Some Jobs Numbers to Brighten Your Day ✨

In spite of high inflation and fears of an upcoming recession, job numbers from last month were… pretty good! With respect to employment, March’s numbers indicate a return to (some kind of) pre-pandemic normalcy. 👏

The unemployment rate beat analysts’ expectations — March’s unemployment rate clocked in at 3.6% (below analysts’ expected 3.7% and below February’s rate of 3.8%.) Additional nonfarm payrolls for the month totaled 431,000 (economists expected 490,000 payrolls.) Overall, the U.S. labor force increased by 418,000 employees, just 174,000 workers shy from pre-pandemic participation in the workforce. 🙌

Here’s a sector breakdown of where jobs were added:

  • Leisure & hospitality: 112,000
  • Professional & business services: 102,000
  • Retail: 49,000
  • Manufacturing: 38,000
  • Social assistance: 25,000
  • Construction: 19,000
  • Financial: 16,000

March has marked the eleventh consecutive month that the U.S. workforce has increased by over 400,000 laborers/month. 📈 Lydia Boussour of Oxford Economics shared her enthusiasm for March’s strong employment figures:

All the constraints on the labor supply that were prevailing in 2021 have really eased. [That is] a really important factor in driving that next leg of the recovery and getting employment back to where it was before the pandemic.” Right on! 🥳

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