Saturday, March 9, 2024

Strong gains continue with February Jobs Report


Once again the February Jobs Report released on Friday by the US Labor Dept. showed a strong, and dare we say it once more, resilient job market for the world’s largest economy, at 275,000 jobs created, close to the 200,000 number for private employers released on Thursday.

It’s no one’s guess when interest rates will decrease and Federal Reserve Chair, Jerome Powell, as we have noted previously, is data driven and will not recommend that the Bank cut interest rates based on a few months of strong numbers. At the next meeting on March 19 to 20, most investors expect rates to remain the same, but some are hoping in June for a decrease.


“We’re waiting to become more confident that inflation is moving sustainably to 2 percent,” Mr. Powell told Congressional lawmakers on Thursday. “When we do get that confidence, and we’re not far from it, it will be appropriate to dial back the level of restriction.”


The Chair also said,”The economy is growing at a healthy, sustainable, solid, strong pace,” Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell said during a Thursday hearing of the Senate Banking Committee.


“We’re doing the best of anybody. We’ve got the strongest growth and the lowest inflation of the advanced economies,” he added..


That of course, is praise, but it also sends a note that cutting rates at this juncture could prove disastrous in overheating an already hot economy, currently the rate is 5.50 percent, and even a cut to 5.25 percent would prove unwise.


This is also the third straight month of job gains above 200,000, and Americans can look in the rear view mirror and see those depressing figures of the Covid pandemic that resulted in so many layoffs.


There was a slight uptick in the unemployment rate from 3.7 to 3.9 percent, but with monthly fluctuations being normal, the overall picture is still rosy, made even rosier that unemployment is under 4 percent for the 25th consecutive month.


Average hourly earnings increased to 4.3 percent, “We’ve recently seen gains in real wages, and that’s encouraged people to re-enter the labor market, and that’s a good development for workers,” said Kory Kantenga, a senior economist at the job search website LinkedIn, to The New York Times, and “As wage growth slows, he said, the likelihood that more people will start looking for work falls.”


Significantly, the labor force participation rate, or LFP, for those of prime working age, 25 to 54 has increased to 83.5 showing that many workers who were on the sidelines, have returned, and some, with continuing inflation returned to work, even part time; but, this could be higher if the United States offered subsidized child care. That being said, more flexible work schedules, increased wages and benefits are retaining a core of employees.


The pool of workers also increased with the immigrants that have been allowed to work, and those preceding them, from countries other than Venezuela, peaking between 120,000 and 200,000. Should Congress pass a comprehensive immigration bill reforming what was passed in the middle 1980s, that number could increase, especially for the unskilled labor force.


Taking a more comprehensive look at the household survey, or known in economic jargon as the U6, those not working, compared to those who are, is at 7.3 percent, a closely watched figure by some, but is often overshadowed by the banner, or marquee employment rate, is frequently cited, by the media, as well as by government officials.


Who were the stars in this report? Education and Health at 85,000 followed by Leisure and Hospitality at 58,000, and then Government employment at 52,000, with the continued growth of Construction, that had decreased hiring in the past, but now reflects the11th straight month, coming in at a strong 23,000.


Anirban Basu, the chief economist for the Association of Builders and Contractors told Engineering News Record that this was despite the “high project financing costs” and “elevated construction service delivery costs and lingering recessionary fears.”


Despite some concerns among economists, most agree that this is a strong report, and bodes well for the economy despite public concerns that the economy is in trouble, but this is based, as we noted last month, on the high cost of housing, and food prices, but nevertheless it will be an issue in the November presidential election.









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