We are pleased to announce that we have finished updating the U.S. Snapshot. It should now give us the same flexibility in our data presentation as in our partner page: the European Snapshot. We also hope to bring you more regional and state-level analysis in our future posts.
Month: April 2018
In Like a Lion…
By Thomas Cooley and Peter Rupert
The BLS announced that nonfarm payroll employment rose by 103,000 in March and revised February employment up 13,000 to 326,000 and January down 63,000 to 176,000. The 50,000 in downward revisions and the weak 103,000 March number paints a fairly different picture of the labor market…one not quite as strong as it was just yesterday.
The sharp drop off may well have been weather related as the construction sector lost some 15,000 jobs in March.
Looking at the data over a longer period of time with a 12 month moving average suggests that employment growth has been slowing for some time. But this is the ninth year of an expansion and the fact that the economy is continuing to add jobs at a good pace is encouraging, the March hiccup notwithstanding.
Average hourly earnings increased 8 cents and is up 2.7% since last year and with low inflation has lead to real wage gains. Average weekly hours remained at 34.5.
The household survey reveals a decline of 158,000 in the labor force with the participation rate falling from 63.0 to 62.9. The unemployment rate fell slightly from 4.14% to 4.07%.
Upgrading our Blog!
We are pleased to announce that we will be upgrading our blog this weekend in order to give greater flexibility in our data presentation.
After this change, you will still be able to find us at econsnapshot.com.
Subscriptions should remain intact, though to err on the side of caution, we suggest that our loyal readers check back with us on Monday and re-subscribe after the change takes place. We thank you for your readership and we look forward to continuing to bring you the current Economic Snapshot!