The Saline Courier

US employers add 916,000 jobs in March as hiring accelerate­s

- By Christophe­r Rugaber

WASHINGTON — America’s employers unleashed a burst of hiring in March, adding 916,000 jobs in a sign that a sustained recovery from the pandemic recession is taking hold as vaccinatio­ns accelerate, stimulus checks flow through the economy and businesses increasing­ly reopen.

The March increase — the most since August — was nearly double February’s gain of 468,000, the Labor Department said Friday. The unemployme­nt rate declined from 6.2% to 6%.

Even with last month’s robust increase, the economy remains more than 8 million jobs short of the number it had before the pandemic erupted a little over a year ago. But with the recovery widely expected to strengthen, many forecaster­s predict enough hiring in the coming months to recover nearly all those lost jobs by year’s end.

The increasing­ly bright outlook for the labor market follows a year of epic job losses, waves of coronaviru­s infections and small business closures. Numerous signs suggest that the economy is improving. Consumer confidence in March reached its highest level since the pandemic intensifie­d.

Last month, hiring strengthen­ed across the economy. Restaurant­s, hotels and bars — the sector that was most damaged by the virus — added 216,000 jobs. Constructi­on companies, aided by better weather after severe storms in February, gained 110,000.

Manufactur­ers added 53,000. And profession­al and business services, which include such wellpaying fields as engineerin­g and architectu­re, gained 66,000.

In another encouragin­g sign, about 500,000 women returned to the workforce last month and found jobs, in part a reflection of school re-openings around the country. Women disproport­ionately quit jobs or stopped looking for work during the pandemic, in many cases because they had to care for children attending school online from home. A reversal of that trend will be important as employers seek to rapidly rehire.

A survey found that manufactur­ing grew in March at its fastest pace since 1983. And vaccinatio­ns are increasing­ly being administer­ed, although new confirmed infections have risen from lower levels in recent weeks.

The $1,400 checks in President Joe Biden’s

$1.9 trillion-economic relief plan have sharply increased consumer spending, according to Bank of America’s tracking of its debit and credit cards. Spending jumped 23% in the third week of March compared with prepandemi­c levels, the bank said.

Spending had begun to rise in March even before the stimulus checks arrived as viral case counts have tumbled from their heights in January. Americans are increasing­ly willing to venture out from home to travel and eat out, though not yet at their prepandemi­c pace. Roughly

1.5 million people traveled through airports on March 28, according to the Transporta­tion Services Administra­tion. That was roughly eight times the figure of a year ago, although it was still down sharply from 2.5 million on the same day in 2019.

The transporta­tion analytics firm Inrix has calculated that daily car trips returned to pre-pandemic levels late last month. Many of those trips have likely been to restaurant­s, where the volume of seated diners was just 25% below pre-pandemic levels, on average, in the last week of March, according to Opentable, a restaurant software provider. That’s up from 50% below prepandemi­c traffic just six weeks earlier.

The burgeoning economic activity is showing signs of translatin­g into more jobs.

Karen Fichuk, CEO of Randstad North America, a recruiting firm, said the company is seeking to fill 38% more permanent jobs than it was at the end of last year. Demand for workers is particular­ly strong in manufactur­ing, informatio­n technology, logistics, and health care.

Job listings on the website Indeed.com jumped in the last week of March, with available jobs now 13.5% above pre-pandemic levels. Jed Kolko, Indeed’s chief economist, said that job postings in higher-paid sectors, such as financial services and technology, have accelerate­d in the past couple of months.

The surge of hiring last month raises an important question: Can it continue at the same pace?

Besides the 8.4 million fewer jobs that now exist in the U.S. economy than just before the virus struck, an additional 2 million or so jobs would have been added in the past year under normal circumstan­ces. That means the U.S. economy still needs roughly 11.5 million more jobs to regain something close to full health.

Louise Sheiner, a senior fellow at the Brookings Institutio­n and formerly an economist at the Federal Reserve, has estimated that hiring could average between 700,000 and 1 million a month for the rest of the year, if the economy expands at the 6.5% pace that the Fed and many economists expect. That would leave total job growth for 2021 at somewhere between 7 million and 10 million.

In part, her forecast is based on the fact that the pandemic recession has deeply hurt labor-intensive parts of the economy, from hotels and restaurant­s to health care and the entertainm­ent industry. A recovery in those sectors, even a partial one, would require significan­tly more hiring. In addition, Sheiner said, higher consumer spending, fueled by stimulus checks and pent-up savings, should drive job growth in other industries.

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