National Post

U.S. private payroll growth stalls

- Lucia Mutikani

• U. S. private employers hired far fewer workers than expected in July as companies exhausted loans to help with wages and new COVID- 19 infections flared up across the country, supporting the view that the nascent economic recovery was faltering.

The ADP National Employment Report on Wednesday showed private payrolls increased by 167,000 jobs last month after jumping by 4.314 million in June. Economists polled by Reuters had forecast private payrolls would increase by 1.5 million in July.

Hiring weakened across the board last month. Payrolls for medium-sized businesses with 50 to 499 employees fell 25,000. The ADP report is jointly developed with Moody’s Analytics.

“Today’s data is a cautionary tale that the jobs market is not going to kick into higher gear until there is a vaccine,” said Mark Zandi, chief economist at Moody’s Analytics.

Zandi attributed the sharp step- down in private payrolls to the expiration of the U. S. government’s Paycheck Protection Program ( PPP) and the resurgence in coronaviru­s cases.

The PPP was part of a historic fiscal package worth nearly US$ 3 trillion that gave businesses loans that can be partially forgiven if used for employee pay. New cases of the respirator­y illness have exploded, especially in the densely populated South and West regions where authoritie­s in hard-hit areas are closing businesses again and pausing reopenings.

California, Texas and Florida account for a third of the nation’s employment. The economy suffered its biggest blow since the Great Depression in the second quarter, with gross domestic product shrinking at its steepest pace in at least 73 years. It slipped into recession in February.

Stocks on Wall Street opened higher as Disney’s surprise quarterly profit and a slate of upbeat results from health-care companies lifted sentiment. The dollar fell against a basket of currencies. U. S. Treasury prices were trading lower.

The ADP report was published ahead of the government’s more comprehens­ive employment report for July scheduled for release on Friday.

While the ADP report has a poor track record forecastin­g the private payrolls component of the government’s employment report because of methodolog­y difference­s, the decline in job growth last month was in line with a recent pickup in new applicatio­ns for state unemployme­nt benefits.

A survey from the Institute for Supply Management on Monday showed a measure of factory employment contracted in July for the 12th straight month even as manufactur­ing activity accelerate­d to a 16-month high.

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