Corrects article to reflect number of months since job growth was lower than in March.
WASHINGTON (MarketWatch) — The United States created the fewest number of jobs in March in nine months, adding to a [Dear Guest/Member you can't see link before click here to register] suggesting companies have cut back on new hires and that the economy is slowing again.
The U.S. added a seasonally adjusted 88,000 jobs — the smallest increase since last June — and nearly half-a-million people stopped looking for work last month, according to [Dear Guest/Member you can't see link before click here to register] Friday.
The March jobs report fell well below Wall Street expectations. Economists polled by MarketWatch had forecast a 190,000 increase in jobs. [Dear Guest/Member you can't see link before click here to register] after the report.
“This report is a stark reminder of how fragile the U.S. economy remains now four years into the economic expansion,” said Scott Anderson, chief economist of Bank of the West. [Dear Guest/Member you can't see link before click here to register]
The unemployment rate fell to 7.6% from 7.7% to mark the lowest level since December 2007, but the decline stemmed from more Americans dropping out of the labor force.
As a result, the participation rate fell again to 63.3% and touched the lowest level since 1979. The rate measures the percentage of working-age Americans who have or want a job.
All the slack in the labor market is sure to worry the Federal Reserve. Analysts say it probably ensures the [Dear Guest/Member you can't see link before click here to register] its controversial strategy of buying billions in bonds to keep interest rates low as a means to boost the economy.
In Washington, Democrats blamed slow hiring on the unwillingness of Republicans to halt federal spending cuts required by a law known as the sequester. Yet the cuts only began in early March and most economists don’t think they had a big impact. Republicans, for their part, argued that the Obama administration’s policies are holding the economy back.
The lackluster pace of hiring in March overshadowed upward revisions to job growth in the first two months of 2013. The number of new jobs created in February was revised to 268,000 from 236,000, while January’s figure was revised up to 148,000 from 119,000. [Dear Guest/Member you can't see link before click here to register]
Until the March employment report, the U.S. labor market appeared to be gaining momentum. The economy had added an average of 220,000 jobs a month from November to February in a sharp pickup since last fall.
The disappointing March jobs report has revived concerns that the economy could cool off again in midyear like it did in both 2012 and 2011. In both years, hiring started out strong but later petered out.
Most economists have been predicting the economy would slow in the second quarter after a strong start to the new year. Growth in the second quarter is forecast to decelerate to 2.2% from an estimated 3% in the first three months of 2013. The onset of large federal spending cuts and a soft global economy are among the drags on growth, analysts say.
WASHINGTON (MarketWatch) — The United States created the fewest number of jobs in March in nine months, adding to a [Dear Guest/Member you can't see link before click here to register] suggesting companies have cut back on new hires and that the economy is slowing again.
The U.S. added a seasonally adjusted 88,000 jobs — the smallest increase since last June — and nearly half-a-million people stopped looking for work last month, according to [Dear Guest/Member you can't see link before click here to register] Friday.
The March jobs report fell well below Wall Street expectations. Economists polled by MarketWatch had forecast a 190,000 increase in jobs. [Dear Guest/Member you can't see link before click here to register] after the report.
“This report is a stark reminder of how fragile the U.S. economy remains now four years into the economic expansion,” said Scott Anderson, chief economist of Bank of the West. [Dear Guest/Member you can't see link before click here to register]
The unemployment rate fell to 7.6% from 7.7% to mark the lowest level since December 2007, but the decline stemmed from more Americans dropping out of the labor force.
As a result, the participation rate fell again to 63.3% and touched the lowest level since 1979. The rate measures the percentage of working-age Americans who have or want a job.
All the slack in the labor market is sure to worry the Federal Reserve. Analysts say it probably ensures the [Dear Guest/Member you can't see link before click here to register] its controversial strategy of buying billions in bonds to keep interest rates low as a means to boost the economy.
In Washington, Democrats blamed slow hiring on the unwillingness of Republicans to halt federal spending cuts required by a law known as the sequester. Yet the cuts only began in early March and most economists don’t think they had a big impact. Republicans, for their part, argued that the Obama administration’s policies are holding the economy back.
The lackluster pace of hiring in March overshadowed upward revisions to job growth in the first two months of 2013. The number of new jobs created in February was revised to 268,000 from 236,000, while January’s figure was revised up to 148,000 from 119,000. [Dear Guest/Member you can't see link before click here to register]
Until the March employment report, the U.S. labor market appeared to be gaining momentum. The economy had added an average of 220,000 jobs a month from November to February in a sharp pickup since last fall.
The disappointing March jobs report has revived concerns that the economy could cool off again in midyear like it did in both 2012 and 2011. In both years, hiring started out strong but later petered out.
Most economists have been predicting the economy would slow in the second quarter after a strong start to the new year. Growth in the second quarter is forecast to decelerate to 2.2% from an estimated 3% in the first three months of 2013. The onset of large federal spending cuts and a soft global economy are among the drags on growth, analysts say.