Finance

US adds more jobs than expected in October despite GM strike, trade-war tensions

GM workerAP Photo/LM Otero

  • Government data out Friday showed that hiring cooled less than expected in October.
  • A 40-day strike at General Motors, which was one of the largest in decades, pulled down the headline number in October.
  • The report came during a period of heightened policy uncertainty and talk of a potential slowdown.
  • Visit Business Insider’s homepage for more stories.

Government data out Friday showed that hiring cooled far less than expected in October, easing anxiety about the American economy during a period of heightened policy uncertainty and talk of a potential slowdown.

The US added 128,000 nonfarm payrolls last month, according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics, compared with forecasts for an increase of 85,000. That was fewer than the 180,000 created in September but enough to keep unemployment at a historically low 3.6%. Average hourly earnings rose 3% from a year earlier.

A 40-day strike at General Motors, which was one of the largest in decades weighed on activity last month. The United Automobile Workers reached a deal to reopen shuttered factories in late October but roughly 50,000 jobs were left unaccounted for during the impasse, according to Labor Department data.

“The strike is now over, so November private payrolls will rebound, but the trend is slowing as businesses cut back on hiring in the face of uncertainty over trade policy,” said Ian Shepherdson, the chief economist at Pantheon Macroeconomics.

Trade disputes between the Trump administration and major economies have piled pressure onto a labor market that had already been expected to slow this year, as the effects of a major tax-cut package began to fade.

A spate of steep tariffs have increasingly raised costs and cast uncertainty on business plans, creating a particularly challenging outlook for heavily trade-dependent sectors. Manufacturing fell deep into a recession this fall as new orders and hiring cooled further. In September, American factories lost 2,000 jobs.

Friday’s employment report was likely to temper expectations that the Federal Reserve would continue lowering borrowing costs in the near-term. Policymakers slashed interest rates Wednesday for a third time this year but signaled they would pause those efforts to insulate the economy from strains.

“Chair Powell needs to see a ‘material’ deterioration in the outlook and spent considerable time describing a strong household sector and jobs,” said Ellen Zentner, the chief US economist at Morgan Stanley. “Those are the sectors we will follow closely for signs a material reassessment might be warranted.”

The labor market struggled to pull Americans from the sidelines last month. The labor-force participation rate was little changed at 63.3%, a figure that is low by historical standards and compared with other countries.

Since the beginning of the year, the US has added an average of 167,000 jobs each month.

This story is developing. Please check back for updates.

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