Weather Tonight: 1°c Heavy snow Morning: 3°c Mostly cloudy

Business

US jobless figures show triumph for private sector

3 Sep 2010


More than 50,000 jobs were lost in the US last month - around half the amount feared as private companies hired new staff.

Official figures published in Washington this afternoon showed so-called non-farm payrolls fell 54,000 in August. That was far less than the 100,000 expected by economists in Wall Street, although it was still enough to push the unemployment rate up to 9.6%.

It is 7.8% in the UK.

Private employment in the US, seen by many as a better gauge of the jobs market and the economy, increased by an impressive 67,000, much more than the 40,000 expected. Government employment fell by 121,000, largely because 114,000 temporary workers who had been taken on to compile the US census finished their work in August.

The private sector figures raised hopes that the US economy, the biggest in the world, is not heading for a double-dip recession.

"An increase in private payrolls is a move in the right direction," said Ken Mayland, president of ClearView Economics in Ohio. "It's a stunted recovery and we see a lot of headwinds."

The better-than-feared jobs news was also a boost for Barack Obama ahead of the midterm elections.

More than eight million jobs were lost in the US during the recession - the worst employment slump in the post war era. "We really need private businesses to step up and begin to hire more aggressively for this recovery to gain momentum," said Ryan Sweet of Moody's.

Reader views (1)

 Add your view

For the U.S. an increase in private non-farm jobs of 67000 is not at all impressive. 250000 jobs would be a typical monthly number if a recovery was taking place. The S&P 500 rose following the number but that was probably caused by a lack of market participants on the day prior to a public holiday. Lookout for doom and gloom and a market slide to return by the middle of next week when we see again that Obama is out of ideas to kickstart the recovery.

- dougwatt, london EUSSR14, 03/09/2010 23:14
Report abuse


Add your comment

 

Terms and conditions Make text area bigger You have  characters left.

We welcome your opinions. This is a public forum. Libellous and abusive comments are not allowed. Please read our House Rules.

For information about privacy and cookies please read our Privacy Policy.


 

 

  • RBS chairman denies he threatened to quit over Hester's bonus RBS Sir Philip Hampton, chairman of Royal Bank of Scotland, has denied that he and the rest of his board had threatened to resign en masse over...
  • BT profits surge by 48% Ian Livingstone BT shares have risen 3.3% to a four-year high as the telecoms giant boosted profits, despite another dip in revenues and some renewed...
  • Insolvencies on the rise Insolvency practitioners warned of even worse to come as official figures have revealed a 7% rise in the number of firms going bust in the past year
  • Service sector powers UK away from a double-dip Spinning Chancellor George Osborne's hopes of avoiding a double-dip recession have been given a massive boost after a stunning January for the UK's...
  • Sale and rent back halted The City watchdog has clamped down on the much-criticised sale and rent back industry, which preyed on struggling homeowners
  • Stepping down: BP's ex-safety tsar heads for exit BP oil Sir Bill Castell, BP's former safety tsar who received a bloody nose at last year's AGM, is to sever ties completely with the oil giant
  • Takeover talks back on for Misys Mike Lawrie IT firm Misys has said it is in merger discussions with Swiss counterpart Temenos in a possible £2 billion tie-up
  • UK economy forecast to shrink again London's skyline Britain's economy will fall into recession in the first half of the year and the Government needs to ease up on its tough package of...
  • Taxman squeezes big firms for extra £4bn The taxman clawed back a record £4.06 billion from Britain's biggest companies last year, as HM Revenue & Customs ramped up investigations into the country's biggest corporate accounts
  • Hamleys to expand as global strategy pays off Hamleys teddy Hamleys, the toys specialist, posted robust festive sales in the UK, although its international business was the group's star performer
  •  
    Market Roundup
    FRIDAY UPDATE

    Admiral steadies the ship after its long spell of rough sailing

    It has been choppy sailing for Admiral recently, but the insurer has been enjoying rather clearer conditions

    More