What Happens to 20Y+ Treasury (TLT) When the Labor Force Participation Rate Drops?
What happens when the labor force participation rate drops sharply? Implications for structural growth, unemployment measurement, and Fed policy.
How 20Y+ Treasury (TLT) Responds
Scenario Background
The labor force participation rate measures the percentage of the working-age population either employed or actively seeking work. A declining rate reduces the pool of available workers, which can tighten labor markets even if unemployment is rising. This creates ambiguity for policymakers: is low unemployment reflecting genuine strength, or masking workers who gave up looking?
Read full scenario analysis →Historical Context
Participation was 66.0% pre-2008 and fell to 62.3% by 2015 as millions exited the workforce. The COVID pandemic pushed participation to a low of 60.1% in April 2020, recovering slowly to 62.5-62.8% by 2024. Japan's participation rate tells an instructive longer-term story: its labor force has shrunk absolutely as participation failed to offset demographic decline, contributing to decades of low growth.
What to Watch For
- •Prime-age participation falling below 83%
- •Employment-to-population ratio declining alongside participation
- •Long-term unemployed rising as share of total
- •Social Security disability applications rising
- •Discouraged worker measures (U4, U5) rising
Other Assets When the Labor Force Participation Rate Drops
Other Scenarios Affecting 20Y+ Treasury (TLT)
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