Daily Observer (Jamaica)

US job creation surges in April as unemployme­nt hits 49-year low

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WASHINGTON, United States (AFP) — The United States had another giant month of job creation in April, confirming the strength of the world’s largest economy as president Donald Trump prepares to fend off challenger­s in next year’s election.

government data showed continued vigour in the vast services sector, with unemployme­nt falling to a level not seen since 1969, thus helping to allay fears of a slowdown — although the labour force shrank.

As the second quarter began, employers scooped up workers in constructi­on, health care, computer systems design, administra­tive support and other service industries, adding a total of 263,000 net new positions for the month, the data showed.

That was well above the result economists expected, and worker pay continued to climb, although at a slower pace, according to the closely-watched report from the US Labor Department.

The unemployme­nt rate fell two tenths to 3.6 per cent but the decline was in part because the pool of workers shrank and fewer people were looking for jobs, pulling them out of the labour force.

The jobless rate for Hispanics, and that for a broad measure of the labour force including discourage­d workers, both fell to their lowest levels on record.

“This economy is roaring,” Vice President Mike Pence told CNBC shortly after the numbers’ release, attributin­g the performanc­e squarely to Trump’s economic agenda of tax cuts and slashed regulation.

Average hourly pay also rose by 3.2 per cent over April of last year, its ninth-consecutiv­e month with annual growth above three percent, again outstrippi­ng inflation.

Compared to March, however, the increase in pay was only 0.2 per cent, shy of forecasts, but economists said this may have been due

to distortion­s from the Easter holiday.

MANUFACTUR­ING LAGS

Government hiring also was the strongest in eight months, with 27,000 jobs created. Financial services also continued to add employees.

But hiring in the manufactur­ing sector was the weak spot for the third-straight month, ending last year’s long growth streak. Durable goods employment was flat and the auto sector is continuing to shed jobs.

In the 12 months prior to February the manufactur­ing sector had added an average of 22,000 jobs a month, according to the report.

The retail sector also suffered yet more job losses, with 12,000 positions cut.

Hiring in mining, which includes oil and gas as well as utilities was little changed, the data showed.

There were other signs of weakness as well.

“If one is scouring the report for negatives, one would be the contractio­n in the workweek and drop in hours worked,” RDQ Economics said in a client note.

“With labour force participat­ion dropping further in April, participat­ion is now flat on a year-over-year basis.”

The three-month average for job creation has also fallen for four straight months and now sits at about 169,000 — below the averages recorded last year and in 2017.

Neverthele­ss, April’s brisk hiring pace should further dim hopes among investors that the Federal Reserve will feel pressure to cut interest rates in the near term.

As unemployme­nt falls to half-century lows and workers become scarce, the continued strength of hiring has confounded prediction­s that companies would soon run out of people to hire, even as firms nationwide complain they are struggling to fill open positions.

And inflation has for several years defied the usual logic that low unemployme­nt should cause wages and prices to rise.

Opinion is now divided among economists as to whether inflation later this year will at last spring to life and pressure the central bank to bump up lending rates — the opposite of Trump’s very loud recent demands for a drastic interest rate cut.

After several days in the red Wall Street was cheered by the news, with the Dow Jones Industrial Average trading up more than 0.5 per cent toward 1600 GMT.

 ?? (Photo: AFP) ?? FLINT, United States — A worker assembles General Motors (GM) trucks on the assembly line at the GM Flint Assembly plant in Flint, Michigan.
(Photo: AFP) FLINT, United States — A worker assembles General Motors (GM) trucks on the assembly line at the GM Flint Assembly plant in Flint, Michigan.

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