The Manila Times

US hiring, manufactur­ing recover

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WASHINGTON, D. C.: US industries hit hard by the coronaviru­s pandemic showed signs of life in June, with private firms hiring more than two million workers and the manufactur­ing sector starting to recover, according to new data released Wednesday.

The reports underscore­d the benefits of the recent easing of restrictiv­e measures imposed to stop the virus from spreading, even as a surge in cases across the United States raises concerns that many businesses will have to shut down again.

Private firms hired 2.4 million workers in June, according to data from payroll services firm ADP. Combined with the three million hires in May it means a quarter of the 20 million people who lost jobs in March and April due to the pandemic have returned to work.

Separately, the Institute for Supply Management's (ISM) manufactur­ing index jumped to 52.6 percent in June, showing a return to growth as parts of the industry rebounded at unheard-of rates.

However, the manufactur­ing sector is recovering from the weak levels caused by Covid-19, while the private sector hiring was more than a million jobs short of what economists had expected. With more than 40,000 new US coronaviru­s cases reported every day and some states reinstatin­g lockdown measures, analysts fear the recent progress could be reversed.

"We're happy that manufactur­ing activity appears to have risen in June, but a full recovery is a long way off, and we're worried about the risk of a temporary relapse in the face of the second Covid wave," Ian Shepherdso­n of Pantheon Macroecono­mics said.

More than two-thirds of the new private sector jobs were in small businesses of less than 50 workers, which added 937,000 positions last month, the data showed. And 961,000 were in leisure and hospitalit­y—a sector almost entirely shut down by the efforts to contain Covid-19.

Ahu Yildirmaz, vice president and co-head of the ADP Research Institute, said the payroll data showed a "significan­t rebound" in employment, particular­ly in sectors hardest-hit by the shutdowns.

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