Biden Cautiously Optimistic As New Jobs Rebound

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2021-04-02 HKT 22:54

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  • The US unemployment rate edged down to 6.0 percent in March. Image: Shutterstock

    The US unemployment rate edged down to 6.0 percent in March. Image: Shutterstock

President Biden on Friday hailed new jobs figures showing a massive rebound in March as a sign of hope "at long last" for the recovery of an economy devastated by the pandemic.

"And at long last there is hope. So for so many families, credit for this progress belongs not to me but to the American people -- hard-working women and men who have struggled through this," he said in a televised address.

He was commenting after the Labor Department reported that the US economy had regained a massive 916,000 jobs in March, the biggest increase since August, with nearly a third of the increase in the hard-hit leisure and hospitality sector.

The rise in hiring pushed the unemployment rate down to 6.0 percent from 6.2 percent in February.

However, Biden also warned that the economy had some way to go, noting that employment was still 8.4 million jobs lower than the pre-pandemic peak.

The gain in non-farm payrolls, which far exceeded the consensus estimate among economists, reflects the accelerating recovery as vaccinations become more widespread.

And with upward revisions to hiring in the first two months of 2021, employment in January and February combined was 156,000 higher than previously reported, the report said.

Hiring was widespread in manufacturing, construction and education, but leisure and hospitality which bore the brunt of the shutdowns topped the list, regaining 280,000 -- 176,000 of those in restaurants and bars.

Labor economist Diane Swonk of Grant Thornton almost exactly predicted the blockbuster report. She said before the release that the rebound was due to "ramping up vaccinations, lifting restrictions on indoor venues and reopening schools for in-person learning combined with spring break" and increased air travel.

But the data show there are still scars from the pandemic damage: Black unemployment remains little changed at 9.6 percent, and average hourly earnings fell by 4 cents to US$29.96, reflecting rehiring of lower wage workers who bring down the average.

In addition, there are nearly six million more workers now than before the pandemic who either are working part time because they cannot find a full time position, or are on the sidelines because they have not been able to find work, the report said. (AFP)______________________________



Last updated: 2021-04-03 HKT 00:31

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