Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

US hiring surges, but the variant is the wild card

- Paul Wiseman

WASHINGTON – U.S. employers added 943,000 jobs in July and drove the unemployme­nt rate down to 5.4% in another sign the economy is bouncing back with surprising vigor from COVID-19. But there is growing fear the fast-spreading delta variant will set back the recovery.

The worry is that the resurgent virus could discourage people from going out and spending and trigger another round of shutdowns or other restrictio­ns.

“That is a definite downside risk,” said Rubeela Farooqi, chief U.S. economist at High Frequency Economics. “The risk is from a more cautious consumer, if they don’t want to engage in outside activities. … You’re also hearing about big companies that are delaying a return to work. That might be something that slows things down.”

The Labor Department collected its data for the report in mid-July before the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention last week reversed course and recommende­d that even vaccinated people resume wearing masks indoors in places where the variant is pushing infections up.

Still, the July numbers looked good. They exceeded economists’ forecast of more than 860,000 new jobs. Encouraged by their prospects, 261,000 Americans returned to the job market in July. And the unemployme­nt rate fell from 5.9% in June.

Moreover, the report found that as customers come back and businesses scramble to find workers, they are raising wages: Average hourly earnings were up 4% last month from a year earlier.

The Labor Department also revised its jobs numbers for May and June, adding 119,000 jobs.

The economy lost over 22 million jobs in March and April 2020 in a practicall­y overnight recession as the coronaviru­s forced businesses to shut down and people to stay home. Since then, the U.S. has recovered nearly 17 million jobs, meaning it is still almost 6 million short.

“If the pace of hiring over the last three months continues, all jobs lost due to the pandemic would be regained in seven months,” Leslie Preston, senior economist at TD Economics, wrote in a research report.

 ?? NAM Y. HUH/AP FILE ?? The 943,000 added jobs exceeded economists’ forecast of more than 860,000 new jobs, driving the unemployme­nt rate down to 5.4%.
NAM Y. HUH/AP FILE The 943,000 added jobs exceeded economists’ forecast of more than 860,000 new jobs, driving the unemployme­nt rate down to 5.4%.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States