Antelope Valley Press

US added 431,000 jobs in March

- By PAUL WISEMAN AP Economics Writer

America’s employers extended a streak of robust hiring, in March, adding 431,000 jobs in a sign of the economy’s resilience in the face of a still-destructiv­e pandemic, Russia’s war against Ukraine and the highest inflation in 40 years.

The government’s report, Friday, showed that last month’s job growth helped shrink the unemployme­nt rate to 3.6%. That’s the lowest rate since the pandemic erupted two years ago and just above the half-century low of 3.5% that was reached two years ago.

Despite the inflation surge, persistent supply bottleneck­s, damage from COVID-19 and now a war in Europe, employers have added at least 400,000 jobs for 11 straight months. In its report, the government also sharply revised up its estimate of hiring, in January and February, by a combined 95,000 jobs.

The job growth, in March, though solid, was the lowest since September and slightly below what economists had expected. Still, Vincent Reinhart, chief economist at Dreyfus and Mellon, said the numbers show that “the US economy continues to have underlying momentum and that firms are taking workers when they can.”

The March report sketched a bright picture of the job market, with steady hiring and rising wages. Average hourly pay has risen a strong 5.6% over the past 12 months, welcome news for employees across the economy. For leisure and hospitalit­y workers, including people who work in hotels, restaurant­s and bars, average pay has jumped 11.8% from a year earlier — “a clear sign that employers are desperate for staff,” said Saru Jayaraman, president of One Fair Wage, which advocates for better pay and conditions for service employees.

For most workers, though, pay raises aren’t keeping up with the spike in inflation that has put the Federal Reserve on track to raise rates multiple times, perhaps aggressive­ly, in the coming months. Those rate hikes will result in costlier loans for many consumers and businesses. In the meantime, worker pay raises, a response in many cases to labor shortages, are themselves feeding the economy’s inflation pressures.

The steady job growth has failed to buoy President Joe Biden’s flagging popularity, with the gains overshadow­ed in the public’s mind by chronicall­y high inflation. With Russia’s invasion of Ukraine driv- ing oil and gasoline prices higher, Biden has announced plans to release a million barrels of oil daily from the US strategic reserve for the next six months.

Since the pandemic struck, in 2020, many Americans have remained on the sidelines of the job market, a trend that has contribute­d to the worker shortage in many industries. But in an encouragin­g sign for the economy, 418,000 people began looking for a job in March, and many found one. Over the past year, 3.8 million people have rejoined the labor force, meaning they now either have a job or are looking for one.

Across the economy, hiring gains were widespread last month. Restaurant­s and bars added 61,000 jobs, retailers 49,000, manufactur­ers 38,000 and hotels 25,000. Constructi­on jobs rose by 19,000 and have now returned to their pre-pandemic level.

 ?? ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? A “now hiring” sign is posted in Garnet Valley, Pa., May 10.
ASSOCIATED PRESS A “now hiring” sign is posted in Garnet Valley, Pa., May 10.

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