The U.S. added more jobs than forecast in November and the unemployment rate held at an almost 17-year low, though below-forecast wage gains suggest the labor market still has slack to absorb.
Payrolls rose 228,000, above the median economist estimate of 195,000, after a downwardly revised 244,000 advance, according to Labor Department figures released Friday. Average hourly earnings increased 2.5% from a year earlier, less than the 2.7% projection, and October’s figures were revised lower.
The data provide a clearer picture of the labor market after the volatility caused by two hurricanes mostly dissipated, though there may have been some lingering effects. While the job market remains a bulwark for the economy and investors see a Federal Reserve interest-rate hike next week as a near-certainty, the lack of acceleration in wages remains a puzzle that could factor into the pace of increases in 2018.
Average hourly earnings rose 0.2% from the prior month following a revised 0.1% drop, the report showed. Analysts had penciled in a gain of 0.3% for November. The gain from a year earlier followed a downwardly revised 2.3% advance for October.
Economists expect that in time, wages will post a sustained pickup, which has remained elusive in this expansion even though labor-market slack is steadily disappearing. Faster gains in paychecks would boost consumer spending, which accounts for about 70% of the economy. Jerome Powell, President Donald Trump’s nominee to head the Fed, said last month at his confirmation hearing that he doesn’t see wages signaling any tightness in the labor market.
What Our Economists Say ...
“Even though job gains are well in excess of the natural growth rate for the labor market, labor scarcity is not yet driving wage pressures higher. The moral of the story from this jobs report is that full employment is indeed much lower in the current cycle relative to history. While average hourly earnings were tepid, the sizable payroll gain and increase in the nonfarm workweek indicate that there was substantial wage-income generation in the economy last month.” — Carl Riccadonna and Yelena Shulyatyeva, Bloomberg Economics
The Trump administration has said the tax-cut proposal in Congress, if it gets signed into law, will spur growth and boost wages, though economists generally expect a modest impact.
Several measures showed the labor market remains fairly steady. The two-month gain in payrolls was the strongest since mid-2016. The U-6, or underemployment rate, remained near the lowest since 2006, while the participation rate, or share of working-age people in the labor force, was unchanged at 62.7%.
The breakdown of data showed healthy gains across many industries, particularly in manufacturing and construction. Health care and professional and business services also showed solid gains. Restaurants and bars, which had showed bigger swings in the prior two months due to the storms, added 18,900 workers in November.
Revisions to prior reports added a total of 3,000 jobs to payrolls in the previous two months, according to the report.
Steady household demand and a pickup in business investment — backed by elevated consumer and business sentiment and improving global demand — bode well for U.S. employment. Nonetheless, payroll increases have been slowing the past few years, albeit in orderly fashion, as the labor market tightens. Economists say job gains above 100,000 a month are still enough to keep putting downward pressure on the jobless rate.
Other Details
The U-6 underemployment rate rose to 8% from 7.9%. That measure includes part-time workers who’d prefer a full-time position and people who want a job but aren’t actively looking. … Manufacturing payrolls rose by 31,000, while construction added 24,000, matching its highest since February. … Retailers boosted staff by 18,700, and hiring in leisure and hospitality rose by 14,000. … People working part-time for economic reasons rose by 48,000 to 4.8 million. … Private employment rose by 221,000 (above the median estimate of 195,000) after increasing 247,000. Government payrolls increased by 7,000. … The average workweek for all workers rose to a five-month high of 34.5 hours (just above the median estimate of 34.4 hours) from 34.4 hours.
By Shobhana Chandra, with assistance from Chris Middleton