Employment growth slows with 236,000 jobs in March

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No Viva Las Vegas
The office of the Culinary Workers Union is seen through a car window in Las Vegas, Monday, Nov. 9, 2020. The union represents 60,000 people, most of them immigrants, in the Las Vegas area who work in the hospitality industry. More than half of the members represented by the union are currently out of work due to the coronavirus pandemic. (AP Photo/Wong Maye-E) Wong Maye-E/AP

Employment growth slows with 236,000 jobs in March

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The economy added 236,000 jobs in March, the Bureau of Labor Statistics reported Friday, a slight slowdown from the strong gains of recent months that indicates the labor market might be slowing in response to the Federal Reserve’s rate hikes but remains robust.

The unemployment rate edged down a tenth of a percentage point to 3.5%, a very low figure historically.

March’s slowdown in job creation and wage growth could cause the central bank to gauge that the labor market no longer threatens to drive up inflation and could sway it toward a more dovish monetary stance.

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The Fed is hoping to bring down inflation without tipping the country into inflation — thought to be a difficult task. But Friday’s report is a sign of hope to the extent that it shows that employment growth is at a sustainable pace without unemployment rising. In fact, unemployment is near the lowest levels since the 1960s. Unemployment for black workers fell to 5%, the lowest rate on record.

The reading follows several months of strong and overperforming job gains, which has been key positive economic data that President Joe Biden has touted even as historic inflation cuts deeply into the paychecks of people across the country. Recent jobs reports have proven surprisingly resilient, with the unemployment rate even declining to the lowest level since 1969 in January.

But this latest report cuts into that narrative and raises fears that a recession is right around the corner.

Adding to the indicators of a weaker jobs market, the number of new applications for unemployment benefits was at 228,000 last week, the Labor Department reported Thursday, much higher than recently reported numbers. The weekly jobless claims reports give an even more up-to-date sense of the labor market than the monthly employment reports.

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Additionally, there were about 9.9 million job openings across all sectors in February, according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics Job Openings and Labor Turnover Survey updated Tuesday, the first time in nearly two years the number of openings fell below 10 million.

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