Ronaldskk. Posted August 5, 2023 Posted August 5, 2023 https://www.bbc.com/news/business-66408284 Analysts said the latest figures were unlikely to settle that matter, pointing to an unemployment rate that remained near historic lows and wage gains that were stronger than expected, despite the slowdown in hiring. The average hourly pay in July was 4.4% higher than a year ago, the Labor Department said. Spring surge in US economy beats expectations US raises interest rates to highest in 22 years "Last month's results offered evidence that employment growth had begun to slow, and today's numbers indicate that a downward trend may be in motion," said Richard Flynn, managing director at Charles Schwab UK. "While this should be encouraging for policymakers as they continue to battle sticky inflation, the Fed would likely prefer to see wage gains closer to 3%." The 187,000 jobs added in July was fewer than the roughly 200,000 analysts had expected. Manufacturing, transportation, tech and media firms shed jobs. Most other sectors expanded, with health care firms driving the gains. The Labor Department also said hiring was weaker than previously estimated in June and May. But analysts said jobs growth has remained strong enough to absorb growth in the working age po[CENSORED]tion. That has raised hopes that the economy will slow gradually, but avoid a harsh contraction that would throw millions of people out of work. Julia Pollak, economist at the jobs site Zip Recruiter, said Friday delivered a "goldilocks" report, while Mark Zandi, chief economist at Moody's Analytics, said it "couldn't have been much better".
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