest level in three years in June. Image: X Screengrab

The US unemployment rate rose to 4.3% in July, the highest level in three years, the Bureau of Labor Statistics reported this morning (August 2), as the US economy added just 114,000 jobs, far below the consensus estimate of 175,000.

Graphic: Asia Times

US consumers, buoyed by an unprecedented rise in federal transfer payments to individuals, sustained GDP growth during the past two years while business investment lagged.

A fall in weekly hours to the lowest level since the Covid-19 pandemic produced a decline in nominal weekly earnings of US workers. After inflation, that means a pay cut in real terms.

Graphic: Asia Times

Earlier this week, the US Institute for Supply Management reported, “Economic activity in the manufacturing sector contracted in July for the fourth consecutive month and the 20th time in the last 21 months.”

Consumers accounted for 1.6 percentage of points of annualized GDP growth during the second quarter of this year, out of a total of 2.6 percentage points of annualized growth.

But consumers can’t keep up with inflation and retail sales adjusted for inflation are falling.

Graphic: Asia Times

Federal economic stimulus in the form of higher transfer payments (subsidies to individuals) has been the main driver of nominal growth under the Biden administration – as well as the chief source of inflation.

Transfer payments under the Biden administration remain about 20% above the long-term trend.

Graphic: Asia Times

Follow David P. Goldman on X at @davidpgoldman

Join the Conversation

4 Comments

  1. Transfer to individuals? I do not know of any individual receiving any extra money from the government. COVID related unemployment and business closure subsidies expired ling time ago. I am curious if anyone knows what subsidies to individuals are still in place? Or have not been stopped by 2022?

    1. Good point. Chinese subsidies are publicly owned enterprise profits — reinvested in strategic industries. Subsidies in the name of COVID made rich people immensely richer. But they did investe it wisely, so back to the drawing board. Hope they get it right this time around.

      1. “Invest wisely” means investing in the places that can give them the best return. Not the places that can actually help the public.