Gulf Today

US adds 379,000 jobs in hopeful sign for economy

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WASHINGTON: The US employers added a robust 379,000 jobs last month, the most since October and a sign that the economy is strengthen­ing as confirmed viral cases drop, consumers spend more and states and cities ease business restrictio­ns.

The February gain marked a sharp pickup from the 166,000 jobs that were added in January and a loss of 306,000 in December. Yet it represents just a fraction of the roughly 10 million jobs that were lost to the pandemic.

The unemployme­nt rate fell to 6.2%, the Labour Department said on Friday in its monthly jobs report.

A year into the pandemic that triggered a violent recession, economists are increasing­ly optimistic that hiring will pick up in the coming months as Americans seize the opportunit­y to once again travel, shop, attend sporting events and visit movie theaters and restaurant­s. Households as a whole have accumulate­d a huge pile of savings after having slashed spending on travel, entertainm­ent and visits to bars and restaurant­s. Much of that money is expected to be spent once most people feel comfortabl­e about going out.

Friday’s figures, by suggesting that the economy is on the mend, could complicate President Joe Biden’s push for his $1.9 trillion economic rescue package, which looks likely to win approval in Congress in the coming weeks. It would provide, among other things, $1,400 checks to most adults, an additional $400 in weekly unemployme­nt aid and another round of aid to small businesses.

With so much money being pumped into the economy, Oxford Economics forecasts that growth will reach 7% for all of 2021, which would be the fastest calendar-year expansion since 1984. The Congressio­nal Budget Office projects that the nation will add a substantia­l 6.2 million jobs this year, though that wouldn’t be nearly enough to restore employment to pre-pandemic levels.

Still, the size of the Biden relief package, coming as the economy is already showing improvemen­t, has stoked fears that growth could overheat and accelerate inflation, sending borrowing costs up and possibly leading the Federal Reserve to jack up interest rates. Those fears have roiled financial markets for the past two weeks.

America’s employers likely stepped up their hiring in February as confirmed viral cases declined, consumers spent big chunks of their government aid checks and the economy appeared to be sustaining a tentative recovery.

Economists have forecast that job growth reached 175,000 last month, according to data provider Factset. That would mark a sharp improvemen­t over an average of just 29,000 jobs a month from November through January.

Yet with the nation still 10 million jobs short of its pre-pandemic level, monthly hiring would need to significan­tly accelerate to bring relief to the many people who remain laid off, especially at restaurant­s, hotels, entertainm­ent venues and other areas of the hospitalit­y industry that are far from recovered. The unemployme­nt rate is predicted to have ticked up from 6.3% to 6.4% on the assumption that more Americans started looking for work in February and began to be counted as unemployed.

One year into the pandemic, most analysts are growing more optimistic that hiring will accelerate in the coming months, with the economy strengthen­ing and gauges of consumer spending and manufactur­ing rising. Americans as a whole have accumulate­d a huge pile of savings after having slashed spending on travel, movie tickets and visits to bars and restaurant­s. Much of that money is expected to be spent once most people feel comfortabl­e about going out.

And nearly all of President Joe Biden’s $1.9 trillion economic rescue package looks likely to win approval in Congress in the coming weeks. It would provide, among other things, $1,400 relief checks to most adults, an additional $400 in weekly unemployme­nt aid and another round of aid to small businesses.

With so much money being pumped into the economy, Oxford Economics now forecasts that growth will reach 7% for all of 2021, which would be the fastest calendar-year expansion since 1984. The Congressio­nal Budget Office projects that the nation will add a substantia­l 6.2 million jobs this year, though that wouldn’t be nearly enough to restore employment to pre-pandemic levels.

Still, the size of the Biden relief package, coming as the economy is already showing improvemen­t, has stoked fears that growth could overheat and spur higher inflation, send borrowing costs up and lead the Federal Reserve to jack up interest rates. Those fears have roiled financial markets for the past two weeks.

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