Will big U.S. job gains raise inflation risks?
Tight labor markets could give the Fed even more pause on rate cuts
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Employment boost July 6: CNBC’s Hampton Pearson reports on the June jobs report, which showed better-than-expected growth. CNBC |
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The latest official jobs data from the government confirmed that, after barely breaking even in the first quarter, the U.S. economy is rebounding convincingly; some 132,000 new jobs were added in June, according to the Labor Department. That kept the unemployment rate at a historically low 4.5 percent. Workers also posted gains in their paychecks last month.
Friday’s report also showed that that the economy added more jobs in April and May than the government previously thought. Revised figures Friday showed that payrolls grew by a strong 190,000 in May, up from the 157,000 reported last month. And in April the total job pool expanded by 122,000, better than the 80,000 previously reported.
Those numbers point to a recovery that’s coming on somewhat stronger than expected. The consensus of economists polled by Reuters was for a gain of 118,000 new jobs in June, with the unemployment rate holding steady at 4.5 percent.
While the overall numbers were strong, not all industries are growing at the same pace. The big gains came in education, health services, leisure and hospitality and government. Those gains more than made up for job cuts at factories, retailers and certain professional and business services. Despite the ongoing slump in the housing market, construction companies also expanded employment, according to the government data.
The government’s numbers were bolstered by a separate report Thursday from payroll processor ADP, which found a net gain of 150,000 new jobs in June from the 383,000 employers who write paychecks for some 23 million workers. (Unlike the government report, the ADP figures do not include jobs in the government sector, which is currently adding about 25,000 new jobs a month.)
“My sense is that the economy is accelerating from its weakest spot late last year, now that the drag from housing and auto production is diminishing,” said Joel Prakken, chairman of Macroeconomic Advisers, which partners with ADP in assembling and analyzing the monthly data.
There have been other recent signs of strength in the job market. On Thursday, a widely-watched report by the Institute of Supply Management — a professional group for managers who keep their companies supplied with goods and service — showed a strong pickup in employment in June.
“Both manufacturing and non-manufacturing surveys point to the economy picking up momentum as the second quarter drew to a close,” said Bear Stearns chief economist John Ryding in note to clients. “This is an encouraging sign for growth in the third quarter.”
Help-wanted ads are up 24 percent over this time last year, according to to a monthly report released Monday by The Conference Board.
"Tight labor markets in many areas of the country and in specific occupations and industries like IT and healthcare are forcing companies to advertise more aggressively than last year in order to find the employees they need,” said Gad Levanon, a Conference Board economist.
Layoffs, meanwhile, have been easing. Planned job cuts fell 22 percent in June from the month before, according to the outplacement firm Challenger Gray & Christmas. The pick-up is even helping hard-hit manufacturing industries.
“The auto industry seems to be stabilizing,” said company CEO John Challenger. “Those cuts are down by about a half from what we were seeing last year, so the real brunt of the job cuts have passed. But it's still the second heaviest industry for the year.”
Other industries are also seeing some weakness. Though the construction industry picked up in May, homebuilders and financial services companies still face the headwind of the ongoing unwinding of the housing market and the collapse of many subprime lenders; home sales are still stalled and prices declining. Many in the housing industry expect the downturn to last until at least the end of this year.
But the overall job numbers point to an economy that, after limping through the start of the year, is convincingly back in business. The bounce comes after a sharp pickup in orders, as businesses restocked inventories that were heavily drawn down in the first quarter. That has some analysts wondering whether the pace of growth will slow through the rest of the year as those orders are filled. The bigger risk seems to be that job growth picks up even more steam from here.
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