Unemployment: U.S. Economy Adds 151k Jobs

Unemployment is spurring interest today as the U.S. economy saw a gain of 151,000 jobs in October. However, the unemployment rate remained at 9.6 percent, the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics said Friday.

It was the third consecutive month the unemployment rate was 9.6 percent and 15th consecutive reporting period the rate was 9.5 percent or higher. That is the longest such stretch since record keeping on the statistic began in 1948.

The gain in payroll was much higher than economists' expectations of an increase of 60,000.

The rise in the number of jobs marked the first time since May, when data were affected by thousands of temporary U.S. Census Bureau jobs, that job growth was reported.

The private sector added 159,000 jobs, easily offsetting the 8,000 loss of government positions.

It was also the first time, discounting the Census employment bubble, since December 2007 that the U.S. economy gained enough positions to offset the natural growth in the employable population.

The bureau said, however, the number of unemployed was still 14.8 million, little changed from recent months. Also 6.2 million have been unemployed for at least 27 weeks.

The data indicate gains were made in temporary help services (35,000), retail (28,000) and healthcare (24,000).

On Thursday, employment firm CareerBuilder said there are jobs out there in the U.S. economy, but it helps to know where to look. "In addition to fields like technology and healthcare that have consistently performed well in a troubled economy, it's encouraging to see improvement in areas like manufacturing," said Matt Ferguson, CareerBuilder's chief executive officer. "Jobs are being created, but not yet in volumes needed to bring down the unemployment rate," Ferguson said. In a survey of 575 laid-off workers conducted by the firm at the end of September, more than a third of respondents indicated they had found a new job within three months. For those still looking, CareerBuilder said human resource listings are up 33 percent from a year ago, while manufacturing job openings listed are up 27 percent. Healthcare listings have risen 11 percent, while information technology job listings are up 39 percent. Sales and customer service listings are also up, 21 percent and 15 percent, respectively, CareerBuilder said. CareerBuilder said entry-level job listings are up 46 percent from a year ago, while managerial listings were up 27 percent.
1 2 Next
Source: UPI

CONTRIBUTE TO THIS STORY
Print Article