Los Angeles Times

U.S. makes job, wage gains

Payrolls in January add 200,000 workers while average hourly pay increases 2.9% from a year earlier.

- By Don Lee

WASHINGTON — Wage gains unexpected­ly accelerate­d last month to the fastest pace in more than eight years, signaling that average workers’ pay may finally be breaking out of a long period of weakness, according to a report Friday that also showed hiring continued at a solid pace.

Nationwide, average hourly earnings for all private-sector workers in January were up 2.9% from January 2017, the largest yearover-year percentage gain since June 2009, when the economy emerged from the Great Recession.

Analysts said the pickup in wages probably did not reflect the recent wave of announceme­nts from companies that they planned to increase raises, thanks in part to the tax cuts that passed last year. Many more employers said they would be giving bonuses, but those one-time payouts would not affect average wages.

The upturn in earnings began late last year, the Labor Department’s revised data on Friday showed, reflecting the long economic expansion and tightening labor market.

The nation’s unemployme­nt rate in January held steady at a 17-year low of 4.1% for the fourth straight month.

The sustained low unemployme­nt and solid job growth — employers added 200,000 jobs last month — indicate that the U.S. economy is performing well and that companies are increasing­ly finding it difficult to hire workers. Layoffs are at very low levels, and for many businesses, attracting and retaining talented staff has become their top concern, according to the Conference Board, an employer-sponsored group.

In states such as California, overall wages are rising thanks to a combinatio­n of a shrinking supply of workers,

higher minimum wages and lower immigratio­n, both legal and illegal, in industries such as constructi­on, farming and health services, said Michael Bernick, a San Francisco employment lawyer and former head of the California Employment Developmen­t Department.

“Wages are going up in ways they haven’t before,” he said.

Nationwide, average hourly earnings for all private-sector workers last month rose a solid 9 cents, to $26.74, after an upwardly revised 11-cent increase in December. Workers in constructi­on and most services, including finances, informatio­n and hotels and restaurant­s, saw sharper pay increases.

While good for workers, news of the faster-than-expected gain in wage inflation appeared to surprise financial markets — and not in a positive way. Stocks tumbled and long-term bond yields rose as investor worries set in that labor costs could be rising too fast, crimping corporate profits and leading to higher inflation and interest rates.

“There’s room for them to handle higher wages, but it’s the speed” of pay increases they’re nervous about, said Kathy Bostjancic, an economist at Oxford Economics. She added, however, that the market may be overreacti­ng. She foresees wage gains rising only moderately.

Policymake­rs at the Federal Reserve have been looking for wage pressures to build and give a lift to the unusually low inflation that has persisted over the last few years, and the latest jobs report could be a sign of higher prices and interest rates to come. The central bank held its benchmark interest rate steady earlier this week, but Friday’s report makes a rate hike in March highly probable.

Higher inflation will undercut real wage gains as workers pay more for goods and services; gas prices have been rising lately, and the weakening of the dollar also has made imports more expensive. In recent months, inflation has been running around 1.5%.

Brad Hershbein, an economist at the W.E. Upjohn Institute for Employment Research, says one key indicator of underlying wage pressures is what’s happening with average earnings of newly hired workers, as opposed to raises for existing employees. And by that measure, he said, wages are not heating up as the total average hourly pay might suggest.

It’s also not clear how many potential workers are out there. A greater percentage of people in their prime are not working or looking for work today than in the past, and just how many of them have the skills or want to work is an open question. Employers may have to bid up wages to find out.

The addition of 200,000 workers to the nation’s payrolls last month exceeded most analysts’ forecast for job growth of about 175,000. The average monthly job growth for last year was 181,000; it was 195,000 in 2016.

January’s job gains were widespread, with constructi­on, food services and healthcare industries leading the way. Manufactur­ing also continued a yearlong pattern of solid hiring, adding a net 15,000 jobs last month. The stronger global economy has boosted exports and helped boost hiring at factories making machinery, transporta­tion equipment and other products.

Most analysts are expecting the pace of job growth to slow this year but to remain well above the 80,000 to 100,000 range needed to absorb new entrants to the labor market and keep the unemployme­nt rate from rising.

Many experts expect the jobless rate to fall to below 4% this year, and that should benefit more groups of workers with historical­ly high unemployme­nt. In January, the jobless figure for blacks rose to 7.7% after falling to a record low of 6.8% in December, a level that prompted President Trump to frequently highlight the economic progress under his watch. The jobless rate for Latinos ticked up a notch to 5% in January.

Jobless rates for groups can be volatile, and last month’s figures included annual population adjustment­s by the Labor Department that make for difficult comparison­s with the prior month.

 ?? Lynne Sladky AP ?? THE AVERAGE hourly earnings for all U.S. private-sector workers last month rose a solid 9 cents to $26.74. Above, Grace Ochoa of Performanc­e Food Service talks with an applicant this week at a job fair in Florida.
Lynne Sladky AP THE AVERAGE hourly earnings for all U.S. private-sector workers last month rose a solid 9 cents to $26.74. Above, Grace Ochoa of Performanc­e Food Service talks with an applicant this week at a job fair in Florida.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States