July employment report: U.S. added 187K jobs |
The U.S. economy saw 187,000 jobs added last month, nearly matching June’s downwardly revised 185,000, the Labor Department said Friday. That gain was slower than the average monthly pace for the first half of this year, and well below the roughly 400,000 average monthly gain in 2022. The unemployment rate fell to 3.5% last month from 3.6% in June. Employers raised pay at the same rate as June, with average hourly earnings growing 4.4% in July from a year earlier. The labor force participation rate held at 62.6%, the fifth straight month at that level. The rate for those in the 25-to-64 “prime” age group edged lower to 83.4%. Health care led job creation by industry, adding 63,000 jobs for the month. Other sectors contributing included social assistance (24,000), financial activities (19,000) and wholesale trade (18,000). The other services category contributed 20,000 to the total, which included 11,000 from personal and laundry services. “The wage data is stronger than the payroll data, suggesting that demand for labor is still robust, and that the slowing pace of hiring is more due to a lack of supply of labor," commented Thomas Simons, U.S. economist at Jefferies. "This, combined with the firmer household survey data, should keep the Fed on their toes for another rate hike as soon as next month, but the [consumer price index] data next week will have a big influence in that decision as well.” |
|