US job growth rebounds in November; unemployment rate ticks up
A closely-watched report from the U.S. Labor Department on Friday showed job growth surged in November, raising bets that the Federal Reserve would cut interest rates later this month. Nonfarm payrolls increased by 227,000 jobs, more than what economists polled by Reuters had expected.
U.S. employers added a booming 256,000 jobs in December, shrugging off high labor costs, slowing sales and uncertainty about President-elect Donald Trump’s economic policies.
The unemployment rate fell from 4.2% to 4.1%, the Labor Department said Friday.
Economists surveyed by Bloomberg had estimated that about 165,000 jobs were added last month, based on their median forecast.
The robust performance bolsters the case for the Federal Reserve to stand pat and skip an interest rate cut at a meeting later this month.
Employers added 2.2 million jobs for all of 2024, or an average 186,000 a month. That’s down from 3 million, or an average 251,000 a month, in 2023 but still a surprisingly strong showing. Most forecasters expected a sharper slowdown, believing inflation and high interest would take a bigger toll and a post-pandemic rebound in economic activity would fade more dramatically.
Average hourly pay rose 10 cents to $35.69, nudging down the yearly increase from 4% to 3.9%.
Wage growth generally has slowed as pandemic-related labor shortages have eased, helping bring down inflation. Since employers often pass their increased labor costs to consumers through higher prices, economists have said yearly wage growth needs to fall to 3.5% to achieve the Fed’s 2% inflation goal.
But recent strong gains in productivity – or output per worker – could let companies give up to 4% raises without hiking prices, economists have said.
The solid jobs report likely keeps the Fed on course to pause its campaign of interest rate cuts at a meeting later this month.
After the Fed lowered rates by a total percentage point at its last three meetings of 2024 amid easing inflation, many economists expected the central bank to pause in January and slow the pace of decreases this year. That’s because price increases have remained elevated recently while the economy and labor market have been healthy.
The Fed raises rates or keeps them high to increase borrowing costs and bring down inflation. It lowers rates to spur a weakening economy or return rates to normal as inflation slows.
Economist Michael Reid of RBC Capital Markets said it would take “a surprisingly weak employment report” for December to convince Fed officials to cut rates again this month. Instead, Friday’s report was unexpectedly strong.
In 2022 and 2023, the Fed hiked its key interest rate to a 23-year high of 5.25% to 5.5% to fight a pandemic-induced inflation spike.
Health care led the job gains with 46,000. Retail added 43,000, bouncing back from disappointing holiday hires in November. The public sector added 33,000 jobs and leisure and hospitality, which includes restaurants and bars, 43,000.
December ostensibly marked a return to a more stable labor market after Southeast hurricanes and worker strikes hammered employment totals in October, leading to higher-than-normal payroll gains the following month.
But some additional recovery from the storms may have continued to bolster job growth last month in industries such as construction and leisure and hospitality, economist Nancy Vanden Houten of Oxford Economics wrote in a note to clients.
Retail was another wild card. Holiday hiring was relatively weak this past fall, in part because of consumers’ shift to online shopping, resulting in job losses for retailers after Labor seasonally adjusted the figures. That development also may have suppressed December payrolls in sectors such as retail, trucking and warehousing, Vanden Houten said.
At the same time, the late Thanksgiving probably contributed to November’s soft holiday hiring and so a larger share of new seasonal workers likely were counted in last month’s jobs survey, Goldman Sachs wrote in a research note. That could have boosted December employment totals, Goldman said.
More broadly, job growth is expected to slow this year. Consumers’ post-pandemic burst of demand is fading, but businesses are still saddled with high labor costs due to outsize raises during COVID-related labor shortages. That’s squeezing profit margins.
And uncertainty over President-elect Donald Trump’s policies is causing many employers to stand pat for now. His vows to impose hefty tariffs on certain imports and deport millions of immigrants who lack permanent legal status could reignite inflation, dampen consumption and constrain the labor force, said economist Dante DeAntonio of Moody’s Analytics.
Yet his pledge to loosen regulations on companies and work with Congress to extend and expand tax cuts could embolden firms to step up hiring and investment. Many businesses are waiting to see how the policies play out before moving ahead with hiring plans, DeAntonio said.
Although hiring has hovered below pre-pandemic levels for months, net job gains have remained sturdy because businesses have been reluctant to lay off workers in large numbers while consumer spending growth, though slowing, is still solid.
But by the end of the year, the immigration crackdown – along with baby boomer retirements – is expected to constrict the supply of workers and push up wages and prices while tariffs also drive inflation higher. Tax cuts, meanwhile, aren’t expected to juice the economy until 2026. Moody’s predicts average monthly job growth will slow to 100,000 by the end of 2025.
A mom-of-four works three jobs while her husband stays home, leaving the internet buzzing with questions about their unconventional dynamic.Lauren (@budgetbylau
December's US employment data blew past expectations with the Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS) reporting an addition of 256,000 jobs in the month this morni
December's job report marked yet another month of stronger-than-expected growth, with gains coming from many different parts of the U.S. economy.Last month, hea
WASHINGTON (AP) — U.S. hiring picked up unexpectedly in December as employers added a strong 256,000 jobs, another sign of the economy’