U.S. job growth increased at its fastest pace in more than two years in April and the unemployment rate dived to a 5-1/2 year low of 6.3 percent, suggesting a sharp rebound in economic activity early in the second quarter.
Nonfarm payrolls surged 288,000 last month, the Labor Department said on Friday. That was the largest gain since January 2012 and beat Wall Street’s expectations for only a 210,000 increase.
The unemployment rate tumbled 0.4 percentage point, touching its lowest level since September 2008. The Labor Department attributed the decline to a drop in the number of unemployed people reentering the labor market as well as a fall in new entrants into the labor force.
The economy stalled in the first quarter, weighed down by an unusually cold and disruptive winter. A slow pace of stock accumulation by businesses, while they work through a glut of goods amassed in the second half of 2013, also undercut growth.
The employment report joins other upbeat data such as consumer spending and industrial production in suggesting the first quarter’s 0.1 percent annual growth pace was an aberration and is not a reflection of the economy’s otherwise sound fundamentals.
The Federal Reserve on Wednesday shrugged off the dismal performance. The U.S. central bank, which announced further reductions to the amount of money it is pumping into theeconomy through monthly bond purchases, said indications were that “growth in economic activity has picked up recently.”
Economists expect second-quarter growth to top a 3 percent pace.
While details of the bigger survey of employers were upbeat, the smaller and volatile household survey from which the unemployment rate is calculated was mixed.
Household employment fell slightly after increasing robustly in the first quarter. The labor force, which also grew during the same period as improving job prospects encouraged some job seekers who had given up the hunt to resume looking for work, declined sharply in April.
The labor force participation rate, or the share of working-age Americans who are employed and unemployed but looking for a job, fell 0.4 percentage point to 62.8 percent. That was the lowest level since last December.
Some of the 1.35 million people who lost their longer-term unemployment benefits at the end of last December could have dropped out the labor force last month.
The participation rate and the persistently high number of Americans out of work for long spells could keep the Fed from lifting interest rates for some time to come.
April job gains were broad based. Government payrolls rose by 15,000. Manufacturing employment increased 12,000. Construction payrolls gained 32,000, but the hiring trend could slow in the months ahead as residential construction loses some steam.
Average hourly earnings were flat in April. The length of the workweek held steady at 34.5 hours in April after bouncing back in March from its winter-depressed levels.
(Reporting by Lucia Mutikani; Editing by Andrea Ricci)
http://www.reuters.com/article/2014/05/02/us-usa-economy-idUSBREA3T03420140502
They must be counting the new ones that apply for Welfare, as if they’re getting work –
Let me see if I’ve got this: only 28% of the US population actually has a job – and of that; a growing (by the day) portion of that, is in the public sector – which in turn, is wiping out an equal amount in the private sector – some of which are (still) employed in the packaging and shipping of our remaining industries overseas – which would seem like a potential problem when they run out of businesses to send elsewhere – all apparently being subsidized by a printing press – and you want me to think: It’s all getting better?