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U.S. nonfarm payrolls grew 223k in December, jobless rate falls to 3.5% By Investing.com



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By Geoffrey Smith 

Investing.com — The U.S. economy continued to add jobs at a solid clip in December, but wage growth cooled slightly, easing fears that the labor market is too hot to allow inflation to fall.

The Labor Department said on Friday that employment rose by 223,000 through the middle of last month, a modest slowdown from November’s 256,000 and slightly more than the 200,000 expected by analysts. However, any upside ‘surprise’ was nullified by revisions that sliced 28,000 off the previous two months’ data.

The rest of the headline figures from the report were a mixed bag. slowed marginally to 0.3% from 0.4% in November – reflecting that job growth seems to be fastest in lower-paying entertainment and hospitality service functions, while the number of average hours worked per week also fell to 34.3 from 34.4, its lowest since April 2020.

By contrast, the , typically seen as a good indicator of labor market tightness, fell to 3.5% from a downwardly revised 3.6%. That equals a record low stretching back over 50 years. The more broadly defined ‘U6’ unemployment rate, which gives a fuller picture of under-employment across the economy, likewise fell to 6.5% of the workforce from 6.7%.

Julia Coronado. a professor at UT Austin and a former Federal Reserve economist, said that the gradual slowdown in jobs growth and modest cooling of wage pressures “clearly points to slower nominal momentum and better balance” in the jobs market, after a 2021 stamped by record job quitting and a massive overhang of vacancies relative to unemployed people. 

Financial markets reacted positively as the report failed to generate any new concerns about overheating in the labor market, which has been a core concern of the Fed as it has jacked up interest rates over the last year. The opened up 26 points, or 0.7%, at 3,383.8, while the gave up almost all of its gains for the day as market participants trimmed their interest rate outlooks. The Treasury note yield, which closely tracks expectations for Fed rates, fell 5 basis points to 4.41%.

The numbers mean that the U.S. economy added some 4.5 million jobs in 2022, on top of the 6.7 million gained in 2021, when the rebound from the pandemic was at its sharpest.

“In large part, the job gains in 2021 and 2022 were about recovering from Covid,” said Daniel Zhao, an economist with Glassdoor, via social media. “But we’re now exceeding pre-pandemic job levels.”

Zhao noted that there were still signs of the economy cooling in the report. The retail sector, in particular, had its worst holiday season for hiring since 2009, he noted. 



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