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US unemployment rate falls to 4.1%, lowest in 17 years

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The US unemployment rate fell to its lowest level in nearly 17 years in October while job creation resumed climbing after the two late-summer hurricanes, the Labor Department reported Friday.

Analysts said the rebound was smaller than expected but upward revisions to job creation in the prior months meant the storms had caused less damage than originally feared, making for an upbeat report.

The White House hailed the outcome, saying the Trump administration’s economic agenda was bearing fruit. However, the report also showed a shrinking labor force and confirmed job creation in 2017 has lagged behind last year.

The US jobless rate fell to 4.1 percent, down a tenth of a point from September, the lowest the US economy has seen since December 2000.

Employers added 261,000 net new positions as businesses reopened in the wake of Hurricanes Harvey and Irma, although economists had forecast a rebound of 300,000 new jobs.

But the data for September turned out not be as bad as initially reported, with 18,000 new jobs created, rather than a loss of 33,000 positions. Together with the upward revision for August, an additional 90,000 jobs were added for those two months.

The results generally showed US labor markets in good health, easily bouncing back from the storms that idled the US energy hub in southeast Texas and forced millions of Floridians to flee their homes.

“With nearly 1.5 million new jobs since the president took office, including over 260,000 last month, it’s clear his agenda is putting Americans back to work,” White House Press Secretary Sarah Sanders said.

Nevertheless, average monthly job creation now stands at 169,000 so far this year, significantly below the 192,000 monthly average recorded through October of last year.

The labor force participation rate also fell 0.4 points to 62.7 percent and the employment-to-population ratio shrank 0.2 points to 60.2 percent — suggesting the fall in unemployment may partly reflect a dip in the size of the work force as well as job creation.

– The Fed starting to sweat? –

The falling unemployment rate was likely to spark further debate among Federal Reserve policymakers, who appear set to raise the benchmark US interest rate next month despite doggedly low inflation even while a vocal minority argues the Fed should remain on hold.

Since January, unemployment has seven tenths of a percentage point, and more employers say positions are increasingly difficult to fill amid a scarcity of qualified labor.

“As in the late 1990s, the last time unemployment was this low, the Fed will start to sweat the potential inflation implications,” Chris Low of FTN Financial said in a client briefing.

“But any who take the time to look at the data will see the late 90s was a remarkably benign time for inflation.”

The central bank worries low unemployment eventually will fuel higher wages and overall inflation, even though there have been no signs of that yet.

Wages pressures in October were flat, with average hourly earnings falling by a penny to $26.53, putting wages up 2.4 percent over the past 12 months, just above inflation.

But economists said the hurricanes distorted wage calculations, with average compensation rising in September because fewer hourly laborers were able to work, and then falling as they returned to their jobs.

“We expect more clear-cut evidence of wage pressures in the months ahead but today’s data are a bit disappointing from that perspective,” Jim O’Sullivan of High Frequency Economics wrote in a client note.

“We still think the weight of evidence supports ongoing Fed tightening, however, including another rate hike in Dec.”

Employment in bars and restaurants sharply rebounded from the hurricanes, adding 89,000 positions in October following September’s 98,000-job decline.

Manufacturers added 24,000 new positions but the retail workforce fell by more than 8,000 and mining and logging also shrank slightly, losing 2,000 positions.

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