The U.S. labor market continued to strengthen in June, according to the latest data from the Bureau of Labor Statistics.
Strong June data and upward revisions for April and May put payroll job
gains for the second quarter of 2013 ahead of those for the first three
months of the year. The unemployment rate remained unchanged as both
the labor force and the number of employed workers grew. Involuntary
part-time work fell to its lowest level since early 2009, and long-term
unemployment also fell to a low for the recovery.
The economy
gained 202,000 private-sector payroll jobs in June. Most of those came
in the service sector, although goods-producing industries also gained
slightly. The government sector as a whole lost 7,000 jobs, but trends
differed strongly by level of government. The federal government lost
5,000 jobs, continuing a long decline. State governments reduced payroll
employment by 15,000 jobs, but that was almost fully offset by a gain
of 13,000 jobs in local government.
As the following chart shows,
payroll job gains were revised upward from data first reported for April
and May. The revisions raise the total number of payroll jobs added in
Q2 2013 to 535,000, significantly more than the 481,000 added in the
first quarter. The good quarterly job data provide a reason for optimism
regarding Q2 GDP, for which the first estimate is due at the end of the
month.
The unemployment rate for June remained steady at 7.6 percent, near its
low for the recovery. The unemployment rate is the ratio of unemployed
persons to the civilian labor force. The labor force grew by 177,000 in
the month, the number of employed by 160,000 and the number of
unemployed by 17,000. These data are based on a separate household
survey that does not always agree with the survey of employers on which
the payroll jobs data are based. The two differ partly because of
sampling error and partly because the payroll jobs data exclude farm
workers and the self-employed. >>>Read more
Follow this link to view or download a classroom-ready slideshow with charts of the latest employment data
I agree with the data and facts you have listed above and because of that many people wants to working from home
ReplyDelete