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She's now more confident about the recovery, which she feared might be "a false hope" earlier this year. "Orders are coming in consistently," she said. "Most customers want everything right now because they had let their inventories run down during the recession." The 290,000 net job gains in April come from a survey of businesses. The government also does a separate survey of households. The household poll found far larger job gains last month: 550,000 more people said they were employed. The household survey is used to calculate the unemployment rate. Economists are encouraged by the sharp jump in employment in the household survey: It's shown a net 1.6 million jobs created over the past four months. By contrast, the business payroll survey has shown 573,000 jobs added in the same period. The difference is encouraging because the household survey often is the first to detect employment trends in a recovery. Some economists say that's because it can better pick up hiring trends at startup companies. After the 2001 recession, for example, the household survey showed job gains before the payroll survey did. The household poll is also more inclusive. It covers agricultural workers, the self-employed, domestic employees and people who work in family businesses without pay
-- none of whom are included in the payroll survey.
There will need to be far more job growth to reduce unemployment. Friday's report showed that 15.3 million people were out of work in April. And the number of people working part time who would rather have full-time jobs rose by 98,000 to 9.2 million. Counting people who have given up looking for work and part-timers who would prefer to be working full time, the so-called underemployment rate rose to 17.1 percent in April, up from 16.9 percent in March. It's close to record high of 17.4 percent set in October. The number of people out of work six months or longer reached 6.7 million in April, a new high. These people made up 45.9 percent of all unemployed people, also a record high. Hiring isn't expected to be robust enough anytime soon, and economists think unemployment will remain above 9 percent by the November midterm elections. That could make Democratic and Republican incumbents in Congress vulnerable. For employers to boost hiring significantly, the economy would need to grow at an annual rate of 6 percent to 8 percent a quarter, rather than the 3.2 percent pace logged in the first three months of this year, economists say. Such growth would mean shoppers were spending much more freely. That scenario isn't likely, both because of high unemployment and sluggish wage gains. Nationwide, average hourly earnings rose just a penny in April, to $22.47. Another issue is that small businesses, which usually help drive job creation during recoveries, are having trouble getting loans. That tight credit is crimping their ability to expand operations and hire. Many economists think it will take until at least the middle of the decade to lower the unemployment rate to a more normal 5.5 percent to 6 percent.
[Associated
Press;
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