US Economy Adds 661,000 Jobs in September, Unemployment Falls Below 8 Percent

US Economy Adds 661,000 Jobs in September, Unemployment Falls Below 8 Percent

The U.S. economy added 661,000 jobs in September, while the unemployment rate fell from 8.4 percent ..

The U.S. economy added 661,000 jobs in September, while the unemployment rate fell from 8.4 percent in August to 7.9 percent last month, the Labor Department said in a release Friday.

The agency’s last monthly employment report ahead of the Nov. 3 presidential election shows labor market recovery continues from the lockdown-driven lows of March and April, although at a slowing pace. Employment growth peaked in June, when payrolls jumped by a record 4.781 million jobs, dropping to 1.761 million jobs added in July, and 1.489 million in August.

So far, the economy has recovered around half of the 22 million jobs lost due to lockdowns and other measures in response to the outbreak of the CCP (Chinese Communist Party) virus. Overall, September’s nonfarm employment remains below its pre-pandemic level by around 10.7 million jobs, or 7 percent.

“If you had told me we were going to get 11 million jobs in five months, that seemed incredible,” said economist Stephen Moore, in remarks to Fox News. “Is the economy, in terms of job creation slowing a little bit, yeah that was expected, you know the first 10 million jobs are easier to get back than the next 10 million jobs, but, look these are very positive numbers,” he added.

Yet with the pace of job creation last month falling below 1 million, it could be many months before the economy recovers the remaining 10 million-plus jobs and completes a V-shaped recovery in the labor market.

“The big gains from business re-openings are fading,” said Gus Faucher, chief economist at PNC Financial in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. “Job growth will slow through the rest of 2020 and in 2021.”

The Labor Department report showed that private sector employers added 877,000 jobs in September, with the topline payrolls number driven down by a drop in the number government jobs, which fell by 216,000. The biggest decline was in the category of local government education, which shed 231,100 jobs in September.

The unemployment rate, after peaking at 14.7 percent in April, has fallen steadily, and for Americans 16 years or older stood at 7.9 percent in September. This is the same rate of unemployment as October 2012, a month before President Barack Obama was reelected.

person A person looks inside the closed doors of the Pasadena Community Job Center during the CCP virus pandemic in Pasadena, Calif., on May 7, 2020. (Damian Dovarganes/AP Photo)

Women returned to work at a slightly greater rate than men in September, the Labor Department figures also showed, with joblessness among adult women over 20 falling by 0.7 percentage points to 7.7 percent, compared to men in the same age group seeing their rate of unemployment fall by 0.6 percentage points to 7.4 percent.

Asian Americans saw the biggest month-over-month drop in unemployment in September, with their jobless rate dropping by 1.8 percentage points to 8.9 percent. Black or African American workers experienced the next largest monthly drop in joblessness, down by nearly a full percentage point to 12.1 percent. Joblessness among white workers declined by 0.3 percentage points, while unemployment among those of Hispanic or Latino ethnicity ticked down by 0.2 percentage points.

Economic output data released by the Commerce Department on Wednesday confirmed that the economy suffered its sharpest contraction in at least 73 years in the second quarter amid widespread business lockdowns and other measures related to the virus outbreak. Record growth is predicted in the third quarter, buoyed by fiscal stimulus and the resumption of many business operations, but factors like unceRead More – Source

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