San Francisco Chronicle

Added jobs make Fed rate hike more likely

- By Christophe­r S. Rugaber

WASHINGTON — A second straight month of robust hiring pointed on Friday to an economy healthy enough for the Federal Reserve to raise interest rates next week and to signal the likelihood of additional rate hikes ahead.

Employers added 235,000 jobs in February, average paychecks rose and the unemployme­nt rate dipped to 4.7 percent from 4.8 percent, the Labor Department said.

February’s jobs report was the first to cover a full month under President Trump. During the presidenti­al campaign, Trump had cast doubt on the validity of the government’s jobs data, calling the unemployme­nt rate a “hoax.”

But just minutes after the report was released, Trump retweeted a news report touting the job growth.

Later in the day, his spokesman, Sean Spicer, quoted Trump as saying of the jobs reports: “They may have been phony in the past, but they are very real now,” a comment that incited laughter, including from

Spicer himself, during a press briefing.

The February report showed that more people began looking for jobs, an encouragin­g sign that they’ve grown confident about their prospects. Hiring was strong enough to absorb those new job seekers as well as some of the previously unemployed.

“It’s hard to find much to dislike in the February jobs report,” said Michael Feroli, an economist at JPMorgan Chase.

About a quarter of the job gains occurred in constructi­on, which added 58,000 jobs, the most in a decade. Unseasonab­ly warm weather probably inflated that figure, economists said. Last month was the second-warmest February since 1895, according to the Commerce Department.

Some economists cautioned that last month’s outsize job gains might be hard to sustain. If warm weather did help elevate constructi­on hiring in February, for example, it might also have the effect of subtractin­g from job growth that would normally occur in early spring.

“There will probably be some weather payback in March,” Ted Wieseman, an economist at Morgan Stanley, said in an email.

Mining, which includes oil and gas drilling, added 7,700 jobs last month, the most in nearly three years. Energy companies have increased drilling in response to higher oil prices, reversing nearly two years of job losses. Oil prices have dropped this week, though.

And as unemployme­nt declines, hiring typically slows as the pool of available workers shrinks. Many small businesses are complainin­g that they cannot find workers with the qualificat­ions they need. This trend could weigh on hiring in the coming months.

Stock prices fluctuated throughout the day Friday, and the Dow Jones industrial average closed up a modest 44 points.

The February jobs data probably provided the final piece of evidence the Fed needs to raise rates at its next policy meeting Wednesday, the third hike in 15 months.

In December, Fed policymake­rs forecast that they would raise rates three times this year. Economists said Friday’s hiring data increases the probabilit­y of additional rate hikes.

“There are few factors more important to consumers than jobs,” said Russell Price, an economist at Ameriprise Financial. “Overall, consumers are in great shape to support an accelerate­d pace of economic growth.”

Average hourly pay rose 2.8 percent from February 2016, a decent gain though slightly below historical averages. In a healthy economy, wages typically rise at a roughly 3.5 percent annual pace.

Though most of the job market’s scars from the recession have healed, some have not. The number of part-time workers who would prefer a full-time job but can’t find it remains nearly 25 percent above its level before the recession began in 2007.

That’s a big reason an alternate measure of unemployme­nt, which includes those involuntar­y part-time workers as well as people who have stopped looking for work, was 9.2 percent last month.

 ?? Doug Mills / New York Times ?? White House Press Secretary Sean Spicer, here at a January briefing, hailed the Friday report of 235,000 jobs created.
Doug Mills / New York Times White House Press Secretary Sean Spicer, here at a January briefing, hailed the Friday report of 235,000 jobs created.

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