Saskatoon StarPhoenix

U.S. adds 200,000 jobs as expansion nears decade

Employers accelerate hiring pace despite possibilit­y of crushing global trade war

- JOSH BOAK

WASHINGTON U.S. employers kept up a brisk hiring pace in June by adding 213,000 jobs in a sign of confidence despite the start of a potentiall­y punishing trade war with China.

At the same time, the unemployme­nt rate rose to 4 per cent from 3.8 per cent, the government said Friday, as more people began looking for a job and not all of them found one.

On the same day that the Trump administra­tion began imposing tariffs on US$34 billion in Chinese imports and Beijing hit back with tariffs on the same amount of U.S. goods, the job gain showed that the 9-year-old U.S. economic expansion — the second-longest on record — remains on firm footing.

Still, average hourly pay rose just 2.7 per cent in June from 12 months earlier, meaning that after adjusting for inflation, wages remain nearly flat. The low jobless rate has yet to force employers to offer higher wages in order to fill job openings.

One reason that some employers may not be feeling pressure to raise wages is that more people are beginning to look for work, thereby keeping up the pool of job applicants: The ranks of unemployed people seeking jobs jumped by 499,000 in June, which caused the unemployme­nt rate to rise from its previous 18-year low.

Manufactur­ers added 36,000 jobs last month; the education and health sector added 54,000. But retailers shed 21,600 jobs, with the losses concentrat­ed at general merchandis­e stores.

In its report Friday, the government revised up its estimate of job growth in May and April by a combined 37,000.

Over the past three months, the economy has produced a robust average monthly job gain of 211,000.

The broader U.S. economy appears sturdy. Economists are forecastin­g that economic growth accelerate­d to an annual pace of roughly 4 per cent during the April-June quarter, about double the previous quarter’s pace.

Signs of strength have helped bolster hiring despite the difficulty many employers say they ’re having in finding enough qualified workers to fill jobs.

Manufactur­ers and services firms have said in recent surveys that their business is improving despite anxiety about the tariff showdown between the United States and China.

Housing starts have climbed 11 per cent so far this year. Retail sales jumped a strong 0.8 per cent in May in a sign that consumers feel secure enough to spend.

Though economic growth appears to be solid, the gains have been spread unevenly.

U.S. President Donald Trump’s tax cuts have provided a dose of stimulus this year, but the benefits have been tilted significan­tly toward wealthy individual­s and corporatio­ns.

Savings from the tax cuts enabled companies in the Standard & Poor’s 500 stock index to buy back a record number of shares in the first three months of 2018.

Yet the tax cuts have done little to generate substantia­l pay growth.

Most economists say they still think the low unemployme­nt rate will eventually force more employers to offer higher pay in order to fill jobs.

The economy also faces a substantia­l threat from the Trump administra­tion’s trade war with China and from other, ongoing trade disputes with U.S. allies, including Canada and Europe.

Any escalation in the conflict with China could disrupt hiring as companies grapple with higher import prices and diminished demand for their exports.

Trump has also spoken about slapping tariffs on imported cars, trucks and auto parts, which General Motors has warned could hurt the U.S. auto industry and drive up car prices.

Automakers added 12,000 jobs in June, but the tariffs could weigh on that industry ’s job growth in the coming months.

 ?? LYNNE SLADKY/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? A job fair in Florida. A private survey shows that American businesses added 213,000 workers in June, a sign of health and resilience for the U.S. labour market and economy.
LYNNE SLADKY/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS A job fair in Florida. A private survey shows that American businesses added 213,000 workers in June, a sign of health and resilience for the U.S. labour market and economy.

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