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Unemployment
rate
hits 8.3
pct.
after
hiring
burst
By
CHRISTOPHER
S.
RUGABER
AP
Economics
Reporter
WASHINGTON
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In the
most
impressive
surge
for the
job
market
since
the
middle
of last
decade,
the
United
States
added
243,000
jobs in
January,
far more
than
economists
expected.
The
unemployment
rate
dropped
to 8.3
percent,
the
lowest
in three
years.
Hiring
accelerated
across
the
economy
and up
and down
the pay
scale.
The
high-salary
professional
services
industry
added
70,000
jobs,
the most
in 10
months.
Manufacturing
added
50,000,
the most
in a
year.
The
report
Friday
from the
Labor
Department
sent
money
pouring
into the
stock
market
and out
of more
conservative
investments
in
bonds.
Dow
Jones
industrial
average
futures,
virtually
flat
before
the
report
was
released
at 8:30
a.m.
EST,
jumped
100
points.
The
stock
market
is
already
off to
its
fastest
start in
15 years
as more
investors
start to
believe
the
economic
recovery
is
finally
for real
and will
only get
stronger.
The Dow
has
gained 4
percent
in 2012.
It was
the most
jobs
added
since
and
April
and May
2010,
when
277,000
and
458,000
jobs
were
created.
But
those
months
were
skewed
by
massive
hiring
for the
census.
Before
that,
the last
month
with
more job
creation
was
March
2006.
The
unemployment
rate was
down two
ticks
from
last
month
and the
lowest
since an
8.3
percent
reading
in
February
2009. It
was also
the
fifth
consecutive
month
that the
rate has
fallen,
the
first
time
that has
happened
since
late
1994.
The
report
seemed
certain
to shake
up the
presidential
campaign,
which is
expected
to turn
on the
economy.
Unemployment
was 7.8
percent
when
President
Barack
Obama
took
office
in and
10
percent,
its peak
for the
economic
downturn,
nine
months
later.
Employers
have
added an
average
of
201,000
jobs a
month in
the past
three
months.
That's
50,000
more
jobs per
month
than the
economy
averaged
in each
month
last
year.
The
Labor
Department's
January
jobs
report
was
filled
with
other
encouraging
data and
revisions.
The
economy
added
200,000
more
jobs in
2011
than
first
thought.
The
unemployment
rate is
nearly a
percentage
point
lower
than
over the
summer,
when
many
feared a
recession
was
imminent.
Impressively,
the job
gains
last
month
were
spread
across
the
economy.
Even the
beleaguered
construction
sector
added
21,000
jobs,
its
second
month of
strong
gains.
That
figure
has
probably
been
helped
by
unseasonably
warm
weather
this
winter.
The
leisure
and
hospitality
industry,
which
includes
restaurants
and
hotels,
added
44,000
jobs.
Retailers
added
nearly
11,000.
The
unemployment
rate
fell
even as
more
people
began
looking
for
work.
But a
much
larger
number
said
they
found
work.
More
jobs and
higher
incomes
should
help
consumers
boost
spending
and
increase
economic
growth.
Job
gains in
November
and
December
were
revised
upward
to show
that an
additional
60,000
jobs
were
created
in those
two
months.
The
government
also
issued
its
annual
revisions
to jobs
data
going
back
five
years.
They
showed
that
hiring
was
stronger
over the
past two
years
than
previously
thought.
The
economy
added
about
1.82
million
jobs
last
year,
nearly
twice as
many as
in 2010.
Even
with the
gains,
the job
market
faces a
long way
back to
full
health.
The
nation
has
about
5.6
million
fewer
jobs
than it
did when
the
recession
began in
late
2007.
There
are
still
12.8
million
people
out of
work,
though
that is
the
fewest
since
the
recession
ended.
An
additional
11
million
are
either
working
part-time
but
would
prefer
full-time
work, or
have
stopped
searching
for
jobs.
When all
those
groups
are
combined,
nearly
24
million
are
considered
"underemployed.
The
so-called
"underemployment"
rate
ticked
down in
January
to 15.1
percent,
from
15.2
percent.
Several
reports
signaled
this
week
that the
economy
is
improving
gradually.
Manufacturers
expanded
at the
fastest
pace in
seven
months
in
January,
a
private
survey
showed.
And
fewer
people
sought
unemployment
benefits
last
week,
the
Labor
Department
said.
The
four-week
average
of
applications
fell to
its
second-lowest
level
since
June
2008.
The drop
shows
that
companies
are
cutting
fewer
jobs,
which
usually
leads to
more
hiring.
Americans
spent
more at
big
chain
retail
stores
last
month
compared
with a
year
earlier.
And
automakers
began
2012
with a
strong
sales
gain in
January.
Healthier
auto
sales
can
boost a
range of
companies,
from
steel
makers
to parts
suppliers
to
shippers.
The
economy
expanded
at a 2.8
percent
annual
pace in
the
October-December
quarter,
a full
percentage
point
higher
than in
the
previous
quarter.
Even so,
economists
expect
slower
growth
this
year.
Much of
the
fourth
quarter's
expansion
was due
to
companies
ordering
more
goods to
restock
their
warehouses.
Restocking
is
likely
to slow
in the
first
three
months
of this
year.
That
would
drag on
growth.
Europe's
financial
crisis
could
also
slow
demand
for U.S.
goods.
And
average
wages
failed
to keep
up with
inflation
last
year.
That
leaves
consumers
with
less
spending
power,
which
can
hamper
growth.
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