US job openings rose last month, though hiring slowed, in mixed picture
for labor market
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[December 04, 2024] By
CHRISTOPHER RUGABER
WASHINGTON (AP) — The number of job postings in the United States
rebounded in October from a 3 1/2 year low in September, a sign that
businesses are still seeking workers even though hiring has cooled.
Openings rose 5% to 7.7 million from 7.4 million in September, the Labor
Department said Tuesday. The increase suggests that job gains could pick
up in the coming months. Still, the latest figure is down significantly
from 8.7 million job postings a year ago.
Last month, job openings rose sharply in professional and business
services, a category that includes engineers, managers, and accountants,
as well as in the restaurant and hotel and information technology
industries.
The number of people quitting their jobs rose in October, a sign of
confidence in the job market. And layoffs tumbled to just 1.6 million —
below the lowest figures in the two decades that preceded the 2020
pandemic.
Taken as a whole, Tuesday's figures suggest that the job market might be
stabilizing at a modest level, with hiring moderate but layoffs
uncommonly low. The unemployment rate is at a low 4.1%, even though job
gains slowed sharply in October, according to the monthly jobs report.
The slowdown in job growth last month reflected mainly the impact of
hurricanes and a strike at Boeing.
“There's a lot of cause for optimism," said Cory Stahle, an economist at
Indeed, the job listings website. "The fact that job openings ticked up
is always an encouraging sign.”
Tuesday's figures mean there are now 1.1 available jobs for each
unemployed worker, a healthy figure. Before the pandemic there were
usually more unemployed people than openings.
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A construction worker walks on scaffolding at a building site on
Sept. 4, 2024, in Waukee, Iowa. (AP Photo/Charlie Neibergall, File)
Still, the latest ratio is down from
a peak of roughly two job openings per unemployed person two years
ago. Businesses have pulled back from the hiring frenzy that
occurred as the economy emerged from the pandemic recession.
Tuesday's report, known as the Job Openings and Labor Turnover
Survey, or JOLTS, showed that overall hiring slowed in October.
Total hiring slipped to 5.3 million from 5.6 million, though that
decline reflected hurricane-related disruptions.
The JOLTS report is separate from the monthly jobs figures, which
will be released Friday. That report is forecast to show a net gain
of nearly 210,000 jobs in November, up from an anemic 12,000 in
October.
Tuesday’s report also showed that the number of Americans who quit
their jobs rebounded in October to 3.4 million, after having reached
a four-year low in September. An increase in quitting is a good sign
for the economy, because it suggests that people are confident
enough to search for new job opportunities.
The Federal Reserve is watching the jobs data closely. Any sign that
hiring is sharply weakening could encourage Fed officials to cut
their key interest rate more quickly, to try to bolster borrowing
and spending and support the economy.
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