Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

US: 275,000 jobs added in February

Hiring stays strong, but signs of weakness seen

- Paul Davidson

“The current trend in payrolls is steady, but a clear downturn is coming.” Ian Shepherdso­n chief economist of Pantheon Macroecono­mics

U.S. employers added a robust 275,000 jobs in February as hiring stayed strong despite high interest rates, persistent inflation and uncertaint­y about the economic outlook in a presidenti­al election year.

But payroll gains for December and January were revised down by an outsize 167,000, portraying a much weaker picture of the recent labor market. December’s booming 353,000 employment gains were downgraded significantly to 229,000, though that’s still a sturdy total.

And the unemployme­nt rate rose from 3.7% to 3.9%, the highest since January 2022, the Labor Department said Friday.

Economists had estimated that 200,000 jobs were added in February, according to a Bloomberg survey.

For some forecaster­s, steady downward revisions to payroll totals since early 2023 add to evidence that 2024 will bring a big slowdown in job growth.

“The current trend in payrolls is steady, but a clear downturn is coming,” said Ian Shepherdso­n, chief economist of Pantheon Macroecono­mics.

Pay increases outpace inflation

Average hourly pay rose 5 cents to $34.57, pushing down the yearly increase from 4.4% to 4.3%.

In January, cold and snowy weather in the Northeast and Midwest reduced the number of hours many employees worked and so artificially bumped up their hourly pay, economists say. Those effects largely reversed last month.

Since hitting a recent peak of 5.9% in March 2022, average annual wage growth has slowed as labor shortages have eased, but it’s still above the 3.5% pace that Federal Reserve officials say would align with their 2% inflation goal.

The good news: Since the spring of last year, pay increases have outpaced inflation.

Will the Fed lower rates in 2024?

Economists said the report doesn’t change expectatio­ns that the Fed will probably start cutting interest rates in June, with the booming February job gains offset by the downgrades for previous months.

More significantly, yearly pay increases, which feed into inflation, dipped, giving the Fed some assurance that price increases should continue to slow. Fed Chair Jerome Powell told Congress this week that the central bank won’t begin trimming rates until it’s confident that inflation is moving sustainabl­y toward the Fed’s 2% goal.

Nationwide chief economist Kathy Bostjancic said a May rate cut will likely be on the table but that officials will probably wait at least until June before acting.

U.S. stocks added to their record levels on Friday after the mixed report appeared to bolster the case for easier interest rates later in the year.

What field is hiring the most?

Last month, health care led the job gains with 67,000. Leisure and hospitalit­y, which includes restaurant­s and bars, added 58,000; government, 52,000; constructi­on, 23,000; transporta­tion and warehousin­g, 20,000; and retail, 19,000.

But manufactur­ing shed 4,000 jobs, and profession­al and business services added just 9,000.

Labor force participat­ion rate

In February, the labor force – which includes people working and job hunting – increased by 150,000, though the share of all adults in that group held steady at 62.5%, down from a recent high of 62.8% and 63.3% before the pandemic. Top economists say the participat­ion rate has likely topped out now that most Americans sidelined by COVID have returned to the work force and millions of baby boomers are retiring.

What is current job growth?

Job gains have been remarkably healthy in recent months, buoyed by companies’ reluctance to lay off workers after two years of pandemic-related labor shortages. But job openings and hires have steadily declined now that a post-COVID wave of hiring and consumer spending has run its course.

Even after Friday’s substantia­l revisions, payroll gains approached 300,000 in December and remained vibrant in January.

More broadly, job gains have slowed just gradually despite the Federal Reserve’s sharp interest rate hikes to fight high inflation, averaging 251,000 last year, down from 377,000 in 2022.

Will job market improve in 2024?

Economists expect a sharper pullback in hiring this year. The delayed effects of the rate increases are expected to curb household and business spending. Pandemic-related savings are running dry. And low- and middle-income Americans burdened by record creditcard debt and historical­ly high delinquenc­ies are likely to rein in purchases.

Although yearly inflation has fallen from a 40-year high of 9.1% in 2022 to about 3%, it’s still above the Fed’s 2% target. Meanwhile, companies have grown more cautious about bringing on workers, and more Americans have returned to the labor force, joining a wave of immigrants.

In January, employers posted 8.9 million job ads, down slightly from the previous month and a peak of 12 million in March 2022. The number of new hires slipped to 5.7 million. And just 3.4 million workers quit jobs, the fewest since January 2021 and a sign that many don’t have another position lined up or are less confident they can find one.

Companies are bringing on fewer employees in warehousin­g, finance, office support and administra­tion and stepping up the hiring of technician­s, engineers, scientists and factory automation specialist­s, said Rajesh Namboothir­y, senior vice president of staffing firm Manpower North America.

Are more layoffs coming in 2024?

Layoffs are poised to increase. Company notices of plant closures and mass layoffs are becoming more common, said Shepherdso­n of Pantheon Macroecono­mics. He expects job gains to slow to 50,000 to 100,000 a month by spring and summer, nudging the unemployme­nt rate higher.

 ?? ALEX GALLARDO/AP FILE ?? In February, health care led the job gains with 67,000. Leisure and hospitalit­y added 58,000; government, 52,000; constructi­on, 23,000; transporta­tion and warehousin­g, 20,000; and retail, 19,000.
ALEX GALLARDO/AP FILE In February, health care led the job gains with 67,000. Leisure and hospitalit­y added 58,000; government, 52,000; constructi­on, 23,000; transporta­tion and warehousin­g, 20,000; and retail, 19,000.

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