Jobless numbers to play larger role in long election: Don Pittis - Action News
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Jobless numbers to play larger role in long election: Don Pittis

For most Canadians, jobless numbers are a powerful indicator: if you or someone in your family can't get a good job, that might change how you vote. Today's figures are the first set of jobs stats that could make a difference on Oct. 19.

Unlike some statistics, unemployment has a direct effect on voters' mood

A man wearing a yellow helmet speaks into a walkie-talkie. He is surrounding by people wearing orange and yellow vests.
Good jobs like these at Muskrat Falls power station under construction in Newfoundland and Labrador make workers and their relatives feel the government has run the economy well. Rising unemployment has the opposite effect. (Andrew Vaughan / Canadian Press)

The Canadian government collects data on a lot of economic indicators, but to the average voter not all make anequal impression.

Employment reports, like today's figures for July, have a bigger effect than most. The numbers quoted in today'sheadlines are relatively bland, showingthat the country added 6,600 jobs, withthe jobless rate remainingunchanged.

But allthe political parties will be sifting through the numbers behind thosenumbersto see how it might affect them in the polls.

That's because unlike trade figures or, say, the monthly survey of manufacturing, joblessnesshas a direct and immediate impact on how you feel the economy is faring. According to voter polls, jobs, or the lack of them, are right at the top of the list of issues that people say will influence their vote.

This time round, because of the long78-daycampaign, political analysts and voters will have more jobs data to feast upon than ever. Counting today's numbers, Statistics Canada will release three sets of monthly data before the autumnelection. The final figures, for September, will come out only 10 days before the Oct.19 vote.

Unemployment hurts

You can see why people take joblessness seriously.

Even if they themselves are employed, the factthat adultchildren, grandchildren or close friends can't get work is an immediate reminder that things may be worse instead of better. The idea of unemployed offspring living in the basement has become such a trope that Bank of Canada governor Stephen Polozweighed in on the subject.

Unfortunately for Poloz, there was an angry backlash when he advised students to get out ofthe basement and work for free.

However,headline jobs statistics are only an approximation of the pain people are feeling. If youthwithexpensive degrees arestuck in dead-end low-payingjobs, statistics will still show them as employed. But on voting daythey, or their parents, might think the economy has failed them.

The political effect of economic statistics is magnified by an election campaign. When the numbers are good, incumbents can crow. When they are bad their opponents can rub their noses in the news.

But to average voters,it may not betherelease of the job statistics over the coming monthsthat affects how people vote. Not everyone pays attention to such things.Instead, the mostimportant election impact maybe the economic mood those statisticsreveal.

That's why the parties'researchers will be looking deeper into the details of each new Labour Force Survey Statistics Canada produces.

Devil in the detail

Just as important as the total number of jobs and any change in the rate of unemployment, StatsCan offers a wealth of data to inform campaigners. Regional numbers, for example,may show growing dissatisfaction in energy-producing provinces as another fall in crudeprices leads to another round of oil company spending cuts.

Breakdown by industry will show sectors where jobs aregrowing and whether thosejobs are good or bad. While part-time jobs of a few hours a week take people off the unemployment rolls, an increase infull-time jobs is likely to increase voter satisfaction.

Last time round, in the June statistics, part-time jobs fell sharply, but they were replaced by full-time jobs. Most economists consider that a good indicator. However, most of the new jobs did not indicate an industrial rebound. They were government jobs.

Like huge forest fires thatcreate theirown weather systems, elections create their own jobs. Also, seasonal factors may pep up the statistics as full-time students go back to school and fall out of the official job statistics.

According to research from a number of jurisdictions around the worldcited in the bookMass Politics in Tough Times,worsening unemployment does have a negative effect on an incumbent's re-election chances. However, the research showsthe impact of economic growth (GDP) has a more direct statisticalcorrelation.

In other words, even if job figures look good, a general feeling of economic decline can sour voters' taste for the incumbent governent.

Arecent economic report from the think-tank C.D.Howe Institute saidimproving employment means falling GDP doesn't matter so much.

But that maynot be so comforting to the Harper Conservatives if the economy continues to shrink in the months before the election.

Follow Don on Twitter @don_pittis

More analysisby Don Pittis