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This Article is From Jun 03, 2022

Job Growth In U.S. Tops Estimates, Signaling Optimism On Economy

Nonfarm payrolls increased 390,000 last month after a revised 436,000 gain in April.

Job Growth In U.S. Tops Estimates, Signaling Optimism On Economy
Job Growth in US Tops Estimates, Signaling Optimism on Economy

US employers hired at a robust clip in May while wage gains held firm, suggesting the economy continues to power forward as the Federal Reserve raises interest rates at a steep pace to tame red-hot inflation.

Nonfarm payrolls increased 390,000 last month after a revised 436,000 gain in April, a Labor Department report showed Friday. The unemployment rate held at 3.6%, and the labor force participation rate crept higher.

The median estimate in a Bloomberg survey of economists called for a 318,000 advance in payrolls and for the unemployment rate to fall to 3.5%.

The report suggests that employers had success filling open positions in the month. It also potentially provides some broader reassurance that the economy can achieve a soft landing as wage gains moderate from their more rapid pace of most of 2021.

Average hourly earnings rose a less-than-forecast 0.3% from April, the same as the previous month. They were up 5.2% from a year earlier, a slowdown from 5.5% in April.

“The jobs report will provide mixed feelings for the Fed, which will welcome the steadier jobless rate, firmer participation rate, and possible softening in wages, while worrying that the economy is still running too hot to convincingly drive inflation back to the target,” Sal Guatieri, senior economist at BMO Capital Markets, said in a note.

Treasuries extended losses and stocks fell as a traders considered the report as a sign that Fed will keep its policy tightening on track.

Follow the reaction in real time here on Bloomberg's TOPLive blog

The Fed has adopted a more aggressive monetary policy stance in an effort to curb decades-high inflation, and has indicated that it will raise rates by a half point in both June and July. While those efforts are likely to ease price pressures, they also risk eventually leading to softer demand for labor. 

What Bloomberg Economics Says...

“The gain in employment in May was the weakest since April 2021. We expect a further downshift in the months ahead. Yet despite talk of hiring freezes, there are still nearly two job openings for every unemployed person, which means outright job losses are unlikely near-term.”

--Andrew Husby, Eliza Winger and Anna Wong, economists

To read the full note, click here.

Midterm Elections

The figures may provide some comfort to President Joe Biden and Democrats as they face a difficult challenge defending their thin congressional majorities in the November midterm elections. Even so, rapid price gains have far outweighed plentiful jobs in polls of Americans that have shown unhappiness with the economy and disapproval of Biden's performance.

Biden is scheduled to speak later Friday morning about the jobs report.

At the same, overall job growth is expected to slow in the coming months as the labor market reaches pre-pandemic employment levels and the unemployment rate remains historically low. That means monthly payroll gains of a half million or more, as experienced over the last two years, are likely over for the US.

Job growth in May was led by steady hiring in leisure and hospitality, business services, and education and health care.

Retail trade, however, suffered a 60,700 decrease in payrolls in a relatively broad decline across various categories. Even with the drop, retail employment remains above pre-pandemic levels.

Leisure and hospitality added 84,000 jobs in May, most of which were in accommodation and food services. Employment in business and professional services rose 75,000 and payrolls increased by 74,000 in education and health care. 

Construction employment registered a 36,000 increase, the most in three months. Still, payrolls in the industry are at risk of cooling eventually against a backdrop of higher mortgage rates that have been slowing demand for housing.

The labor force participation rate -- the share of the population that is working or looking for work -- rose to 62.3%, and the rate for workers ages 25-54 climbed to a pandemic-high of 82.6%. 

Overall participation has been slow to recover to pre-pandemic levels after many Americans left their the workforce for good during the pandemic, in part due to child care challenges and early retirement.

(Adds comments from Bloomberg Economics. A previous version of this story corrected the participation rate.)

More stories like this are available on bloomberg.com

©2022 Bloomberg L.P.

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