The Mercury News

U.S. adds 145,000 jobs; unemployme­nt holds at 3.5 percent

But hiring, wage gains have slowed during past decade

- By Josh Boak

WASHINGTON — U.S. employers added 145,000 jobs in December and the unemployme­nt rate held steady at 3.5%, signaling that the job market remains strong at the start of 2020 even if hiring and wage gains have slowed somewhat more than a decade into an economic expansion.

Friday’s snapshot from the Labor Department showed hiring slipped from robust gains of 256,000 in November, which were given a boost by the end of a strike at General Motors. For the year, employers added an average of roughly 175,000 jobs per month, compared with about 223,250 per month in 2018.

Annual wage growth fell in December to 2.9%, down from an annualized average of 3.3% a year earlier, a possible sign that some slack remains in the labor market and that unemployme­nt could fall even further from its current half-century low.

The picture of a slowly-but-steadily improving economy – plus low inflation – likely gives the Federal Reserve comfort in keeping interest rates low, which has been a boon to stock markets. The Dow Jones Industrial Average fell a slight 0.34% in Friday afternoon trading, but it briefly climbed to a record-level of 29,000 in the morning.

“We’re starting 2020 in very good shape,” said Gus Faucher, chief economist at PNC Financial Services. “We should see continued economic expansion throughout 2020 driven by consumers.”

The state of the job market has become a pivotal division between President Donald Trump and his Democratic challenger­s. Trump can campaign on the low unemployme­nt rate and job growth as he seeks a second term. Democrats, seeking to oust him, will point to wages that have not taken off in a meaningful for many Americans coping with high costs for medical care and higher education.

This is the last jobs report be

fore the Iowa caucus in February that will serve as a first step for choosing the Democratic presidenti­al nominee.

The prospect of a stable job market, a pick-up in global growth, supportive central banks, an easing of trade tensions and U.S. economic growth of around 2% should be a positive for this year.

“We really have the wind at our backs going into 2020,” said Julia Pollak, a labor economist at the employment marketplac­e ZipRecruit­er.

Yet job growth has failed so far to translate into substantia­lly better hourly pay. There is the potential that wages jumped in January as many states adjusted their minimum wages.

Some businesses in competitiv­e industries are already taking steps to prepare for wage competitio­n this year. The Big Blue Swim School based in Chicago vies with day cares, learning centers and gyms for its instructor­s.

The chain has five sites employing on average 30 people and plans to open five more schools this year and 17 in 2021. But it had to dramatical­ly boost wages in order to attract staff for that expansion.

“We gave all of our frontline employees a 10% or 11% raise because of the fear we have about the wage pressures in the economy,” said CEO Chris Kenny. “We can’t meet our business goal without great staff.”

Irina Novoselsky, CEO of the jobs site CareerBuil­der, said that more employers are offering non-wage benefits such as the chance to work remotely to potential workers and becoming less focused on educationa­l credential­s when hiring.

“The major fact that is pushing the trend is the labor shortage in America,” she said. “Companies are being forced to provide that flexibilit­y.”

The U.S. economy added 2.1 million jobs last year, down from gains of nearly 2.7 million in 2018. Hiring may have slowed because the number of unemployed people seeking work

has fallen by 540,000 people over the past year to 5.75 million. With fewer unemployed people hunting for jobs, there is a potential limit on job gains.

The steady hiring growth during the expansion has contribute­d to gains in consumer spending. Retail sales during the crucial holiday shopping improved 3.4% compared to the prior year, according to Mastercard SpendingPu­lse. This likely contribute­d to a surge of hiring in retail as that sector added 41,200 jobs in December.

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