US recoups jobs lost in recession as economy picks up

Latest official figures show employment returned to its pre-recession level last month

US President Barack Obama (R) meets with business leaders from across the country and the world in the Roosevelt Room of the White House. Photograph: Jim Lo Scalzo/EPA

US employers kept up a solid pace of hiring in May, returning employment to its pre-recession level and offering confirmation the economy has snapped back from a winter slump.

Non-farm payrolls increased 217,000 last month, the Labor Department said today. The gain was in line with market expectations. Data for March and April was revised to show 6,000 fewer jobs created than previously reported.

"That suggests the first quarter was an anomaly in terms of what the economy was and we are back to a decent pace of job creation. Overall it's a pretty solid report," said John Canally, an economist at LPL Financial in Boston.

Despite decelerating from April’s outsized 282,000 gain, when hiring was still bouncing back from a winter lull, May marked a fourth straight month with job gains above 200,000 and an important milestone in the economy’s recovery. It finally recouped the 8.7 million jobs lost during the recession.

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Employment has risen by 8.8 million since hitting a trough in February 2010. Average hourly earnings, which are being closely watched for signs of how fast labor market slack is easing, rose five cents last month. In the 12 months through April, earnings grew at a 2.1 per cent rate, suggesting little build-up in wage pressures.

US stock index futures added to gains, while prices for US Treasury debt fell. The dollar was little changed against the yen and euro. The pace of hiring adds to data ranging from automobile sales to services and factory sector activity that have suggested growth this quarter will top a 3 per cent annual pace.

The economy contracted at a 1.0 per cent rate in the first quarter, dragged down by unusually harsh winter weather and a slow pace of inventory building by businesses. The unemployment rate held steady at a five year low of 6.3 per cent in May even as some Americans who had given up the search for work resumed the hunt.

A measure of underemployment that includes people who want a job but who have given up searching and those working part-time because they cannot find full-time jobs fell to 12.2 percent, the lowest since October 2008. Economists expect more previously discouraged workers to re-enter the labor force over the course of the year.

While that would be a sign of confidence in the labor market, it could slow the decline in the jobless rate. The return of discouraged job seekers will be welcomed by the Federal Reserve, which has cited low labor force participation as one of the reasons for maintaining an extraordinarily easy monetary policy. The labor force increased by 192,000 people in May after declining sharply the prior month.

That left the labor force participation rate, or the share of working-age Americans who are employed or at least looking for a job unchanged at 62.8 per cent. May employment gains were broad-based. Manufacturing employment increased by 10,000, expanding for the 10th straight month. Further increases are expected as auto sales outpace inventories. Construction payrolls rose by 6,000.

It was the fifth consecutive month of gains, but the pace is slowing. There were sturdy job gains in leisure and hospitality, and professional and businesses services, as well as healthcare. Government payrolls increased 1,000, the fourth straight month of gains. Retail employment also rose last month. The length of the workweek held steady at 34.5 hours.

Reuters