Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

JOB GROWTH slows but remains solid enough.

Payroll gains hit 155,000, miss forecast

- JIM PUZZANGHER­A

WASHINGTON — Job growth slowed significan­tly in November but still was solid, indicating the economy remains in good shape but IS not expanding so quickly that it will lead to sharply higher interest rates.

U.S. employers added 155,000 jobs last month, well below analyst expectatio­ns and a steep decline from October’s strong 237,000 figure, the Labor Department reported Friday.

Still, monthly job gains are averaging 206,000 this year, the best since 2015. Even the slower pace of 170,000 over the past three months is close to last year’s average of 182,000 and well above the amount needed to keep up with population growth.

The unemployme­nt rate remained at 3.7 percent, the lowest since 1969. Wages grew at a robust 3.1 percent in the 12 months that ended Nov. 30, matching the yearover-year pace from the previous month.

Michael Gapen, chief U.S. economist at Barclays Investment Bank, said the report showed that the labor market remained healthy.

“Solid employment growth, on average, is also keeping household income

growing at a decent clip,” he wrote in a research note.

Investors initially reacted positively Friday, seeing the report as adding to recent signals from Federal Reserve officials that they will slow their pace of interest-rate increases next year.

The Dow Jones industrial average was headed for an open that was down 200 points. That reversed after the report was released and the Dow was up modestly in early trading before turning negative. The Dow closed down 558 points, or 2.24 percent, at 24,388.95.

That downturn came after a turbulent Thursday session in which a steep decline based on trade concerns was eased by indication­s Fed policymake­rs were rethinking the projected path for a key interest rate.

“The stock market has been volatile the last few weeks and today’s strength in the employment data will go a long way to calming jittery investor fears,” said Chris Rupkey, chief financial economist at MUFG Union Bank in

New York.

Fed officials still are expected to nudge up their benchmark short-term rate later this month, the fourth small raise this year. But investors are anticipati­ng a pullback from a forecast of three more increases in 2019.

The recovery from the recession is approachin­g the longest in U.S. history and showing signs it has peaked after a boost this year from Republican tax cuts.

The economy grew at a 4.2 percent annual rate in the second quarter, the fastest since 2014. But the rate slowed to 3.5 percent in the third quarter as the initial stimulus from the tax cuts faded. Economists are forecastin­g the rate to slow further in the fourth quarter, to about 2.6 percent.

On Friday, the Business Roundtable — an organizati­on of chief executives of the nation’s largest companies — forecast the economy would grow at a 2.7 percent rate next year.

Jamie Dimon, chief executive of JPMorgan Chase & Co. and the trade group’s chairman, said Friday that he was not worried about the disappoint­ing jobs report.

“We’ve had some slightly weaker numbers this quarter

but that just might be a bump in the road,” he said.

The Business Roundtable’s economic outlook index declined for the third-straight time, although it remained high, as chief executives reported labor and material costs were their top cost pressures.

Those results reflect the strong jobs market, which is forcing companies to pay higher wages to lure and retain workers, as well as the spillover from the U.S. trade war with China.

The retaliator­y tariffs between the two countries is leading to rising costs for key materials.

Josh Bolten, the Roundtable’s president, said that “trade policy remains a noticeable head wind.”

The U.S. and China declared a 90-day truce in their trade war after President Donald Trump and Chinese President Xi Jinping met at the Group of 20 summit last weekend. But differing interpreta­tions of what was agreed to at the meeting began roiling financial markets on Monday.

Trump further inflamed the fears by declaring on Tuesday that he was “Tariff Man” and prepared to add

more if the China talks did not produce results.

Bolten said his group’s members were pleased that U.S. and Chinese officials were talking despite the challenges.

“Ninety days is a short time to address the large set and very complex set of problems that we face with China in the internatio­nal trading system,” he said.

Though it was not enough time to address all the problems between the two economic superpower­s, Bolten said “it’s a good start.”

In addition to November’s lower job growth, the Labor Department revised the figures for the previous two months down by a combined 12,000.

Hiring in the constructi­on industry fell off sharply, with the sector adding just 5,000 jobs after payrolls increased by 24,000 the previous month.

Leisure and hospitalit­y companies added just 15,000 jobs in November after an increase of 56,000 the previous month.

But manufactur­ers continued hiring at a solid pace, adding 27,000 net new jobs. That was an increase of 1,000 from October.

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