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US Employment Slump Chart – How To

by Jon Peltier
Thursday, September 4th, 2008
Peltier Technical Services, Inc., Copyright © 2010.
Licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial-Share Alike 3.0 Unported License.

In US Employment Slump Chart I used a panel column chart to display the size of nonfarm sectors of the US workforce and the change in number of jobs in each sector. It is a panel chart even though the percent of workforce and job change panels are not separated by a line. The white space separates the panels sufficiently.

Employment Slump Chart

In a comment to that earlier post, Bob asked if I would show the steps required to create this chart. Bob, this Bud’s for you.

This is what I used for the chart data. I have separated the job change numbers in column C into negative and positive numbers in columns D and E.

Employment Slump Date

I selected A3:B15, held Ctrl while selecting C3:E15 so both areas were selected, and created a clustered bar chart with three series. The percentage of workforce bars don’t show up because their values are so much smaller than the job numbers.

Employment Slump Chart

I selected the percentage of workforce series by selecting a different series and clicking the arrow key once or twice, and moved the series to the secondary axis.

Employment Slump Chart

This gave me a secondary Y (value) axis for the percentage of workforce data. Note: the Y axis in a bar chart is the horizontal axis. I added the secondary category (X) axis. In Excel 2003 and earlier this is under Chart menu > Chart Options > Axes tab. In Excel 2007 it’s in the Chart Tools > Layout tab > Axes group.

Employment Slump Chart

I switched the positions of the primary and secondary value (Y) axis between the top and bottom of the chart. Format the primary category (X) axis (vertical axis toward the left) so the value axis crosses at the maximum category, and format the secondary category (X) axis (vertical axis on the right) so the value axis does not cross at the maximum category. This takes longer to type about than to actually do.

Employment Slump Chart

I moved the secondary category (X) axis to the left by formatting the secondary value (Y) axis (horizontal axis on the bottom) so the category axis did not cross at the maximum value.

Employment Slump Chart

I removed the secondary category (X) axis, since both axis groups used the same categories and it was redundant. Redundant is good for NASA, but here it adds clutter. The easiest way is to select the axis and press Delete.

Employment Slump Chart

Then I changed the category axis label position setting from Next to Axis to Low.

Employment Slump Chart

I picked axis scales that prevented overlap of the two panels of data. Read the values off the chart.

Employment Slump Chart

I used custom number formats to suppress the display of labels outside of the applicable panel. For the primary (top) value axis, I used a format of [>=-600000]#,##0,"K";;; so that only values greater than the minimum -600,000 would appear, and they would lose the last 000 in favor of K. For the secondary (bottom) axis I used a format of [<=20]0;;; so only values less than the maximum 20 would appear.

Employment Slump Chart

I did some touch up formatting of the bar series. I set the gap width to 100% (default is 150%) for both axis groups, and for the primary axis group I also set the overlap to 100% (default is 0%) so the bars lined up properly.

An Axis Group is the collection of all series on a particular axis. In this chart, the primary axis group contains the job loss and job gain series, while the secondary axis group contains the percentage of workforce series.

Employment Slump Chart

I added and positioned the primary and secondary category (X) axis titles, and the chart was complete.

Employment Slump Chart

To change the chart, all I have to do is sort by a different column.

Employment Slump Chart

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Comments


Comment from Tim Mayes
Time: Thursday, September 4, 2008, 2:30 pm

Jon, thanks for the explanation. I was searching for this after reading your post yesterday. It is a bit involved, but the result is definitely worth it. Nice job.


Comment from Jon Peltier
Time: Thursday, September 4, 2008, 2:51 pm

Tim -

It actually isn’t so involved. It takes a couple minutes, if you’re a little familiar with Excel charts and have done it once or twice.


Comment from Bob
Time: Thursday, September 4, 2008, 6:13 pm

Hi Jon,

Wow. Thanks for the tutorial. I would have thought you finessed the axis stuff with XY charts and dummy series to get it all to line up. Way off.

I will call this one the dance of the category axis… :)

I will open a Bud shortly.

Cheers,
Bob

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