The Delaware Gazette

US hiring outlook improves as jobless claims drop

CHRISTOPHER S. RUGABER

AP Eco­nom­ics Writer

WASHINGTON — Fewer Amer­i­cans applied for unem­ploy­ment ben­e­fits last week, and a pri­vate sur­vey showed busi­nesses stepped up hir­ing in August. The data sketched a brighter out­look for the job mar­ket one day before the gov­ern­ment reports on August employment.

Weekly appli­ca­tions for unem­ploy­ment ben­e­fits fell by 12,000 to a sea­son­ally adjusted 365,000, the Labor Depart­ment said Thurs­day. The four-week aver­age, a less volatile mea­sure, ticked up to 371,250.

Unem­ploy­ment ben­e­fit appli­ca­tions are a mea­sure of the pace of lay­offs. When they con­sis­tently fall below 375,000, it sug­gests that hir­ing is strong enough to lower the unem­ploy­ment rate.

Sep­a­rately, pay­roll provider ADP said busi­nesses added 201,000 jobs last month. That’s the most reported by the sur­vey since March. And ADP said July job growth was stronger than first thought: Employ­ers cre­ated 173,000 jobs — 10,000 more jobs than the group reported last month.

“The labor mar­ket is get­ting bet­ter and while the pace of improve­ment is noth­ing great, the direc­tion is clear,” Joel Naroff, pres­i­dent of Naroff Eco­nomic Advi­sors, said in an email to clients.

Despite the pos­i­tive sig­nals, most econ­o­mists tem­pered their expec­ta­tions for August pay­roll growth.

The ADP sur­vey only cov­ers hir­ing in the pri­vate sec­tor and excludes gov­ern­ment job growth. The Labor Department’s report on Fri­day will offer a more com­plete pic­ture. The two sur­veys reported roughly the same private-sector job cre­ation in July. But they have diverged sharply in pre­vi­ous months.

And the drop in appli­ca­tions likely won’t affect the August jobs report, set to be released Fri­day. The data for that report were com­piled three weeks ago. But it could sig­nal bet­ter hir­ing in September.

Econ­o­mists fore­cast that employ­ers added 135,000 jobs last month, while the unem­ploy­ment rate is expected to stay unchanged at 8.3 percent.

Weekly unem­ploy­ment appli­ca­tions “are still stub­bornly high, which is con­sis­tent with our expec­ta­tions for a mod­est employ­ment report in August,” said Brick­lin Dwyer, an econ­o­mist at BNP Paribas

In July, employ­ers added 163,000 jobs. It was the best month of hir­ing since Feb­ru­ary and an improve­ment from the aver­age of only 73,000 per month cre­ated in the April-June quarter.

Still, the econ­omy grew at a tepid 1.7 per­cent annual rate in the April-June quar­ter, down from the 2 per­cent rate in the January-March quar­ter and 4.1 per­cent in the final three months of last year.

Growth at or below 2 per­cent is typ­i­cally too weak to lower the unem­ploy­ment rate. Most econ­o­mists expect the unem­ploy­ment rate will remain above 8 per­cent through the Novem­ber election.

Pres­i­dent Barack Obama will address the Demo­c­rat National Con­ven­tion in Char­lotte on Thurs­day. Polls show most Amer­i­cans regard Repub­li­can nom­i­nee Mitt Rom­ney as bet­ter able to han­dle the U.S. economy.

Rom­ney and his Repub­li­can allies have pointed to high unem­ploy­ment as evi­dence that Obama’s poli­cies are not help­ing the econ­omy. The unem­ploy­ment rate was 7.8 per­cent when Obama took office and has been above 8 per­cent for the past 42 months. Most econ­o­mists say “nor­mal” unem­ploy­ment is 6 per­cent or less.

But Obama and his allies have focused on more than 4 mil­lion jobs that the econ­omy has added in the past ½ years.

A weak employ­ment report could push the Fed­eral Reserve to announce some new action after its meet­ing next week to try to boost growth.

AP News Posted by on Sep 6 2012. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS Feed. Comments can be made below.

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