The Bakersfield Californian

Solid hiring latest sign of a still-sturdy job market

- BY CHRISTOPHE­R RUGABER

WASHINGTON — U.S. employers added a healthy 199,000 jobs last month and the unemployme­nt rate fell, fresh signs that the economy could achieve an elusive “soft landing,” in which inflation would return to the Federal Reserve’s 2% target without causing a steep recession.

Friday’s report from the Labor Department showed that the unemployme­nt rate dropped from 3.9% to 3.7%, not far above a five-decade low of 3.4% in April. The jobless rate has now remained below 4% for nearly two years, the longest such streak since the late 1960s.

Last month’s job gain was inflated by the return of about 40,000 formerly striking auto workers and actors, who were not at work in October but were back on the job in November.

The latest jobs report and other recent data portray an economy and a labor market that, while still sturdy, are downshifti­ng back to pre-pandemic norms. Businesses are hiring but are less desperate to fill huge numbers of jobs. More Americans have come off the sidelines to look for work, and immigratio­n has jumped this year.

As a result, employers are finding it easier to hire, with fewer complaints of worker shortages and less pressure to aggressive­ly raise pay, which can fuel inflation.

“What we wanted was a strong but moderating labor market, and that’s what we saw in the November report,” said Robert Frick, an economist at the Navy Federal Credit Union.

A cooling job market is also just what the Fed was hoping to achieve as it sought to slow the economy and inflation with its rapid interest rate hikes in the past year and a half. Hiring has averaged just over 200,000 a month in the past three months, down from an average of about 320,000 in the same period last year.

And most of last month’s job gains were concentrat­ed in just a few sectors. The health care industry — doctors’ offices and hospitals — added 93,000 jobs in November. Hotels and restaurant­s added 40,000, and government­s 49,000, accounting for nearly all the job growth.

 ?? MATT ROURKE / AP ?? Mechanic David Stoliaruk works on the engine of a car at IC Auto in Philadelph­ia May 2.
MATT ROURKE / AP Mechanic David Stoliaruk works on the engine of a car at IC Auto in Philadelph­ia May 2.

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