The U.S. Economy Added 428,000 Jobs in April, Unemployment at 3.6%, But Participation Rate Fell

Kyle

Beloved Misanthrope
PREMO Member
The U.S. economy added 428,000 jobs in April and the unemployment rate held steady at 3.6 percent, the Department of Labor said Friday.

Economists had expected the economy to add 400,000 jobs and the unemployment rate to come in unchanged from the prior month at 3.6 percent. The range of forecasts by economists surveyed by Econoday was between a gain of 300,000 to a gain of 500,000.

The labor force participation rate unexpectedly declined to 62.2 percent from 62.4 percent.

Average hourly earnings for all employees on private nonfarm payrolls rose by 10 cents, or 0.3 percent, to $31.85 in April. Over the past 12 months, average hourly earnings are up 5.5 percent. In April, average hourly earnings of private sector production and nonsupervisory employees rose by 10 cents, or 0.4 percent, to $27.12. This represents a deceleration of wage gains from the 0.4 percent overall recorded in March, likely due to many of the jobs added in April being on the lower end of the wage scale.


 

OccamsRazor

Well-Known Member
Bottom line. The amount of available jobs went UP but, the amount on unemployment stayed THE SAME! How is this possible? Whom are working these 400K new jobs when no one came off the unemployment rolls?
 

Kyle

Beloved Misanthrope
PREMO Member
Bottom line. The amount of available jobs went UP but, the amount on unemployment stayed THE SAME! How is this possible? Whom are working these 400K new jobs when no one came off the unemployment rolls?
The Unemployment numbers has been a shell game for decades now.

The labor participation rate is the only thing left that might... Might, mean something.
 

Sneakers

Just sneakin' around....
Aren't most of these "new" jobs just everyone going back to work after leaving the workforce during the pandemic?
 
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