Advertisement

December Sees 252k New Jobs, Capping Strongest Job Growth In Years

Jan 9, 2015

Temp workers Dec 2014Capping the end of the strongest 12 months of job growth since well before the recession, employers added 252,000 jobs in December as the unemployment rate fell to 5.6%, its lowest level since June 2008.

Economists had expected a strong year end jobs report from the Labor Department, but were predicting growth closer to about 240,000 jobs and only slight change in November’s 5.8% unemployment rate.

“The economy has some momentum,” Robert Shapiro, chairman of Sonecon, an economic consultancy, told The New York Times before this morning’s report was released. “I think it’s kind of hit a stride with respect to job creation.”

Besides the strong December numbers, the Bureau of Labor Statistics, which compiles the data, adjusted up its previous counts for November and October, adding 50,000 more jobs than initially reported.

The temp sector added 14,700 jobs in December, accounting for 219,000 new jobs during 2014. The year before, temp agencies grew their headcount by 202,500. As a whole, the economy added 2.952 million jobs during the year. In 2013, the economy added 2.331 million.

Tempering the positive news, however, was a decline in private non-farm hourly wages last month. The average fell 5 cents to$24.57, nearly wiping out November’s 6 cent an hour increase. That leaves the average pay increase at 1.7% for the year.

Private-sector production and non-supervisory employees decreased by 6 cents to $20.68 in December. The average was $20.35 a year ago.

Econ indices Dec 2014Part of the explanation for the stagnant wage growth in the face of strong hiring is that many of the new jobs have been in low wage industries. Restaurants and bars, an industry with a large number of minimum wage or near minimum wage jobs, added 43,600 workers in December. That’s a net gain of 361,000 workers over the year.

And while the number of unemployed workers declined by 1.7 million during the year, it doesn’t mean they all found jobs. Many have simply given up trying to find a job and are no longer being included in the count. The Labor Department reported that the participation rate for December was 62.7, a near historic low.

Economists are at a loss to entirely explain the decline. Retirements of Baby Boomers and a return to school by some younger workers accounts for only about half the decline.

For recruiters, it means a smaller worker pool from which to hire. While the global economy is showing signs of cooling which could affect the pace of hiring in the U.S., for the month ahead, recruiting will continue to be a challenge. The LINE report for January from the Society for Human Resource Management predicts manufacturers will increase their hiring. The service sector will decline slightly.

The Labor Department said manufacturers added 17,000 jobs in December; the overall goods producing sector grew by 67,000 jobs. The service sector accounted for 173,000 jobs and government added 12,000 workers, almost all at the state and local level.