New York Daily News

Slow job growth in September shows persistenc­e of virus

- THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

WASHINGTON — U.S. employers added just 194,000 jobs in September, a second straight tepid gain and evidence that the pandemic has kept its grip on the economy, with many companies struggling to fill millions of open jobs.

Friday’s report from the Labor Department also showed that the unemployme­nt rate sank last month from 5.2% to 4.8%. The rate fell in part because more people found jobs but also because about 180,000 fewer people looked for work in September, which meant they weren’t counted as unemployed.

September’s sluggish job gains fell shy of even the modest 336,000 that the economy had added in August and the fewest since December, when employers actually cut jobs.

The economy is showing some signs of emerging from the drag of the delta variant of the coronaviru­s, with confirmed new COVID-19 infections declining, restaurant traffic picking up slightly and consumers willing to spend. But new infections remained high as September began and employers are still struggling to find workers because many people who lost jobs in the pandemic have yet to start looking again. It’s confounded many economists, since job openings are at a record high.

Supply chain bottleneck­s have also worsened, slowing factories, restrainin­g homebuilde­rs and emptying some store shelves.

The shortages have boosted inflation to its highest levels in three decades.

Many economists expect that as COVID recedes further and Americans resume traveling, eating out and seeing movies, more people will reenter the workforce, and hiring will strengthen.

“This report is a look in the rear-view mirror,” said Daniel Zhao, senior economist at the jobs website Glassdoor, “and hopefully this means the worst is behind us, and the worst was just a slowdown in the recovery.”

Economists had expected September to produce robust job growth as schools reopened, thereby freeing parents, especially working mothers, to return to jobs. Several enhanced unemployme­nt benefit programs had expired Sept. 6, potentiall­y providing incentives for more people to seek work. And, before delta intensifie­d, many companies had planned to return to working in offices, which would have revitalize­d still-dormant downtowns.

Instead, as a result of the delta variant, many office buildings remain vacant and fears of the disease rebounded. A Census Bureau survey found that the number of people not working because they had COVID or were caring for someone with the disease doubled between July and early September. COVID outbreaks have temporaril­y closed some schools, making it harder for many mothers to hold down permanent jobs.

Many business owners and Republican political leaders argued that the extra $300-a-week benefit was discouragi­ng some people from seeking jobs because they could receive more money from unemployme­nt aid. So far, though, the ending of those programs appears to have had little effect on the number of people looking for work.

Economists still think that most of the roughly 3 million people who lost jobs and stopped looking for work since the pandemic struck will resume their searches as COVID wanes.

It took years after the 20082009 recession, they note, for the proportion of people working or seeking work to return to prerecessi­on levels.

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