More US jobs lost than expected
The US economy lost 263,000 jobs in September, which was more than
had been expected, according to official non-farm payrolls figures. The
jobless rate rose to a fresh 26-year high of 9.8% from August’s figure
of 9.7%.The number in employment has now fallen for 21 consecutive
months.
There was more bad news from the Labor Department, which revised its
figures for July and August to show 13,000 more jobs lost than
previously reported.The economy as a whole is expected to have grown in
the past three months, but recovery in the jobs market tends to lag
behind the rest of the economy.‘Pattern of weakness’
Since the start of the recession in December 2007, the number of
people out of work has risen by 7.6 million to 15.1 million.“Together
with the ISM data, delinquencies data and even the consumer confidence
data we had, we’re starting to see a pattern of weakness emerge,” said
Kevin Caron, market strategist at Stifel, Nicolaus & Co in New
Jersey.“We saw a lot of artificial involvement by the government to prop
up the markets, and now that that is starting to end the private sector
isn’t yet showing signs of life.”Government employment, which has been
one of the factors boosting the economy in the past year, fell by 53,000
in September.
The other big areas of job losses were construction, manufacturing
and retail.Confidence needed“It shows expectations for recovery may have
gotten a little ahead of the reality,” said Gary Thayer at Wells Fargo
Advisors in Missouri.“The trend is still improved from earlier this
year, but employers need to feel more confident about the economy before
they start hiring again.”The US is not alone in seeing rising
unemployment, with the 16 nations that use the euro announcing on
Thursday that its seasonally adjusted rate rose to 9.6% in August,
putting the number of people without a job at 15.2 million.
Earlier on Friday, Japan unexpectedly announced that its jobless rate
had fallen to 5.5% in August from July’s record high of 5.7%, but the
number of people unemployed still hit a six-year high of 3.61 million.
-BBC
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