Saturday, August 3, 2013

July 2013

July 2013 featured a 2,800-worker gain over June, subject to the usual wholesale revision up or down. Year-over-year was a little better than flat.

Three-year growth was around 16,000. It would have been a lot larger but for the massive earnings potential of a JD luring holders away from law and into even more lucrative endeavors, making recruiting difficult. I'll get to Simkovic's paper eventually. In the interim, I encourage the terminally credulous to enroll somewhere, anywhere this fall. Remember the ABA motto, "It's a mistake to retake."

http://www.bls.gov/news.release/empsit.t17.htm

Not seasonally adjustedJuly20121,135,100
May20131,125,100
June20131,134,500
July20131,138,8003,700
Seasonally adjustedJuly20121,123,200
May20131,126,900
June20131,124,200
July20131,127,0003,800
Change from Jun-13 to
Jul-13
2,800

2 comments:

  1. Keep in mind that if there were 16,000 new jobs created in three years, there were also roughly 135,000 new law school graduates in that time. Of course, a few retired or died. But old fossil lawyers tend to stick around well into their 70s, if not longer.

    Going to law school is a terrible bet. No one can validly refute that reality.

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    Replies
    1. For the most part, law school is a reality-free zone. Reality begins when the loan payments do.

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