Houston Chronicle

U.S. job openings drop; still too high for Fed

- By Augusta Saraiva

Vacancies at U.S. employers retreated at the start of the year but remained historical­ly elevated, highlighti­ng persistent labor tightness that supports a higher level of interest rates from the Federal Reserve.

The number of available positions decreased to 10.8 million in January from an upwardly revised 11.2 million a month earlier, the Labor Department’s Job Openings and Labor Turnover Survey, or JOLTS, showed Wednesday. The median estimate in a Bloomberg survey of economists called for 10.5 million openings.

The JOLTS release included the agency’s annual revision of monthly data back to January 2018. Almost every reading of job openings in the past year was revised higher, including a new record of 12 million in March 2022.

Despite the drop, the report highlights robust demand for workers that’s far in excess of supply, which has put upward pressure on wages and therefore inflation.

Fed Chair Jerome Powell spoke to the imbalance in testimony before the Senate on Tuesday, saying that the central bank could raise rates higher and potentiall­y faster than previously thought should economic data continue to come in strong. He spoke again before the House on Wednesday.

Officials will be particular­ly tuned into the government jobs report on Friday, which is forecast to show strong hiring in February and the unemployme­nt rate holding at a 53-year low. A separate report out earlier Wednesday showed U.S. companies added more jobs than expected last month, according to ADP.

Job openings decreased in constructi­on, accommodat­ion and food services as well as finance and insurance. Meantime, vacancies rose in transporta­tion, warehousin­g and utilities; and nondurable goods manufactur­ing jobs like chemicals, clothing and food processing.

The biggest decline in openings was at companies employing between 50 and 249 staff. Vacancies rose the most among businesses with less than 10 employees.

The ratio of openings to unemployed people edged down to 1.9 in January from 2 in the prior month, which matched a record high. It was around 1.2 before the pandemic.

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