Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

New-job postings slip to 7 million

September count tops jobless total

- Informatio­n for this article was contribute­d by Alex Tanzi of Bloomberg News.

WASHINGTON — The number of jobs posted by U.S. employers declined slightly in September but still exceeded the number of unemployed Americans and remained near a two-decade high.

The report Tuesday from the Labor Department provided the latest evidence that many U.S. companies are straining to fill jobs in the face of a robust job market with low unemployme­nt.

The department said job openings declined 4 percent to roughly 7 million, still close to the highest levels on records dating to December 2000. The number of openings far exceeded the roughly 6 million people who were unemployed in September.

The number of available jobs, in fact, has topped the number of unemployed for six straight months. Steadily strong hiring has lowered the U.S. unemployme­nt rate to a nearly five-decade low of 3.7 percent.

And wages have begun picking up. Average hourly pay rose 3.1 percent in October from a year earlier, the fastest year-over-year gain since 2009, the year the recession ended.

Even with the dip in job openings in September, hiring remains robust. In October, U.S. employers added a strong 250,000 jobs, the gov-

ernment reported last week.

In September, the number of people who quit their jobs was essentiall­y unchanged at around 3.6 million, a record high. A high number of people quitting their jobs is typically an encouragin­g sign: Most people quit when they have another job lined up or are confident they can find one.

Tuesday’s figures come from the government’s Job Openings and Labor Turnover survey, which tracks the number of openings, quits and hires. They showed several industries with a particular abundance of openings: Trade, transporta­tion and utilities; profession­al and business

services, which include many higher-paying positions in engineerin­g, accounting and architectu­re, as well as temporary help; education and health services; health care and social assistance; and hospitalit­y and leisure.

A slight pickup in inflation has eroded some of the value of higher pay. And a stormrelat­ed drop in average wages a year ago, resulting from Hurricane Harvey, helped inflate October’s average hourly pay gain.

Still, a broadening rise in wages suggests that the benefits of a healthy economy have been rippling out to more people. A more dynamic job market, with more people quitting and finding new work, typically helps produce higher pay.

With the economy growing at a brisk pace and consumers spending freely, employers are generally optimistic about customer demand and want to hire more.

Employers hired about 5.7 million people in September, down slightly from 5.9 million in August. The new hiring was close to record levels, partly reflecting population growth. The percentage of the workforce that found jobs in September slipped to 3.8 percent from 4 percent in August.

The Dallas-Fort Worth-Arlington metropolit­an statistica­l area created the most jobs since President Donald Trump took office in 2017, according to a review of metro area employment data from the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics. Dallas was followed by Boston, Atlanta and Houston

respective­ly. The top six areas, which have created more than 100,000 jobs each, are rounded out by Phoenix and Los Angeles. In 18 MSA’s, job growth increased by more than 50,000.

The number of people employed has fallen in 73 metro area with the biggest declines coming in Youngstown and Toledo, Ohio at 6,980 and 6,712 respective­ly.

Aside from areas in Puerto Rico, the metro areas with the sharpest decline in the unemployme­nt rate are Rockford, Ill.; El Centro, Calif.; and Farmington, N.M. The unemployme­nt rate in 17 areas has risen over the past 20 months, most notably in the Colorado areas of Pueblo, Colorado Springs and Boulder.

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