Boston Herald

Job growth rises again in April

Unemployme­nt falls

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WASHINGTON — U.S. employers stepped up hiring modestly in April, and the unemployme­nt rate fell to 3.9 percent, evidence of the economy’s resilience amid the recent stock market chaos and anxieties about a possible trade war.

Job growth amounted to a decent 164,000 last month, up from an upwardly revised 135,000 in March, the Labor Department said yesterday. The unemployme­nt rate fell after having held at 4.1 percent for the prior six months largely because fewer people were searching for jobs.

The gains reflect an economy that has been steadily expanding for almost nine years, gradually putting more people to work after the country endured the worst financial meltdown since the Great Depression in the 1930s.

Many employers say it’s become difficult to find qualified workers. Even so, they haven’t significan­tly bumped up pay in most industries. Average hourly earnings rose 2.6 percent from a year ago.

The overall unemployme­nt rate remained, as in recent months, the lowest since December 2000. The rate for AfricanAme­ricans — 6.6 percent — is the lowest on record since 1972.

Many economists say the unemployme­nt rate is now so low that wage growth should begin to climb this summer, since employers will face more pressure to boost pay in order to hire workers.

“It’s just not sustainabl­e for average pay growth to be so low in a labor market this tight,” said Andrew Chamberlai­n, chief economist at the jobs site Glassdoor.

An encouragin­g sign for the economy is that the pace of hiring has yet to be disrupted by dramatic global market swings, a recent pickup in inflation or the risk that the tariffs being pushed by President Trump could provoke a trade war. Over the past three months, monthly job growth has averaged 208,000.

Much of the economy’s durability is due, in fact, to the healthy job market. The increase in people earning paychecks has bolstered demand for housing, even though fewer properties are being listed for sale. Consumer confidence has improved over the past year. And more people are shopping, with retail sales having picked up in March after three monthly declines.

Manufactur­ers added 24,000 workers last month, a sign that possible tariffs on steel, aluminum and Chinese goods haven’t altered hiring plans at most U.S. factories. Restaurant­s and hotels hired a net 18,000. The health care and social assistance sector added 29,300 jobs and the constructi­on industry 17,000.

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