US economy adds 428,000 jobs in April: govt

Share
1 min read
(FILES) In this file photo donut baker Larry Perlman prepares to put a batch of donuts into the oven in Los Angeles, California. (Photo by Frederic J. BROWN / AFP)
Share
  • Major industries including leisure and hospitality, manufacturing and transportation added positions last month, the Labor Department reported
  • With the US economy facing its highest inflation level in decades, the data showed the pace of average hourly wage growth slowing last month

The United States saw another strong month of hiring in April, with the economy adding a better-than-expected 428,000 jobs and the unemployment rate remaining at a low 3.6 percent, the government said Friday.

Major industries including leisure and hospitality, manufacturing and transportation added positions last month, the Labor Department reported.

But the labor force participation rate indicating the share of the population employed or searching for work declined slightly from March, a sign more job seekers were hired.

With the US economy facing its highest inflation level in decades, the data showed the pace of average hourly wage growth slowing last month, with a 0.3 percent rise compared to March.

Harvard University Professor Jason Furman said on Twitter the trend could be a positive sign as the Federal Reserve signals its determination to hike rates.

“Nothing in this will or should change what the Fed does in June, but is another sign that the underlying inflation trend may be lower than I thought and coming down,” he wrote.

Pay is up 5.5 percent over the last 12 months, according to the report.

The data underscored the progress the US economy has made in the two years since unemployment spiked to a level not seen in decades when Covid-19 caused mass layoffs.

The 3.6 percent unemployment rate now is only a hair above its pre-pandemic level, while the number of unemployed people was at 5.9 million last month, just slightly above its level in February 2020, the data said.

SPEEDREAD


MORE FROM THE POST