OBAMA’S ‘RECOVERY’ EQUALS RECORD NUMBERS UNEMPLOYED
Mr Americana, Overpasses News DeskOctober 2nd, 2015
The economy added just 142,000 jobs last month, depressed by job cuts by manufacturers and oil drillers. The unemployment rate as falsely reported by the Obama administration remained 5.1 percent, but only because many Americans have stopped looking for work and are no longer counted as unemployed.
The proportion of adults either with a job or looking for one is at a 38-year low.
Of course, everyone knows the actual employment situation in America is much more stark. For more information, read this. 10 REASONS WHY OBAMA’S UNEMPLOYMENT NUMBERS ARE A HUGE LIE!
Friday’s tepid jobs report from the government suggested that the U.S. economy, which has been outshining others around the world, is weakening. Lackluster growth overseas has reduced exports of U.S. factory goods. China, the world’s second-largest economy after the United States, is slowing. Europe is struggling. Emerging economies from Brazil to Turkey are straining to grow at all.
“The weakness in the global economy is washing onto American shores”, James Marple, senior economist at TD Bank, said in a note to clients.
The sluggish data sent stock prices tumbling. The Dow Jones industrial average, which had been up before the jobs report was released, was down about 200 points two hours later. The yield on the 10-year Treasury note dipped to 1.92 percent, its lowest level since April. Investors tend to buy bonds when they expect sluggish growth and low inflation.
A homeless man sleeps under an American flag blanket
on a park bench in New York City. New U.S. data reports a drop in the
number of homeless people — but not in New York and other states.
The tepid pace of hiring complicates the picture for the Federal Reserve, which is considering whether to raise interest rates from record lows. Fed Chair Janet Yellen has said that the job market is nearly healed. But she has also said she wants to see further hiring and pay growth for reassurance that inflation is moving toward the Fed’s 2 percent target. Average hourly wages slipped a penny in September and have now risen just 2.2 percent in the past year.
“Every aspect of the September jobs report was disappointing,” said Michelle Girard, an economist at RBS Securities. It “strengthens the case that the Fed will be forced to stay on hold over the remainder of the year.”
The shrinking of the U.S. labor force – the number of people either working or looking for work – reflects in part the first wave of retirements of the vast baby boom generation. But it also signals that many Americans remain discouraged about their job prospects. Modest growth and steady, if unspectacular, hiring hasn’t encouraged more people to look for work.
Though the overall job market has lost some vigor, U.S. consumers are spending at a healthy pace and boosting job growth in sectors like retail and hotels and restaurants. But lackluster growth overseas has sharply reduced exports of factory goods.
So far this year, job gains have averaged 198,000 a month this year, a solid total, but below last year’s average of 260,000.
Last month, construction companies added 8,000 jobs and professional services, which includes accounting and architects, gained 31,000. Government added 24,000. But financial services reported no gain. And hiring in education and health fell to its lowest level in nearly a year.
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