Strong U.S. jobs, wages growth expected in December
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[January 06, 2023] By
Lucia Mutikani
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The U.S. economy likely maintained a solid pace
of job and wage growth in December, but rising borrowing costs as the
Federal Reserve fights inflation could slow labor market momentum
significantly by mid-year.
The Labor Department's closely watched employment report on Friday is
also expected to show the unemployment rate unchanged at 3.7% last
month. The labor market has remained strong since the Fed embarked last
March on its fastest interest rate-hiking since the 1980s.
Rate-sensitive industries like housing and finance, as well as
technology companies, including Twitter, Amazon and Facebook parent Meta
have slashed jobs, yet airlines, hotels, restaurants and bars are
desperate for workers as the leisure and hospitality industries continue
to recover from the pandemic.
Labor market resilience has underpinned the economy by sustaining
consumer spending, but could prompt the Fed to lift its target interest
rate above the 5.1% peak the U.S. central bank projected last month and
keep it there for a while.
"All indications are that the labor market remains strong," said Sung
Won Sohn, a finance and economics professor at
Loyola Marymount University in Los Angeles. "Leisure and hospitality
employers are not able to get anybody even after wages have been going
up. That pattern has and will continue for a while, so that's where the
rubber hits the road."
The survey of business establishments is likely to show that nonfarm
payrolls increased by 200,000 jobs last month after rising 263,000 in
November, according to a Reuters poll of economists. That would be the
smallest gain in two years.
However, job growth would far exceed the pace needed to keep up with
growth in the working-age population, comfortably in the 150,000-300,000
range that economists associate with tight labor markets.
Estimates ranged from as low as 130,000 to as high as the 350,000
predicted by TD Securities.
Data from payroll scheduling and tracking company Homebase showed
employers held on to workers in December, which suggested a
smaller-than-normal drop in not seasonally adjusted (NSA) terms.
SEASONAL BOOST
"This means that the seasonal factor, which should be adjusting over a
plus 200,000 NSA decline, would be adding over a stronger than expected
figure," said TD Securities macro strategist Oscar Munoz. "The seasonal
adjustment has added around 430,000 jobs, on average, over the last five
Decembers."
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A pedestrian passes a "Help Wanted" sign
in the door of a hardware store in Cambridge, Massachusetts, U.S.,
July 8, 2022. REUTERS/Brian Snyder
An ongoing strike by 36,000 teachers in California is seen
depressing government payrolls. The government will revise the
seasonally adjusted data for the household survey, from which the
unemployment rate is derived, for the last five years.
Household employment decreased in October and November, leading some
economists to speculate that overall job growth was overstated. Some
Fed officials have also latched on to the divergence between the two
measures.
Yet the household survey tends to be volatile and most economists
expect household employment would be revised toward nonfarm
payrolls.
"Whenever trends in household employment have diverged from payroll
employment, corrections have tended to come through household
employment correcting towards now-stronger payrolls," said Veronica
Clark, an economist at Citigroup in New York. "We would not be
surprised to see an even larger rebound in household employment in
December or over the coming months."
Little impact is seen on the unemployment rate from the revision to
the household data. Average hourly earnings are expected to have
risen by 0.4% after surging 0.6% in November. That would lower the
year-on-year increase in wages to 5.0% from 5.1% in November.
Strong wage growth is likely to persist in January as several states
raise their minimum wage and most workers across the country get
cost of living adjustments. There were 10.458 million job openings
at the end of November, which translated to 1.74 jobs for every
unemployed person.
But the trend in employment growth could slow significantly by
mid-year. The Fed last year raised its policy rate by 425 basis
points from near zero to a 4.25%-4.50% range, the highest since late
2007. Last month, it projected at least an additional 75 basis
points of hikes in borrowing costs by the end of 2023.
Confidence among chief executive officers is at its lowest level
since the Great Recession, according to a recent survey from the
Conference Board.
"If they think demand is weakening and revenues are going to slow,
they're probably going to feel pressure to cut costs to maintain
profitability," said James Knightley, chief international economist
at ING in New York. "That does suggest that the pace of employment
growth is likely to slow quite quickly through this year, and we
could in fact, start to see some job losses in the middle of the
year."
(Reporting by Lucia Mutikani; Editing by David Gregorio)
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