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For release: March 9, 2007
Revised Employment Data for Columbia Metro Area Show
Faster Growth in Region than Previous Estimates
ST. LOUIS, Mo.—Based on calculations by the
Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis, newly revised estimates for the
Columbia metro area in 2005 and 2006 indicate that employment in
the region grew faster than it did in the country as a whole for
each of the last two years.
Revised estimates indicate that employment growth in the Columbia
metro area was 2.6 thousand (2.9 percent) in 2005 and 1.8 thousand
(2.0 percent) in 2006. Pre-revision estimates of employment growth
for 2005 and 2006 were 3.0 thousand (3.3 percent) and 2.0 thousand
(2.2 percent), respectively. By comparison, according to the latest
estimates for the United States over the same periods, payroll employment
grew by 1.9 percent in 2005 and 1.7 percent in 2006.
The Columbia MSA includes Boone and Howard Counties.
These calculations, by St. Louis Fed economists Michael R. Pakko
and Howard J. Wall, were done in response to annual benchmark revisions,
released Thursday by the Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS), for payroll
employment data for every metro area in the United States.
At any time, the most up-to-date estimates of payroll employment
in a metro area — the number of jobs — are provided
by the Current Employment Statistics (CES) program of the BLS. According
to the BLS, each month it surveys “about 160,000 businesses
and government agencies, representing approximately 400,000 individual
worksites,” from around the United States. Although the survey
covers hundreds of thousands of employers, these employers make
up only a small percentage of all businesses and worksites in the
country. (According to the BLS, there were more than 8.8 million
such establishments in the United States in June 2006.)
To calculate a comprehensive measure of metro area employment,
the BLS has to estimate the number of establishments in the area.
"This," said Pakko and Wall, "is the primary reason
for the sometimes-large revisions to the CES data: the difficulty
in estimating the number of establishments. When the economy is
in recovery, for example, new firms might be setting up and hiring
workers very quickly. The BLS doesn’t find out about the new
firms or jobs until the unemployment insurance records are updated,
which can take several months or more. This lag is compounded by
the fact that small firms, which provide the bulk of jobs, might
only need to provide unemployment insurance information once a year
rather than monthly or quarterly, as is required of larger firms."
To estimate the number of establishments, the BLS relies on the
Quarterly Census of Employment and Wages (QCEW). The QCEW is a tabulation
of employment information for workers covered by state and federal
unemployment insurance programs. Because of its comprehensive nature,
data from the QCEW cannot be produced as quickly as data from the
CES: Initial data are released 6 to 7 months after the end of a
quarter and are subject to
subsequent revision. To fill in the blanks, the BLS estimates the
number of establishments using the QCEW as a benchmark. Each year,
the BLS establishes new benchmarks using updated data from the QCEW.
Because of the lags and revisions to the QCEW data, the yearly benchmarking
affects employment data from the CES going back 21 months.
"This is why the estimates just released have affected the
yearly employment changes for 2005 and 2006," said Pakko and
Wall. "Note also that the estimates for job growth in 2006
will change again in March 2008 because much of the data for 2006
will be affected by the benchmark revisions that will occur then."
With branches in Little Rock, Louisville and Memphis, the Federal
Reserve Bank of St. Louis serves the Eighth Federal Reserve District,
which includes all of Arkansas, eastern Missouri, southern Indiana,
southern Illinois, western Kentucky, western Tennessee and northern
Mississippi. The St. Louis Fed is one of 12 regional Reserve Banks
that, along with the Board of Governors in Washington, D.C., comprise
the Federal Reserve System. As the nation's central bank, the Federal
Reserve System formulates U.S. monetary policy, regulates state-chartered
member banks and bank holding companies, and provides payment services
to financial institutions and the U.S. government.
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