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US unemployment rate holds steady in December at 7.8% | US unemployment rate holds steady in December at 7.8% |
(about 1 hour later) | |
The US economy added a further 155,000 jobs in December, while the unemployment rate held steady at 7.8%, official figures show. | The US economy added a further 155,000 jobs in December, while the unemployment rate held steady at 7.8%, official figures show. |
The jobs came mainly in the healthcare, manufacturing, construction and food services sectors, the Labor Department said. | The jobs came mainly in the healthcare, manufacturing, construction and food services sectors, the Labor Department said. |
The public sector shed 13,000 jobs, mainly at the local level, but this was more than offset by the private sector. | The public sector shed 13,000 jobs, mainly at the local level, but this was more than offset by the private sector. |
Separate figures suggested a sharp rise in activity in the US service sector. | |
The Institute of Supply Management said its service index rose to 56.1 in December, from 54.7 the previous month. Any reading above 50 suggests expansion. | |
The December reading was the highest since February and was stronger than analysts had expected. | |
Deadline postponed | |
The total number of unemployed in the US in December was largely unchanged at 12.2 million. | |
The unemployment rate for November was revised up from 7.7% to 7.8%, the department added. | The unemployment rate for November was revised up from 7.7% to 7.8%, the department added. |
These are the first figures since a short-term deal to stave off the US "fiscal cliff" was reached earlier this week. | These are the first figures since a short-term deal to stave off the US "fiscal cliff" was reached earlier this week. |
Failure to agree a deal would have triggered spending cuts and tax rises worth $600bn (£370bn), which were expected to throw the US back into recession and send the unemployment rate shooting upwards. | Failure to agree a deal would have triggered spending cuts and tax rises worth $600bn (£370bn), which were expected to throw the US back into recession and send the unemployment rate shooting upwards. |
Still, the deal has only postponed by two months negotiations over spending cuts and the government debt ceiling - a legal cap on its total borrowing set by Congress. If this cap is not raised, the US is set to run out of money by February. | Still, the deal has only postponed by two months negotiations over spending cuts and the government debt ceiling - a legal cap on its total borrowing set by Congress. If this cap is not raised, the US is set to run out of money by February. |
Bottoming out? | Bottoming out? |
The December new jobs figure was only slightly above the average 153,000 jobs created per month in both 2012 and 2011. | The December new jobs figure was only slightly above the average 153,000 jobs created per month in both 2012 and 2011. |
The US economy needs to add about 90,000 jobs a month to keep up with population growth. | The US economy needs to add about 90,000 jobs a month to keep up with population growth. |
Analysts expect many of the 30,000 new construction jobs - the sector's best performance in 15 months - to reflect rebuilding in the US Northwest following the damage inflicted by Storm Sandy in October. | Analysts expect many of the 30,000 new construction jobs - the sector's best performance in 15 months - to reflect rebuilding in the US Northwest following the damage inflicted by Storm Sandy in October. |
However, it may also reflect the bottoming-out of prices and activity in the US housing market following the collapse of last decade's property bubble. | However, it may also reflect the bottoming-out of prices and activity in the US housing market following the collapse of last decade's property bubble. |
New home construction has typically played a leading role in the recovery following previous US recessions. | New home construction has typically played a leading role in the recovery following previous US recessions. |
Last month, the US Federal Reserve said it planned to keep interest rates at close to zero at least until the US unemployment rate falls below 6.5%. | Last month, the US Federal Reserve said it planned to keep interest rates at close to zero at least until the US unemployment rate falls below 6.5%. |
Interest rates in the US have been close to zero since December 2008, and the Fed again kept them at below 0.25% last month. It also continues to buy $85bn (£53bn) a month of government bonds and mortgage-backed securities to try to boost the economy. | Interest rates in the US have been close to zero since December 2008, and the Fed again kept them at below 0.25% last month. It also continues to buy $85bn (£53bn) a month of government bonds and mortgage-backed securities to try to boost the economy. |
The Fed said in December: "The committee remains concerned that, without sufficient policy accommodation, economic growth might not be strong enough to generate sustained improvement in labour market conditions." | The Fed said in December: "The committee remains concerned that, without sufficient policy accommodation, economic growth might not be strong enough to generate sustained improvement in labour market conditions." |