The U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics reported that nonfarm payrolls rose by 263,000 in November 2022 and the unemployment rate remained steady at 3.7%. The November increase was roughly the same as average growth over the prior three months (282,000), but well below the year-to-date average of 392,000 and the monthly average of 562,000 seen in 2021, and higher than the average monthly gains of 164,000 seen in 2019. Market expectations had called for a gain of 200,000 jobs. Revisions subtracted 23,000 positions to total payrolls in the previous two months. The monthly gain paints an image of a still growing, but slowing, labor market.
Today’s labor report will add further impetus to the Fed’s policy conviction of increasing interest rates. It is looking for the job market to slow significantly and for the inflation rate to be tempered before it will adjust its aggressive stance on monetary policy. In a statement this past Wednesday, Federal Reserve Chair Jay Powell indicated that the central bank is likely to raise the fed funds rate further, but by a lesser 50 basis points at its upcoming December meeting, down from 75 basis points in the last four rate hikes. Indeed, the Federal Reserve raised short-term interest rates for the sixth time this year on November 2nd. That marked the fourth consecutive 0.75 percentage point increase and followed earlier increases in 2022 of lesser amounts. The latest increase pushed the Fed Funds rate to a range of 3.75% to 4.00%, up from 0% at the beginning of the year. The rapid rise in interest rates is the most aggressive pace of monetary policy tightening since the early 1980s and is in response to inflation which remains uncomfortably high.
Employment in health care rose by 45,000 in November and has increased by an average of 47,000 per month in 2022 compared with 9,000 in 2021. Employment in nursing care facilities grew by 2,800 jobs from last month and 23,500 from year-earlier levels and stood at 1,369,500 positions. Separately, and despite headlines about job losses in tech sectors, the information sector added 19,000 jobs.
In the household survey conducted by the BLS, the jobless rate was unchanged from October and stood at 3.7% in November. In September, the jobless rate had once again fallen to its pre-pandemic level of 3.5% seen in February 2020. Both months’ unemployment rates are well below the 14.7% peak seen in April 2020. The underemployment rate was 6.7% in November, up from 6.8% in October.
Among the major worker groups, the October unemployment rates were 3.3% for adult women, adult men (3.4%), teenagers (11.3%), Whites (3.2%), Hispanics (3.9%), Blacks (5.7%), and Asians (2.7%).
Average hourly earnings for all employees on private nonfarm payrolls rose by $0.18 in November to $32.82. This was a gain of 5.1% from year-earlier levels, lower than the upwardly revised gain of 6.8% seen in October.
The labor force participation rate slipped back to 62.1% in November from 62.2% in October and was below the February 2020 level of 63.4%.
Earlier this week, the BLS released the results of its October Job Openings and Labor Turnover Survey (JOLTS report) that showed the number of job openings fell by 353,000 positions to a seasonally adjusted 10.3 million. That was below the peak of 11.9 million in March, but still well above their pre-pandemic level in early 2020 when it averaged 7.0 million. This means that there are roughly 1.7 open positions for every person looking for work in September, down from 1.9 in September, but much higher than 1.2 in 2019. The hirings rate fell to 6.0 million, the lowest level since January 2021 and the quits fell for the second month in a row to 4.0 million, the lowest level since May 2021.