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Analysts forecast that employers added just 122,000 jobs last month, below September's 148,000. The unemployment rate is forecast to have risen to 7.3 percent. The ISM survey partly reflects consumers' willingness to spend. Other recent reports suggests Americans are spending, but at a cautious pace. Unemployment is at a still-high 7.2 percent and workers are seeing only meager increases in pay. Sales at retail stores, auto dealers and restaurants dipped 0.1 percent in September, mostly because auto sales fell 2.2 percent. But excluding the volatile categories of autos, gas and building supplies, sales rose 0.5 percent, up from 0.2 percent in August. Consumer spending on services, particularly utilities, has been weak. Most economists forecast that consumer spending slowed in the July-September quarter compared with the April-June quarter. Growth likely slowed in the July-September quarter to an annual rate of about 2 percent, economists forecast, down from 2.5 percent in the April-June quarter. Some economists believe it may pick up a bit in the final three months of the year. The government will issue its first estimate of the economy's third-quarter growth on Thursday.
[Associated
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