WASHINGTON,
DC – Jason Furman, Chairman of the Council of Economic Advisers, issued
the following statement today on the employment situation in November.
Summary:
The economy added 178,000 jobs in November, extending the longest
streak of total job growth on record, as the unemployment rate fell to
4.6 percent.
The
economy added a solid 178,000 jobs in November as the longest streak of
total job growth on record continued. U.S. businesses have now added
15.6 million jobs since early 2010. The unemployment rate fell to 4.6
percent in November, its lowest level since August 2007, and the
broadest measure of underemployment fell for the second month in a row.
Average hourly earnings for private employees have increased at an
annual rate of 2.7 percent so far in 2016, faster than the pace of
inflation. Nevertheless, more work remains to ensure that the benefits
of the recovery are broadly shared, including opening new markets to U.S. exports; taking steps to spur competition to benefit consumers, workers, and entrepreneurs; and raising the minimum wage.
FIVE KEY POINTS ON THE LABOR MARKET IN NOVEMBER 2016
1. U.S. businesses have now added 15.6 million jobs since private-sector job growth turned positive in early 2010. Today, we learned that private employment rose by 156,000 jobs in November. Total
nonfarm employment rose by 178,000 jobs, in line with the monthly
average for 2016 so far and substantially higher than the pace of about
80,000 jobs per month that CEA estimates is necessary to maintain a low
and stable unemployment rate given the impact of demographic trends on
labor force participation.
In
November, the unemployment rate fell to 4.6 percent, its lowest level
since August 2007. The labor force participation rate ticked down,
though it is largely unchanged over the last three years (see point 3
below). The U-6 rate, the broadest official measure of labor
underutilization fell 0.2 percentage point for the second month in a row
in part due to a reduction in the number of employees working part-time
for economic reasons. (The U-6 rate is the only official measure of
underutilization that has not already fallen below its pre-recession
average.) So
far in 2016, nominal hourly earnings for private-sector workers have
increased at an annual rate of 2.7 percent, faster than the pace of
inflation (1.6 percent as of October, the most recent data available).
Click here to review the complete statement.
Source: The White House, Office of the Press Secretary
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