Claim: The decline in the labor force participation rate fell in July because fewer teenagers were working.
On Friday, after the Department of Labor’s jobs numbers showed that the labor force participation rate declined from 62.2 percent to 62.1 percent despite employers taking on 528,000 new workers, White House spokesperson Karine Jean-Pierre claimed that the decline as “about teenagers.”
Doocy: “Why do you think people are continuing to drop out of the labor market?”
Jean-Pierre: “Participation actually ticked up.”
Doocy: “It declined 0.1 percentage points to 62.1%, the lowest level of the year.”
Jean-Pierre: “The tick down this month was… about teenagers.” pic.twitter.com/uolhOrn93c
— Washington Free Beacon (@FreeBeacon) August 5, 2022
Verdict: False.
While the teenage participation rate did fall in July from a seasonally adjusted 36.6 to 35.8, this represented a decline in the number of teenagers in the labor for of 126,000. That contributed to the decline but it contributed less than the decline in the number of adult men in the labor force.
Men aged twenty and over saw their labor force participation rate decline from 70.1 to 69.9. While smaller in percentage terms than the teenage decline, it was larger in absolute terms because it represented a 183,000 decline in participation. As a result, grown men contributed more than teenagers to the decline in the participation rate. The data show that men aged twenty-five to thirty-four saw their labor force participation drop by 136,000, for a decline from 88.9 to 88.3.