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வெள்ளி, நவம்பர் 21, 2025 ,கார்த்திகை 5, விசுவாவசு வருடம்

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US hiring rebounded in October, with 531,000 jobs added

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US hiring rebounded in October, with 531,000 jobs added

US hiring rebounded in October, with 531,000 jobs added

US hiring rebounded in October, with 531,000 jobs added


UPDATED : ஜன 01, 1970 05:30 AM

ADDED : நவ 05, 2021 12:00 AM

Google News

UPDATED : ஜன 01, 1970 05:30 AM ADDED : நவ 05, 2021 12:00 AM


Google News
நிறம் மற்றும் எழுத்துரு அளவு மாற்ற

Washington: America's  employers stepped up their hiring in October, adding  a solid 531,000 jobs, the most since July and a sign  that the recovery from the pandemic recession may  be overcoming a virus-induced slowdown. 

Friday's report from the Labor Department  also showed that the unemployment rate fell to 4.6%   last month, from 4.8% in September. 

That is a comparatively low level but still well above the pre-pandemic jobless rate of 3.5%.
The economy's emergence from the  pandemic, by most measures, remains on course.  Services companies in such areas as retail, banks and  warehousing have reported a sharp jump in sales.  More Americans bought new homes last month. And  consumer confidence rose in October. 
Still, the recovery would gain strength  from a sustained acceleration in hiring. The economy  grew at a healthy 6.5% annual rate in the first half of  the year as vaccinations spread and Americans  showed themselves more willing to travel, shop, eat  out and attend entertainment events. Yet the delta  variant held economic growth in the July-September  quarter to just a 2% annual rate and sharply slowed hiring.
Recent economic gauges have cast a  hopeful picture. After several rounds of stimulus  checks and other government support payments, Americans as a whole have amassed about USD 2.5 trillion more in savings than they had before the pandemic. As that money is spent, it will likely fuel further economic activity. 
The Conference Board, a business research group, said that in its October consumer confidence survey, the proportion of Americans who said they planned to buy cars, homes or major appliances all rose. And nearly half the survey  respondents said they planned to vacation in the next six months — the highest such proportion since February 2020, before COVID-19 ripped through the economy.
Yet some companies say they still can't  find enough workers to fill jobs. Many parents,  particularly mothers, haven't returned to the workforce after having left jobs during the pandemic  to care for children or other relatives. Defying the  predictions of some, the expiration of a $300-a-week federal unemployment supplement hasn't caused  more people to look for work. Roughly 5 million fewer people have jobs now than did before the pandemic. 
Most economists say they're hopeful that  with vaccinations helping to suppress the delta wave,  more people will seek and find jobs because they're  no longer sick or caring for someone who is or  because they no longer fear becoming infected. Those  health issues had sidelined more people in September than in previous months.
America's workers, who now enjoy greater  leverage in the job market than they have in decades,  are receiving solid pay increases. The draw of higher  income could entice more people to come off the  sidelines and look for work again.
 
Wages and salaries in the July-September  quarter, compared with a year earlier, jumped by the  most in 20 years. Most of that gain, though, went to  already employed people who left their jobs: The  number of people who quit, mostly to take new  positions, has reached a record high. 
Rising inflation, though, has eroded much  of the value of those pay increases and has become  the most serious headwind for the U.S. 

economy.  Higher costs for food, heating oil, rents and furniture have burdened millions of families. Prices rose 4.4% in September compared with 12 months earlier, the sharpest such increase in three decades. 
That inflation surge was a key reason why  the Federal Reserve announced this week that it  would begin winding down the stimulus it has given  the economy since the pandemic recession struck last  year. The Fed will do so by reducing its monthly bond  purchases, which have been intended to hold down  long-term interest rates to spur borrowing and spending. 
Chair Jerome Powell suggested that it  won't be possible to gain a clear picture of the job  market's health until the impact of COVID-19 declines further, which could take months. 
Yet in the meantime, there are plenty of  signs that the economy is healing: The number of  people applying for first-time unemployment benefits  fell for a fifth straight week, to a level nearly as low  as the pace of jobless claims before the pandemic  struck 20 months ago. 
And while hiring has slowed for now,  consumers as a whole have solid financial cushions.  After several rounds of stimulus checks and other  government support payments, Americans overall  have amassed about USD 2.5 trillion more in savings  than they had before the pandemic. As that money is spent, it will likely fuel further economic activity. 

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