June jobs report shows 372,000 gains

Employers added 372,000 jobs in June 2022 as the sizzling labor market shrugged off a slowing economy, high inflation and rising interest rates The unemployment rate held at 3.6% for the fourth straight month, the Labor Department said Friday.

Employers added 372,000 jobs in June as the sizzling labor market shrugged off a slowing economy, high inflation and rising interest rates

The unemployment rate held at 3.6% for the fourth straight month, the Labor Department said Friday.

Economists surveyed by Bloomberg had estimated that about 270,000 jobs were added last month.

Payroll gains for April and May by a total 74,000, revealing a modestly softer job market than believed.

As a result, employment growth moderated to a still-robust average of 383,000 jobs a month in the spring from about 600,000 the prior three months as the nation drew closer to recovering all 22 million jobs lost in the pandemic. It has now recouped 21.5 million, or 97.6%, and could reclaim the rest in the next couple of months.

In June, professional and business services led will the job gains with 74,000. Leisure and hospitality, which includes restaurants and bars, the sector hit hardest by COVID-19, added 67,000; health care, 57,000; transportation and warehousing, 36,000; and manufacturing, 29,000.

Employers are still grappling with widespread worker shortages as the nation continues to heal from the pandemic.

Many Americans have returned to a favorable labor market this year, but others are still caring for children, fearful of COVID, switching careers or living off federal stimulus checks or other aid. Last month, the number of people working or looking for jobs fell by 353,000, possibly in part because of lingering COVID waves. That pushed down the labor force participation rate from 62.3% to 62.2%, still well below the pre-COVID level of 63.4%.

For now, the economy remains on solid footing as it continues to benefit from a resumption of travel and other activities and massive household savings built up during the health crisis.

But inflation hit a 40-year high of 8.6% in May amid lingering supply-chain troubles and Russia’s war in Ukraine. Sharply climbing prices are squeezing companies’ profit margins, leading many to scale back hiring plans, says economist Lydia Boussour of Oxford Economics.

Consumers are also cutting back as costs swell. Manufacturing and service sector activity is expanding more slowly. And initial jobless claims, a gauge of layoffs, have trended higher in recent months, though they’re still historically low.

The Federal Reserve is compounding the pain, at least in the near term, by aggressively raising interest rates to curtail the inflation spike.

By the end of the year, Moody’s Analytics estimates, average monthly job gains will slow to just over 100,000. Although top economists believe the nation can dodge a recession, they have substantially raised the odds of one in the next 12 months, a scenario that likely would mean net monthly job losses for the U.S.

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