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At the same time, the economy is benefiting from the best two-month hiring stretch in five years. Unemployment dropped to a two-year low of 8.8 percent in March. Economists expect employers will keep adding around 200,000 jobs a month through the end of the year. As more people find jobs, spending will rise. But the job growth is not expected to give workers' more bargaining power to demand higher wages. "The unemployment rate is still very high," said Paul Dales, chief U.S. economist at Capital Economics. "You are not going to ask for a pay raise when you know there are a lot of people who could get your job." As a result, people are saving more than they did before the recession. That's good for household budgets but bad for economic growth. The savings rate remained unchanged at 5.5 percent of after-tax incomes in March, well above the 2.1 percent pace in 2007. Wyss said he believed the savings rate will remain around where it is now for the rest of the year. "People were in debt up to their eyeballs when the recession began and they are gradually working their way out of so much debt," Wyss said.
[Associated
Press;
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