US Economy Added 223,000 New Jobs as Labor Market Continues to Slow
US Economy Added 223,000 New Jobs as Labor Market Continues to Slow

By Andrew Moran

The U.S. economy created 223,000 new jobs in December, down from 256,000 in November, according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS). This was slightly higher than economists’ expectations of 200,000.

This represented the fifth consecutive month of slowing employment growth.

The unemployment rate slipped to 3.5 percent last month, down from 3.6 percent in the previous month. This was also below market estimates of 3.7 percent.

BLS noted that the changes in total non-farm payrolls for October and November were revised down by 21,000 and 7,000, respectively.

Average hourly earnings eased to 4.6 percent year-over-year and rose 0.3 percent month-over-month to $32.82. Average weekly hours also dipped to 34.3. The labor force participation rate edged up to 62.3 percent.

In total, the national economy added approximately 4.5 million new jobs in 2022, down from 6.7 million in 2021.

Employment gains were driven by leisure and hospitality, with 67,000 new positions. Health care also rose by 55,000, followed by construction (28,000) and social assistance (20,000). There was little change in retail (9,000), manufacturing (8,000), and mining (4,000).

The number of long-term unemployed fell by 146,000 to 1.1 million. The number of people employed part-time was flat at 3.9 million, while the number of people not in the labor force but who want a job dropped by 352,000 to 5.2 million.

In addition, the number of people who work two or more jobs topped 8 million, up from 7.7 million in November.

Once again, there was a divergence between the establishment and household surveys. The establishment component, which surveys businesses, showed the headline number. But the household survey revealed employment growth of just 136,000.

“Today’s jobs report indicates that we’re still in a healthy market, especially as available job openings beat expectations, showing employer demand remains high. However, there have been early signs of shifting, like the increase in part-time work and decrease in labor force participation. Jobseeker activity through December also remained on the cooler side,” said Cody Harker, head of Data and Insights from recruitment marketing firm Bayard Advertising, in a note.

In pre-market trading, investors responded favorably to the December jobs report, with the leading benchmark indexes recording modest gains on smaller-than-expected wage gains.

According to Jan Szilagyi, CEO and co-founder of investment firm Toggle AI, the latest jobs numbers show that “the economy is slowing, but not slowing enough.”

“Pace of job growth is still way above the speed limit so for now, the economy isn’t anywhere near the kind of ‘benign job growth’ the Fed wants to see,” he said.

“For stocks, this is a pretty neutral report: markets already know the Fed is relatively hawkish and this isn’t going to change anyone’s mind.”

 Latest Developments in the US Labor Market

According to the ADP National Employment Report (pdf), the private sector created 235,000 jobs in December, topping market estimates of 150,000. This was also higher than the upwardly revised 182,000 positions in November.

Interestingly enough, small- and medium-sized businesses contributed to all employment growth in December, creating 195,000 and 191,000 jobs, respectively. Large businesses lost 151,000 positions.

Overall, ADP noted that payroll growth averaged close to 301,000 jobs per month in 2022. In addition, annual pay eased to 7.3 percent year-over-year in December, down from 7.6 percent in the previous month.

“The labor market is strong but fragmented, with hiring varying sharply by industry and establishment size. Business segments that hired aggressively in the first half of 2022 have slowed hiring and in some cases cut jobs in the last month of the year,” said Nela Richardson, ADP chief economist, in a statement.

Meanwhile, U.S.-based employers announced 43,651 job cuts in December down from 76,835 in November. This represented the second-highest figure this year and surged 129 percent from the same time a year ago. In all of 2022, employers announced intentions to cut 363,824 jobs, up 13 percent from 2021.

The tech sector trimmed the most amount of payroll, with 97,171 job cuts. The automotive industry also eliminated nearly 31,000 jobs last year.

“The overall economy is still creating jobs, though employers appear to be actively planning for a downturn. Hiring has slowed as companies take a cautious approach entering 2023,” said Andrew Challenger, senior vice president of Challenger, Gray & Christmas, in a statement.

Department of Labor data (pdf) found that the number of Americans filing for first-time unemployment benefits slowed to 204,000 for the week ending December 31, below economists’ expectations of 225,000. This was down from the previous week’s print of 223,000.

Continuing jobless claims declined from 1.718 million to 1.694 million. The four-week average, which removes week-to-week volatility, fell from 220,500 to 213,750.

These numbers were released after the BLS reported the number of job openings tumbled to 10.458 million in November, higher than the market forecasts of 10 million. The print was slightly down from 10.512 million in October.

Job quits rose to 4.173 million, up from 4.047 million, and the number of hires slipped by 56,000 to 6.1 million.

Does this mean the U.S. labor market will remain strong in 2023? Not quite, says Eliza Winger, an economist at Bloomberg Economics.

“Layoff announcements were contained to a limited number of sectors in 2022, but we expect a broader cooling of the labor market in 2H 2023, when a recession will likely hit,” she wrote.

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