U.S. job growth seen accelerating, rate cut still expected
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[July 05, 2019] By
Lucia Mutikani
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - U.S. job growth
likely rebounded in June, with wage gains expected to pick up, but that
would probably not be enough to discourage the Federal Reserve from
cutting interest rates this month amid growing evidence the economy is
slowing.
Lack of concrete progress in resolving an acrimonious trade war between
the United States and China was also seen forcing the U.S. central
bank's hand, regardless of a strong employment report from the Labor
Department on Friday. The Fed last month signaled it could ease monetary
policy as early as July, citing low inflation as well as growing risks
to the economy from an escalation in trade tensions between Washington
and Beijing.
President Donald Trump and Chinese President Xi Jinping last week agreed
to a trade truce and a return to talks. White House trade adviser Peter
Navarro said on Tuesday talks were heading in the right direction, but
it would take time to get the right deal made. The trade fight has
undercut business confidence, leading to a downturn in equipment
spending and manufacturing.
"Given signs of slowing growth and little material progress on the trade
war, a rebound in job growth would still leave the Fed on course to cut
rates at the July meeting and we expect a 25 basis points cut," said Sam
Bullard, a senior economist at Wells Fargo Securities in Charlotte,
North Carolina.
Nonfarm payrolls probably increased by 160,000 jobs last month after
rising by only 75,000 in May, according to a Reuters survey of
economists. May marked the second time this year that job gains dropped
below 100,000.
Reports on Wednesday showed private employers hired far
fewer-than-expected workers last month and a measure of services
industries employment declined.
Job growth has slowed to an average of 164,000 per month this year from
223,000 in 2018. The pace, however, remains well above the roughly
100,000 needed to keep up with growth in the working age population. In
light of May's moderation in hiring Fed Chairman Jerome Powell has said
job growth "bears watching."
While the economy is celebrating 10 years of expansion, the longest in
history, and its fundamentals remain healthy, there are signs that
momentum is slowing as the stimulus from last year's massive tax cuts
and more government spending fizzles.
Consumer spending is rising moderately, with confidence easing from its
recent lofty levels. Manufacturing and the housing market are struggling
and the trade deficit is widening again. Construction spending has
weakened as the boost from increased investment in roads and highways by
state and local governments fades.
STEADY UNEMPLOYMENT RATE
Though wage growth is expected to have picked up in June, the trend has
slowed from late last year when wages were rising at their fastest rate
in a decade. Average hourly earnings are forecast increasing 0.3% after
gaining 0.2% in May. That would lift the annual increase in wages to
3.2% from 3.1% in May, which was the slowest rise in eight months.
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Federal Reserve Board building on Constitution Avenue is pictured in
Washington, U.S., March 19, 2019. REUTERS/Leah Millis/File Photo
"I am skeptical that consumers can keep the slowdown, which is centered
in manufacturing and business investment, from seeping into other
corners of the economy," said Scott Anderson, chief economist at the
Bank of the West in San Francisco.
The Atlanta Fed is forecasting gross domestic product rising at a 1.3%
annualized rate in the second quarter. The economy grew at a 3.1% pace
in the first quarter.
The unemployment rate is expected to have remained near a 50-year low of
3.6% in June for a third straight month. But the jobless rate could
surprise on the upside as a survey last week showed consumers less
upbeat in their perceptions of the labor market this month.
The Conference Board survey's so-called labor market differential,
derived from data about respondents who think jobs are hard to get and
those who think jobs are plentiful, fell to a one-year low in June. This
measure closely correlates to the unemployment rate. Some of the recent
drop in the jobless rate has been because of people leaving the labor
market.
Job growth has slowed in part as employers struggle to find qualified
workers. There are about 7.4 million job openings.
"Business investment has been weak in part due to increased uncertainty
over the global environment and trade," said Michelle Girard, U.S. chief
economist at NatWest Markets in Stamford, Connecticut. "This
wait-and-see attitude could lead to a slowdown in the pace of hiring in
the months ahead as well."
Hiring likely picked up in most sectors in June, though manufacturing
payrolls were probably unchanged after rising by 3,000 in May. The
sector is struggling with an inventory bulge, concentrated in the
automotive industry, trade tensions, design troubles at planemaker
Boeing <BA.N> and slowing global growth.
Government employment is forecast rebounding after shedding 15,000 jobs
in May, the most in 16 months. Hiring for the 2020 Census is a wild card
to the estimate.
The average workweek is expected to have been unchanged at 34.4 hours in
June for a third straight month.
(Reporting by Lucia Mutikani; Editing by Andrea Ricci)
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