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But neither figure is strong enough to signal broad gains in job creation. Employers advertised 4.4 million job openings in December 2007, when the recession began. "The data that we're seeing is still consistent with a very slow jobs recovery," said Michelle Meyer, an economist at Bank of America Merrill Lynch. Weak job growth will likely force the Federal Reserve to take further steps to boost the economy. Most economists expect the Fed to act next month to buy government debt to try to lower interest rates and spur more borrowing. The unemployment rate can rise even when the economy is adding jobs -- if the jobs aren't enough to keep up with the growing population. Private-sector job creation in September will likely to fall below the 125,000 net new jobs needed just to keep up with population growth. That growth stems from young people seeking their first jobs and new immigrants looking for work.
Even more jobs will be needed to absorb many of the 1.1 million Americans who have stopped looking for work and won't resume their search until hiring picks up. The Federal Reserve Bank of San Francisco estimates that employers would have to create as many as 300,000 net jobs each month to reduce the unemployment rate to 8 percent within two years. That figure takes into account both population growth and the return of some discouraged job seekers.
[Associated
Press;
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