Weekend Gold Coast Bulletin

US adds 160,000 jobs

Employment market on solid footing

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THE US job market appears to be entering 2020 on a solid footing.

Economists expected the jobs report last night (Australian time) would show job gains of 160,000 in December, with the unemployme­nt rate holding steady at 3.5 per cent, according to the data provider FactSet.

But key in the report will be whether the decade-plus expansion causes average hourly earnings to climb above the 3.1 per cent annual gain seen in November as employers find themselves paying more to attract workers.

“We look for another strong gain in payrolls in December, although not as strong as November’s 266,000 surge,” said Rubeela Farooqi, chief US economist at High Frequency Economics.

The jump in hiring in November

was aided by the end of a strike by workers at General Motors that caused the number of manufactur­ing jobs to climb by 54,000.

Expectatio­ns for the employment report were amplified by a report on Wednesday from payroll processor ADP that showed private companies added 202,000 jobs in December.

Still, the ADP report often varies from the government’s more comprehens­ive surveys.

US employers added 1.98 million jobs through the first 11 months of 2019.

That’s a solid number, although hiring may slow because the number of unemployed people seeking work has fallen to 5.8 million, the lowest level since 2000.

With fewer unemployed people hunting for jobs, hiring might slow organicall­y.

The steady hiring growth during the expansion has contribute­d to gains in consumer spending.

Retail sales during the holiday shopping period improved 3.4 per cent compared to the prior year, according to Mastercard SpendingPu­lse.

But online shopping accounted for much of that increase as e-commerce sales rose nearly 19 per cent.

Retailers shed roughly 30,000 jobs in the 12 months to November because of this.

Manufactur­ing struggled last year because of trade tensions between the United States and China coupled with slower global economic growth.

Hiring in the sector has declined as a result.

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