Los Angeles Times

U.S. job growth slows in July

The gain of 1.8 million is down from May and June hiring as many businesses face new pressure to scale back.

- ASSOCIATED PRESS

WASHINGTON — The United States added 1.8 million jobs in July, a pullback from the gains of May and June and evidence that the resurgent coronaviru­s is stalling hiring and slowing an economic rebound.

With confirmed viral cases still elevated in much of the nation and businesses under continued pressure, many employers appear reluctant or unable to hire. Even counting the hiring of the last three months, the economy has now recovered only about 42% of the 22 million jobs it lost to the pandemic-induced recession, according to the Labor Department’s jobs report released Friday.

The unemployme­nt rate did decline in July from 11.1% to 10.2%, though that still exceeds the highest rate during the 2008-09 Great Recession.

The accelerati­on of the viral outbreak that began in late June more than doubled the daily U.S. confirmed case count by mid-July, though the rate of new reported cases has since declined. The outbreaks have led many states and cities to close bars and other businesses for a second time and have damped confidence, causing many consumers to continue limiting their shopping, traveling, eating out and gathering in crowds.

July’s job gain was much lower than June’s 4.8 million and May’s 2.7 million jobs, both of which were revised slightly.

The economy is struggling to emerge from the devastatin­g recession that caused output to shrink at a nearly 33% annual rate in the April-June quarter, the worst quarterly fall on record. Employers slashed their workforces, consumers cut spending and corporatio­ns pulled back on investment and expansion.

The economy has since started to grow again, and many economists have forecast a solid rebound in the July-September quarter, though not nearly enough to offset the second quarter’s dizzying fall.

The Institute for Supply Management reported in two surveys this week that both manufactur­ing and service sector companies expanded output and sales faster in July than in June. Even so, companies in both surveys reported that they were still cutting jobs.

Some other recent data point to a weak month for hiring. The Census Bureau has found in weekly experiment­al surveys that the number of people with jobs fell by 6.7 million in July, which points to a huge drop in the official figures. In June, the same set of surveys had shown a gain of 5.5 million, close to the government’s official figure.

The census report isn’t adjusted for seasonal trends, though, and many schools typically cut jobs in the summer, which has led economists to say that the census figures might be exaggerati­ng the losses.

Some reports suggest that businesses still added workers in July, albeit at a slower pace. Kronos, a company that makes work management software for small companies, said the number of shifts worked at its clients rose just 1% in July, indicating that some previously laid-off workers are still being recalled. But that’s much smaller than the total gain of 32% in the previous 11 weeks combined.

Two bright spots for the economy, though, have been housing and auto sales. Ultra-low interest rates fueled sharp increases in sales of new and existing homes in June.

Lower interest rates have also boosted auto sales, though both home and auto sales remain below pre-pandemic levels.

 ?? Nati Harnik Associated Press ?? VICKIE GREGORIO with Heartland Workforce Solutions talks to a job seeker in Omaha last month as others seeking employment wait behind her. In July, the unemployme­nt rate dropped from 11.1% to 10.2%.
Nati Harnik Associated Press VICKIE GREGORIO with Heartland Workforce Solutions talks to a job seeker in Omaha last month as others seeking employment wait behind her. In July, the unemployme­nt rate dropped from 11.1% to 10.2%.

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