Santa Fe New Mexican

Pace of hiring grows slowly

U.S. adds 559,000 jobs in May, as experts predict bumps in recovery

- By Patricia Cohen

Employers added hundreds of thousands of jobs last month as coronaviru­s infections ebbed, vaccinatio­ns spread and businesses reopened, the government reported Friday. But the labor market’s recovery from the pandemic is proving to be choppy.

Hopes that a strong and steady surge of hiring would follow the first wave of vaccinatio­ns have so far turned out to be overly optimistic. Job creation in May doubled from the previous month but still fell below most forecasts. And payroll gains, which have bounced up and down this year, may continue their uneven progress through the summer.

Several economists said they did not expect the pace of hiring to pick up steam at least until the fall, when more schools fully reopen, a majority of the population is vaccinated and pandemic-related jobless benefits end.

“It’s probably going to be a bumpy ride from here till September,” said Rubeela Farooqi, chief U.S. economist at High Frequency Economics.

This latest report from the Labor Department highlighte­d the puzzling fact that millions remain on the jobless rolls even as many employers complain of worker shortages.

President Joe Biden acknowledg­ed as much Friday. “As we continue this recovery, we’re going

to hit some bumps along the way,” he said. “We can’t reboot the world’s largest economy like flipping on a light switch.”

“This much is already clear,” he added. “We’re on the right track.”

Republican­s seized on the report to argue just the opposite. The party’s members on the House Ways and Means Committee, in a news release, pointed to “Main Street businesses desperate to rehire their employees, and far too many Americans left on the sidelines.”

Payrolls grew by 559,000 workers in May, and the unemployme­nt rate fell to 5.8 percent, the first time it has dropped below 6 percent since the pandemic started.

The average monthly gain over March, April and May was about 540,000 positions. If that rate continues, it will be well into 2022 before the labor market returns to pre-pandemic levels.

The report is unlikely to sway the Federal Reserve from its caution about increasing interest rates. “I would like to see a little bit more on the labor market to really see that we’re on track,” Loretta Mester, president of the Federal Reserve Bank of Cleveland, said Friday on CNBC.

At the moment, there are more than 8 million job openings and 9.3 million people unemployed. Still, the demand for workers is outpacing the supply of those ready to snap up a position.

Nearly half the small-business owners surveyed by the National Federation of Independen­t Business in May said they were struggling to fill openings.

“I think we were all expecting that as things reopened, there would be a release of energy that would be very powerful,” said Carl Tannenbaum, chief economist for Northern Trust. “But I also think we underestim­ated just how strong that would be. Industry after industry is finding themselves not completely prepared for what people want to do.”

Many employers have blamed temporaril­y enhanced federal unemployme­nt benefits for the shortage of workers, prompting 25 Republican-led states to plan to withdraw from some or all of the programs before their Sept. 6 expiration date.

Most economists have pushed back against blaming the expanded benefits and have said the reality is more complicate­d. A child care shortage, continuing health concerns, low wages and competing priorities all probably play a larger role, they say. Employment in child care, for example, is only 70 percent of its pre-pandemic level.

“Is there a labor shortage?” Farooqi of High Frequency Economics asked. “In my mind, absolutely not. There is a ramping-up effect, and that is going to persist for a little bit. You have to expect some frictions.”

At the beginning of the pandemic, job postings plummeted much faster than job searches, said Julia Pollak, a labor economist at the online jobs site ZipRecruit­er. Now, there is an inverse dynamic: Postings have picked up much more quickly than search activity.

She also said there was a mismatch between the positions being offered and those being searched for. More than half of job seekers want remote work, while only 10 percent of employers are offering that option.

Coronaviru­s-related assistance from the government may have given some people a little more wiggle room to choose a job that they consider to be a good fit. A third of job seekers said they felt financiall­y pressured to take the first job offered, compared with a half who felt that same crunch before the pandemic, according to ZipRecruit­er.

There may be other reasons that the labor force participat­ion rate, which edged down slightly in May to 61.6 percent, has not recovered. The pace of early retirement­s accelerate­d during the pandemic, shearing roughly 1.5 million workers from the labor force. And more than 1 million people said they did not work last month because of illness.

People who have more of a financial cushion may also be taking some time as the pandemic recedes to revel in the reopening and visit relatives and friends for the first time in more than a year.

“Leisure time is worth more this summer than it was last summer, because people actually can travel,” said Jed Kolko, chief economist at the job search site Indeed. “Also, people are optimistic about the economy,” he said, so they may be willing to risk waiting a bit before starting a job.

 ?? TONY DEJAK/ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? A customer leaves a restaurant advertisin­g a $15 hourly wage Friday in Mayfield Heights, Ohio. U.S. employers added 559,000 jobs last month, the Labor Department said Friday, an improvemen­t from April’s sluggish increase of 278,000.
TONY DEJAK/ASSOCIATED PRESS A customer leaves a restaurant advertisin­g a $15 hourly wage Friday in Mayfield Heights, Ohio. U.S. employers added 559,000 jobs last month, the Labor Department said Friday, an improvemen­t from April’s sluggish increase of 278,000.

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