The Borneo Post

Slowdown in wage gains muddies picture of tight job market in US

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JUST when the US labour market looked like it was getting tight, worker pay cheques are giving more of a mixed picture.

Data released on Friday showed employers added 227,000 jobs to payrolls in January, the most in four months and above the 163,000 average pace projected by economists for 2017. Average hourly earnings rose 2.5 per cent from a year ago, the weakest since August. The unemployme­nt rate ticked up to 4.8 per cent as the participat­ion rate increased.

Investors pared bets on the steepness of Federal Reserve interest-rate increases this year, as the figures suggested there’s more room than previously thought for the labour market to grow without feeding into inflation.

While the report represents the final figures under President Barack Obama, it indicates President Donald Trump could boost hiring and wages yet further as he plans tax cuts, infrastruc­ture investment and looser regulation.

“There’s still a very strong resistance from firms to pay higher wages,” said Scott Brown, St Petersburg, Florida-based chief economist for Raymond James Financial Inc. “There’s a gradual uptrend. You’re not seeing really rapid wage growth, but it’s sort of gradually creeping higher.”

Even so, the economy is “already in very good shape” and wage gains should still pick up over the course of the year, Brown said.

Trump said on Friday at a meeting of business leaders that he’s “very happy” about the January job numbers and attributed them to his plans to reduce taxes and regulation­s. The data probably mark a continuati­on of hiring during the Obama years and an early response to the rise in optimism since Trump’s election, Bloomberg Intelligen­ce economists led by Carl Riccadonna said in a note.

Other reports released on Friday provided additional signs of economic improvemen­t. US service industries continued to expand at a solid pace in January, while factory orders excluding transporta­tion equipment rose 2.1 per cent in December, the biggest increase in more than five years and partly a reflection of higher petroleum prices.

The gain in average hourly earnings over the 12 months ended in January fell short of the 2.7 per cent median forecast, despite any possible boost from minimum-wage hikes at the start of 2017. It followed a revised 2.8 per cent gain the prior month.

Compared with December, worker pay increased 0.1 per cent. Overall wage gains were depressed by a one per cent drop in earnings within financial industries.

The causes behind the unexpected­ly weak wage growth aren’t easily pinned down. While the government’s annual benchmarki­ng process might have had some trickle- down effect, the turning over of the calendar year also could share the blame. Bonus season probably results in some fluctuatio­n in reporting on pay, with businesses revising those increases back down when end-year plans changed.

 ??  ?? Workers stand on the assembly line for gas turbines at the General Electric energy plant in Greenville, South Carolina, on Jan 10. — WPBloomber­g photo by Luke Sharrett.
Workers stand on the assembly line for gas turbines at the General Electric energy plant in Greenville, South Carolina, on Jan 10. — WPBloomber­g photo by Luke Sharrett.

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