Washington, Dec 16 :
Companies kept up their slow but steady hiring pace in November, defying
predictions that Superstorm Sandy would deal a big blow to the labor
market.
While the unemployment rate fell to a near four-year low of 7.7
percent, that was only because many Americans gave up the hunt for work,
tempering the signal from the stronger-than-expected payrolls growth.
A
big drop in consumer confidence in December, the largest fall in more than 1-1/2
years, also offered a cautionary note on the economy's health.
Non-farm
employment expanded by 146,000 jobs last month after gaining 138,000 in October,
the Labor Department said. The increase was well above the 93,000 expected on
Wall Street.
"We are moving in a trend-like modest job-growth
environment," said Michael Hanson, a senior economist at Bank of Bank of America
Merrill Lynch in New York. "We really need to see payroll numbers break above
200,000 for a while to think we have a more sustained recovery under
way."
The government said Sandy, which slammed the densely populated East
Coast in late October, did not have a substantive impact on the data. Economists
had thought it would, with some predicting it would cut up to 75,000 jobs off
payrolls growth.
Nevertheless, the storm did hit the economy
hard.
Sandy knocked retail sales and industrial output in October and led
to a big spike in claims for jobless benefits, one of the reasons economists
expected job growth to slow.
A Labor Department survey of households
found 369,000 workers were unable to make it to work in the aftermath of the
storm and a further 1.1 million ended up working only part time. However, the
department still considered them employed.
The stronger-than-expected
payrolls number helped to push down prices for U.S. Treasuries, but lifted the
dollar against a basket of currencies. The Dow Jones industrial average and the
Standard & Poor's 500 Index ended the session moderately higher, but a steep
drop in Apple's stock once again forced the Nasdaq Composite Index to end the
day in negative territory.
November's job gains left them just below the
monthly average of 151,000 that has prevailed since January.
Economists
consider that pace just enough to push the jobless rate lower over time. But
they say roughly 200,000 to 250,000 jobs per month would be needed to make
noticeable headway in absorbing the 22.7 million Americans who are either
jobless or underemployed.
The 0.2 percentage point drop in the
unemployment rate, which took it to its lowest level since December 2008, was
due to a decrease in the size of the labor force, a suggestion that frustrated
Americans were giving up the hunt for work.
The labor force participation
rate, or the proportion of working-age Americans who have a job or are looking
for one, fell back to near a 31-year low.
Heidi Shierholz, an economist
at the Economic Policy Institute in Washington, said it could take more than 10
years for the unemployment rate to drop back to its pre-recession level of
around 5 percent at the current pace of job growth.
Last month, the
retail sector accounted for more than a third of jobs gains, which economists
tied to a brisk start to the holiday shopping season. Still, private hiring
slowed to 147,000 from 189,000 in October, pulled down by a sharp decline in
construction employment and weak manufacturing payrolls.
Employment
continues to be held back by fears the government may fail to prevent the $600
billion in automatic tax hikes and government spending cuts set to take hold at
the start of next year. The debt crisis in Europe has also
weighed.
Worries about this so-called fiscal cliff hit consumer sentiment
in early December. The University of Michigan's preliminary confidence index
plummeted 8.2 points to 74.5. It was the largest drop since March
2011.
"That confirms my belief that the only thing the economy has to
fear is Washington itself," said Joel Naroff, chief economist at Naroff Economic
Advisors in Holland, Pennsylvania.
"There is some real underlying
strength in the economy as the November jobs numbers indicate, but it could be
wiped out by the games being played by our political
representatives."
With the labor market far from full health, Federal
Reserve policymakers, who meet, look certain to keep U.S. monetary policy on its
current ultra-easy course.
Economists said an anticipated tightening of
fiscal policy next year, even if a deal is reached to avoid completely going
over the fiscal cliff, provides ample reason for the U.S. central bank to
maintain its stance.
The retail sector added 52,600 jobs last month after
rising 50,900 in October. The pace of retail hiring over the last three months
was the fastest since 1995.
There were also increases in information and
temporary help hiring. But transport, financial, education and health services
employment slowed. Manufacturing employment fell 7,000, marking the third month
it has dropped this year.
Construction payrolls surprisingly tumbled
20,000, despite a surge in homebuilding, which is benefiting from the Fed's
effort to hold borrowing costs down. Economists said they expect construction
jobs to rise in the coming months as the housing recovery returns full
swing.
Average hourly earnings increased 4 cents. In the 12 months
through November, average hourly earnings are up just 1.7 percent, underscoring
the trouble that workers are having keeping up with
inflation.
Ends
SA/EN
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» Employment ducks Superstorm Sandy's punch
Employment ducks Superstorm Sandy's punch
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