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View Full Version : US adds 136,000 jobs; unemployment hits 50-year low of 3.5%



Teh One Who Knocks
10-04-2019, 12:49 PM
By CHRISTOPHER RUGABER, AP ECONOMICS WRITER


https://i.imgur.com/iEGYxUFl.jpg

U.S. employers added a modest 136,000 jobs in September, enough to help lower the unemployment rate to a new five-decade low of 3.5%.

Hiring has slowed this year as the U.S.-China trade war has intensified, global growth has slowed and businesses have cut back on their investment spending. Even so, hiring has averaged 157,000 in the past three months, enough to absorb new job seekers and lower unemployment over time.

Despite the ultra-low unemployment rate, which dropped from 3.7% in August, average hourly wages slipped by a penny, the Labor Department said Friday in its monthly jobs report. Hourly pay rose just 2.9% from a year earlier, below the 3.4% year-over-year gain at the beginning of the year.

The unemployment rate for Latinos fell to 3.9%, the lowest on records dating from 1973.

With the U.S. economic expansion in its 11th year and unemployment low, many businesses have struggled to find the workers they need. That is likely one reason why hiring has slowed since last year.

But it’s likely not the only reason. The jobs figures carry more weight than usual because worries about the health of the U.S. economy are mounting. Manufacturers have essentially fallen into recession as U.S. businesses have cut spending on industrial machinery, computers and other factory goods. And overseas demand for U.S. exports has fallen sharply as President Donald Trump’s trade conflicts with China and Europe have triggered retaliatory tariffs.

A measure of factory activity fell in September to its lowest level in more than a decade. And new orders for manufactured items slipped last month, the government reported.

Persistent uncertainties about the economy in the face of Trump’s trade conflicts and a global economic slump are also affecting hotels, restaurants and other service industries. A trade group’s measure of growth in the economy’s vast services sector slowed sharply in September to its lowest point in three years, suggesting that the trade conflicts and rising uncertainty are weakening the bulk of the economy.

The job market is the economy’s main bulwark. As long as hiring is solid enough to keep the unemployment rate from rising, most Americans will likely remain confident enough to spend, offsetting other drags and propelling the economy forward.

But a slump in hiring or a rise in the unemployment rate in coming months could discourage consumers from spending as freely as they otherwise might during the holiday shopping season.

Consumers are still mostly optimistic, and their spending has kept the economy afloat this year. But they may be growing more cautious. Consumer confidence dropped sharply in September, according to the Conference Board, a business research group, although it remains at a high level.

Americans also reined in their spending in August after several months of healthy gains. The 0.1% increase in consumer spending that month was the weakest in six months.

Other parts of the U.S. economy are still holding up well. Home sales, for example, have rebounded as mortgage rates have fallen, helped in part by the Federal Reserve’s two interest rate cuts this year. Sales of existing homes reached their highest level in nearly 18 months in August. And new home sales soared.

Americans are also buying cars at a still-healthy pace. Consumers would typically be reluctant to make such major purchases if they were fearful of a downturn.

Muddy
10-04-2019, 03:16 PM
Orange man bad..

lost in melb.
10-04-2019, 03:49 PM
Quick! Impeach the man responsible for this! :maniac:

Muddy
10-04-2019, 04:31 PM
Quick! Impeach the man responsible for this! :maniac:

Exactly.. it's completely ridiculous right?

lost in melb.
10-04-2019, 06:44 PM
Exactly.. it's completely ridiculous right?

If he had really done something illegal he would have already been removed from office. Clearly a witch-hunt.

RBP
10-04-2019, 06:55 PM
I still don't trust the unemployment numbers right now.

lost in melb.
10-04-2019, 08:10 PM
I still don't trust the unemployment numbers right now.

It says 3.6 % for Chicago

RBP
10-04-2019, 09:10 PM
It says 3.6 % for Chicago

And U6 is double that. Plus where are the millions of gig workers accounted for? (answer is nowhere)

Riddle me this.... how can an economy be at full employment with no wage inflation?

Teh One Who Knocks
10-04-2019, 09:45 PM
And U6 is double that. Plus where are the millions of gig workers accounted for? (answer is nowhere)

Riddle me this.... how can an economy be at full employment with no wage inflation?

Because it's not at 0.0%, it's at 3.5%

RBP
10-05-2019, 12:41 PM
Because it's not at 0.0%, it's at 3.5%

:-s

Full employment is generally considered 3%, but I am seen models using 5%. It's never zero. And historically is always paired with wage inflation... simple math... labor is in short supply, employers have to pay more. Unless of course you can end around the NLRB by only hiring a core staff and making everyone else "contractors". That trend is not just your Uber driver, it's the latest and greatest corporate profit scheme. Silicon Valley has maybe 50% employees now.

The principle of a people having a fair, respectful, and mutually beneficial employment relationship with corporations is dead.

Hikari Kisugi
10-05-2019, 01:36 PM
Orange man bad..

I was a bit surprised to see major stock corrections world wide over this news, it was suggested that the figures were expected to come out much better than they actually did, so the world stocks markets threw a complete wobbler.
no doubt some rich people got richer, and the rest of us will catch up again eventually, but news of good figures being received very badly surprised me greatly.,