Washington, Jan
14 : US employers kept their pace of hiring steady in December,
falling short of the levels needed to bring down a still lofty unemployment rate
and pointing to lackluster economic growth in 2013.
Other data gave
stronger signals on the health of the economy, with the U.S. service sector
activity expanding the most in 10 months.
Payrolls, excluding farm jobs,
grew by 155,000 last month, the Labor Department said. That was a touch more
than analysts' expectations and only slightly below the revised gain of 161,000
reported for November.
The jobless rate was steady at 7.8
percent.
While firms kept on hiring despite the uncertainties raised by a
budget stand-off in Washington, the report reinforced expectations of 2 percent
economic growth this year.
Such slow growth is unlikely to quickly bring
down the unemployment rate and probably will not make the U.S. Federal Reserve
rethink its stimulus plan anytime soon despite growing unease among some
policymakers over its bond-buying program.
"The U.S. economy is just
muddling through," said Tom di Galoma, managing director at Navigate Advisors in
Stamford, Connecticut.
The Labor Department raised its estimate for
unemployment in November by a tenth of a point to 7.8 percent.
Most
economists expect the U.S. economy will be held back this year by tax hikes as
well as by weak spending by households and businesses, which are still trying to
reduce big debts taken on before the 2007-09 recession.
The data
nonetheless gave signals of some momentum in the labor market's
recovery.
Gains in employment were distributed broadly throughout the
economy, from manufacturing to health care. The government also said 14,000 more
jobs were created in October and November than originally
estimated.
Average hourly earnings rose 0.3 percent last month, slightly
more than analysts had expected, while the length of the average workweek edged
higher.
"This shows the economy is chugging along," Tom Porcelli, an
economist at RBC Capital Markets in New York.
A increase in the number of
construction jobs in December may represent a one-time bounce from
reconstruction efforts following a mammoth East Coast storm, but the fledgling
recovery in America's housing market could also be behind the gains, said
Michael Feroli, an economist at JPMorgan in New York.
Separately, the
Institute for Supply Management said its services index rose to 56.1 last month,
the highest since February. Another report showed a gauge of business spending
plans remained firm in November.
U.S. stocks rose slightly and prices
fell for U.S. government debt. The ISM report showed much stronger levels of
activity than analysts were expecting, fanning investor speculation that a
strengthening economy could lead the Fed to scale back its bond buying
programs.
Still, many analysts said hiring remains too weak for the Fed
to consider taking its foot off the accelerator. The Fed has said it wants
substantial improvement in the labor market before it eases up on its bond
buying.
"There is nothing here to suggest the Fed will see indications of
a 'substantial' improvement," said Julia Coronado, an economist at BNP
Paribas.
Taking the opposite view, Craig Dismuke, a strategist at Vining
Sparks in Memphis, Tennessee, said the current pace of job creation could raise
pressure on the Fed to stop bond purchases after the middle of the
year.
Minutes from the Fed's December policy review pointed to rising
concerns over how the asset purchases will affect financial markets. St. Louis
Federal Reserve Bank President James Bullard, thought to be less tolerant of
inflation than many of his colleagues at the central bank, said the bond program
could end this year if the economy improves.
Despite the signs of
momentum in hiring, government spending cuts due to begin around March are
looming over the economy.
Also threatening the recovery, the United
States risks defaulting on its debt if Congress doesn't give the government
permission within a few months to increase borrowing. White House economic
adviser Alan Krueger told MSNBC the economy would do better if Congress promptly
raised the debt ceiling.
The government's $16.4 trillion debt limit has
become a poker chip in congressional talks over how to push scheduled spending
cuts further into the future.
A last-minute deal this week softened the
tax hikes and postponed the cuts by two months, and hiring in December may have
been slowed by uncertainty over the timing of the so-called "fiscal
cliff."
"Companies were very worried about the fiscal cliff, so it's a
good number that they were still hiring," said Yelena Shulyatyeva, an economist
at BNP Paribas in New York.
Austerity already held back the U.S. economy
in 2012. In December, government payrolls shrank by
13,000.
Ends
SA/EN
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Mediocre job growth points to slow grind for U.S. economy
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