Lies, Damned Lies and Government Statistics
by Jim Karger
My grandmother grew up in the backwoods of Arkansas. She had a fourth grade education and worked in the fields. When she was 12 years old she threw down her cotton sack and took a train to Texas to live with an aunt she had never met. She lived a hard life, never had much of a chance, and yet she was one of the wisest people I have ever known.
She taught me many life lessons that have served me well, one of which went like this: "Jimmy," she would say as she waved her finger in my face, "most folks will lie even when the truth works better."
Not a particularly rosy view of humanity, but it was, and is, deadly accurate.
Nowhere is the truth of her admonition better seen than when man is collectivized and given authority. Whether government, corporate or union, the simple fact is that most people are liars. Liars lie. Good liars rise to the top. And when good liars are collectivized they lie more frequently and more effectively. When they have control of the numbers, it makes their deceit more difficult to discover. When they can make up the numbers, it can make unwinding them a near impossibility.
Take the recent unemployment numbers that took the U.S. stock market to fresh three month highs. According to the U.S. Department of Labor, 163,000 new jobs were created in July, 2012.
Sounds good enough, but like most numbers, even if it is accurate, which it is not, it creates an intended deceit.
Looking at the Bureau of Labor Statistics own tables reveals the following startling fact: The U.S. actually lost 1,204,000 jobs in the month of July, 2012. Don't believe it? Take a look at the actual unadjusted data from the Bureau of Labor Statistics.
During July, 2012, the private sector added a net 27,000 jobs which represented an added 76,000 goods-producing jobs less 49,000 jobs lost in the service sector. The other million plus were lost in the public sector. The 163,000 represents a number that has nothing to do with reality, but rather represents a model that supposedly takes into account the seasonality of certain jobs.
In short, the BLS report showing 163,000 added jobs is statistical wizardry by bureaucrats with calculators following the demands of liars who want the numbers spun.
If you give it some thought, it makes no sense that employment is expanding.
GDP is falling, in part because fewer people are working, which might also explain why tax receipts per employee are also falling. A contracting, not expanding, workforce might also explain these numbers from the ISM's July Manufacturing Purchasing Manager's Index (PMI) report. The PMI registered 49.8 percent, which was a contraction in the manufacturing sector for the second consecutive month, following 34 consecutive months of expansion. And, the New Orders Index registered 48 percent, indicating contraction in new orders for the second consecutive month.
A rising number of unemployed might also be consistent with:
ISM's New Orders Index of 48 percent in July, represented a contraction in new orders for the second time since April, 2009.
The Inventories Index registered 49 percent in July, 5 percentage points higher than the 44 percent reported in June. ISM's Employment Index registered 52 percent in July, 4.6 percentage points lower than the 56.6 percent reported in June.
ISM's New Export Orders Index registered 46.5 percent in July, 1 percentage point lower than the 47.5 percent reported in June, and represents the second month of contraction in the index since June, 2009.
ISM's Imports Index registered 50.5 percent in July, 3 percentage points lower than the 53.5 percent reported in June.
The employment numbers are even belied by garbage, not just the government's garbage, but real garbage. A recent ZeroHedge blog interpreted Bloomberg numbers on the number of carloads of trash being hauled by U.S. railroads. "As Bloomberg explains: 'One closely watched economic indicator is the rail car loads of waste and scrap materials.' Logically, 'The more we demand, the more waste is generated by that production.'
As the chart of the day, courtesy of Bloomberg Brief, demonstrates, if garbage is the benchmark, the US economy is now contracting faster than it has at any one point in the past 3 years and is on pace to recreate the economic collapse last seen after the Lehman bankruptcy.
Read more here:
http://lewrockwell.com/orig13/karger2.1.1.html

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