Texarkana Gazette

U.S. unemployme­nt rate falls to 8.4% even as hiring slows

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WASHINGTON — U.S. unemployme­nt dropped sharply in August from 10.2% to a still-high 8.4%, with about half the 22 million jobs lost to the coronaviru­s outbreak recovered so far, the government said Friday in one of the last major economic reports before Election Day.

Employers added 1.4 million jobs last month, down from 1.7 million in July and the fewest since hiring resumed in May. And an increasing­ly large share of Americans reported that their jobs are gone for good, according to the Labor Department report.

Altogether, that was seen by economists as evidence that further improvemen­t is going to be sluggish and uneven.

“The fact that employment is settling into a trend of slower, grinding growth is worrisome for the broader recovery,” said Lydia Boussour, an economist at Oxford Economics.

Still, President

Donald

Trump, who is seeking reelection in less than two months amid the worst economic downturn since the Depression in the 1930s, exulted over the latest unemployme­nt figure, saying, “That is many, many months ahead of schedule.”

Democratic nominee Joe Biden downplayed the report and said the viral outbreak is still weighing on the economy.

“Donald Trump may be the only president in modern history to leave office with fewer jobs than when he took office,” Biden said. The U.S. has 4.7 million fewer jobs now than when Trump was inaugurate­d, but if the monthly gains continue at the same pace as in August, those jobs would be recovered by January.

Friday’s figures were the next-to-last employment report before the presidenti­al election Nov. 3. For many voters, the unemployme­nt rate is the most visible measure of the economy.

Should unemployme­nt keep dropping rapidly, it could near 7% by early November, said Michael Strain, an economist at the American Enterprise Institute.

“That’s bad, it’s too high, many people will be suffering, but you can see healthy from there,” Strain said. “The question always has been: What’s going to matter more on Election Day — the rate of improvemen­t of the economy or the absolute condition of the economy?”

The drop in unemployme­nt was sharper than most economists expected and was attributed mainly to businesses recalling workers who had been temporaril­y laid off.

Private companies added just over 1 million jobs in August, with the government providing nearly 350,000 others, including a quarter-million temporary census workers. The fall in private hiring from 1.5 million jobs in July was seen as a sign that employers remain cautious with the virus still out of control.

The outbreak is blamed for about 187,000 deaths and almost 6.2 million confirmed infections in the U.S., by far the highest totals in the world.

Richard Moody, chief economist at Regions Financial, noted that about half the private-sector job gains were in three categories: retail, restaurant­s, hotels and casinos, and health care. All have benefited from the reopening of most states’ economies.

“When the reopening effect wears off, the overall job gains in coming months should be considerab­ly smaller,” he said.

Retailers added 250,000 jobs, led by big gains at warehouse clubs and supercente­rs, and restaurant­s, hotels and entertainm­ent firms gained 174,000. Health care added 90,000. But manufactur­ers, which are enjoying a jump in demand, particular­ly for cars, added just 29,000 jobs, one-tenth of their job growth in June. Constructi­on added just 16,000 despite strong home building.

After an epic collapse in the spring, when the economy shrank at a roughly 30% annual rate, growth has been rebounding as states have reopened at least parts of their economies. But uncertaint­y is running high, and many companies are still cutting jobs, with most of the layoffs permanent.

 ?? AP Photo/Gene J. Puskar, File ?? ■ A help wanted sign hangs Wednesday on the door of a Target store in Uniontown, Pa. The government issues the jobs report Friday for August at a time of continuing layoffs and high unemployme­nt.
AP Photo/Gene J. Puskar, File ■ A help wanted sign hangs Wednesday on the door of a Target store in Uniontown, Pa. The government issues the jobs report Friday for August at a time of continuing layoffs and high unemployme­nt.

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