The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Burst of hiring lifts U.S. outlook

271,000 jobs added in October, raising prospect of interest rate hike.

- By Christophe­r S. Rugaber

WASHINGTON — U.S. hiring roared back in October after two weak months, with employers adding a robust 271,000 jobs and likely setting the stage for the Federal Reserve to raise interest rates next month.

The unemployme­nt rate dipped to a fresh seven-year low of 5 percent from 5.1 percent.

The burst of hiring, the most since December, filled jobs across a range of industries as companies shrugged off slow overseas growth and a struggling manufactur­ing sector. Significan­t job gains occurred in constructi­on, health care and retail.

Friday’s report from the government suggested that the U.S. economy is rebounding after a worrisome summer and is continuing to outshine other major economies. During August and September, U.S. hiring had flagged amid financial turmoil in China and faltering growth in Europe and emerging markets.

Even so, American consumers have kept spending at a healthy pace, supporting strong job growth even as factory payrolls were flat last month and oil and gas drillers cut jobs.

Soon after Friday’s report was released, the prospect of higher interest rates drove down financial markets. By late morning, stocks had fallen modestly. And the yield on the benchmark 10-year Treasury note had surged to 2.33 percent from 2.23 percent Thursday, suggesting that investors see a greater likelihood of a Fed rate hike.

After a prolonged period of relatively stagnant pay rais- es for many Americans, last month’s robust hiring also raised wages 9 cents to $25.20. That is 2.5 percent higher than 12 months ago, the sharpest year-over-year gain since July 2009. That is comfortabl­y above inflation, which was been flat in the past year.

The solid pay gains should fuel more consumer spending in coming months, which, in turn, could support further hiring.

“These are very strong numbers and likely to continue,” said Carl Tannenbaum, chief economist at Northern Trust.

Retailers added nearly 44,000 jobs in October, the most since November and a sign that they anticipate healthy sales for the holiday shopping season. Hotels and restaurant­s added 41,000.

Matt Friedman, chief executive of the Wing Zone restaurant chain, said he thinks lower gas prices are encouragin­g more people to eat out and boosting sales at his company’s 93 U.S. sites. Company sales have grown 6 percent this year from 2014. Wing Zone is adding three jobs to its 18-employee headquarte­rs staff and expects to open 15 stores this year and 19 next year.

“People are spending more money,” Friedman said. “Fuel prices have a big impact.”

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