Arab Times

US job openings dip in May as quits reach 17-year high

Interest rates highest in decade at weekly Treasury auction

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WASHINGTON, July 10, (AP): Businesses advertised fewer jobs in May than the previous month, but the tally of open positions outnumbere­d the ranks of the unemployed for only the second time in the past two decades.

The Labor Department also says the proportion of workers quitting their jobs reached the highest level since April 2001. Quits are seen as a positive sign that workers are confident they can find another job. Most people who quit do so for higher-paying positions.

The figures reflect a strong job market driven by optimistic employers seeking to expand their workforces. Last week’s jobs report showed that businesses hired workers at a healthy pace and the unemployme­nt rate remained very low, at 4 percent.

There were 6.64 million available jobs in May, but just 6 million unemployed people.

Meanwhile, the proportion of American workers that quit their jobs in May reached the highest level in 17 years, a sign that more people are confident they can find a new job, likely at higher pay.

Businesses also advertised fewer jobs in May than the previous month, but the tally of open positions outnumbere­d the ranks of the unemployed for only the second time in the past two decades, the Labor Department said Tuesday.

The figures reflect a strong job market driven by optimistic employers seeking to expand their workforces. Last week’s jobs report showed that businesses hired workers at a healthy pace and the unemployme­nt rate remained very low, at 4 percent.

The percentage of workers quitting their jobs reached 2.4 percent in May, the highest level since April 2001. More quits are a sign of a strong job market because workers typically leave jobs for a new one that pays more. Workers who switch jobs see larger raises than those who stay in the same position, government data shows.

There were 6.64 million available jobs in May, down 3 percent from April’s figure of 6.84 million, which was the most in the nearly two decades that records have been kept. At the same time, there were just 6 million unemployed people in May.

Nick Bunker, an economist at the job-listing website Indeed, calculates that there are now just 0.91 unemployed workers for each available job, also the lowest on record.

The need to compete for such a small pool of workers should force companies to raise pay in order to fill their open jobs, yet pay gains remain modest.

Meanwhile, interest rates on shortterm US Treasury bills rose in Monday’s auction to their highest levels in a decade.

The Treasury Department auctioned $48 billion in three-month bills at a discount rate of 1.945 percent, up from 1.940 percent last week. Another $42 billion in sixmonth bills was auctioned at a discount rate of 2.100 percent, up from 2.085 percent last week.

 ??  ?? Trader Michael Capolino works on the floor of the New York Stock Exchange, Tuesday, on July 10. Energy and industrial companies are leading stocks higher in early trading on Wall Street following three straight days
of gains for the market. (AP)
Trader Michael Capolino works on the floor of the New York Stock Exchange, Tuesday, on July 10. Energy and industrial companies are leading stocks higher in early trading on Wall Street following three straight days of gains for the market. (AP)

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