Current:Home > MarketsThe U.S. created an extraordinary number of jobs in January. Here's a deeper look-Angel Dreamer Wealth Society D1 Reviews & Insights
The U.S. created an extraordinary number of jobs in January. Here's a deeper look
View Date:2024-12-24 07:45:14
It's Groundhog Day. And once again, the monthly jobs report has confounded forecasters.
U.S. employers added 353,000 jobs in January, according to a report from the Labor Department Friday. That's far more than analysts were expecting.
The job market has held up remarkably well, despite the Federal Reserve's effort to fight inflation with the highest interest rates in more than two decades.
The question is whether the Fed will see a shadow in the stronger-than-expected jobs market and extend our winter of elevated borrowing costs.
Policy makers might worry that such a strong labor market will keep prices higher for longer.
Here are four takeaways from Friday's report.
Demand for workers is still extraordinarily strong
Nearly every industry added jobs last month. Health care added 70,000 jobs. Business services added 74,000. Even construction and manufacturing — two industries that typically feel the drag of higher interest rates — continued to hire in January.
What's more, revised figures show job growth in November and December was stronger than initially reported.
Meanwhile, the unemployment rate held steady at a historically low 3.7%. It's been under 4% for two full years now.
More people are joining the workforce
Helping to balance the strong demand for labor is a growing supply of available workers.
Many people who were sidelined during the pandemic have since joined or re-joined the workforce — thanks in part to the possibility of remote work.
Nearly 23% of employees teleworked or worked from home last month — more than double the rate before the pandemic.
The share of people in their prime working years who are working or looking for work in January rose to 83.3%.
Immigration has also rebounded. The foreign-born workforce grew 4.3% last year, while the native-born workforce was virtually flat.
"Those two forces have significantly lowered the temperature in the labor market," said Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell this week. "It's still a good labor market for wages and for finding a job. But it's getting back into balance and that's what we want to see."
But the sizzling job market could delay a cut in interest rates
Powell said this week that he and his colleagues could start cutting interest rates this year if inflation continues to fall.
Powell cautioned, however, that a rate cut at the next Fed meeting in March is unlikely. It's probably even more unlikely after this stronger-than-expected jobs report, which showed average wages in January rising 4.5% from a year ago.
Although rising wages have not been a big driver of inflation, wage gains at that level could make it hard to get inflation all the way down to the Fed's target of 2%.
Before the jobs report, investors had been all but certain the Fed would cut interest rates by May. They're less confident now.
Productivity gains could make rising wages less worrisome
Two other reports from the Labor Department this week show less upward pressure on wages and prices.
One report tracks the labor costs borne by employers last year. It showed a smaller increase in October, November and December than the previous quarter. This "employment cost index" is considered a more reliable guide to labor expenses than the monthly wage data.
A separate report showed that workers' productivity rose by 3.2% in the fourth quarter. Rising productivity helps to offset rising wages, so employers can afford to pay more without raising prices.
"Productivity is the magic wand that keeps wages growing solidly without spiking inflation," said Nela Richardson, chief economist at the payroll processing company ADP.
veryGood! (4578)
Related
- 'Squid Game' creator lost '8 or 9' teeth making Season 1, explains Season 2 twist
- Al Michaels addresses low energy criticism: 'You can’t let things like that distress you'
- 16-year-old left Missouri home weeks ago. Her dad is worried she's in danger.
- Huge explosion at gas station kills at least 35 in Dagestan in far southwestern Russia
- Sam LaPorta injury update: Lions TE injures shoulder, 'might miss' Week 11
- Inmates at California women’s prison sue federal government over sexual abuse
- Summer School 6: Operations and 25,000 roses
- Drive a Ford, Honda or Toyota? Good news: Catalytic converter thefts are down nationwide
- How Ben Affleck Really Feels About His and Jennifer Lopez’s Movie Gigli Today
- Netflix testing video game streaming
Ranking
- Lady Gaga Joins Wednesday Season 2 With Jenna Ortega, So Prepare to Have a Monster Ball
- Judge Scott McAfee, assigned to preside over Trump's case in Georgia, will face a trial like no other
- Pig kidney works in a donated body for over a month, a step toward animal-human transplants
- Charles McGonigal, ex-FBI official who worked for sanctioned Russian oligarch, pleads guilty
- Tennis Channel suspends reporter after comments on Barbora Krejcikova's appearance
- Michigan State University plans to sell alcohol at four home football games
- Ellen DeGeneres and Portia de Rossi's Life-Altering Love Story
- Netflix testing video game streaming
Recommendation
-
Robert F. Kennedy Jr. has a long record of promoting anti-vaccine views
-
Dominican firefighters find more bodies as they fight blaze from this week’s explosion; 13 killed
-
These Towel Scrunchies With 7,800+ 5-Star Reviews Dry My Long Hair in 30 Minutes Without Creases
-
Russia hits Ukrainian grain depots again as a foreign ship tries out Kyiv’s new Black Sea corridor
-
Parts of Southern California under quarantine over oriental fruit fly infestation
-
You Only Have 24 Hours To Get 59% Off a Limitless Portable Charger, Plus Free Shipping
-
Al Michaels addresses low energy criticism: 'You can’t let things like that distress you'
-
New gun analysis determines Alec Baldwin pulled trigger in 'Rust' shooting, prosecutors say