Unemployment rate falls to 6% in March as employers add 916,000 jobs

FAN Editor

Millions of Americans have lost their jobs in the past year.

The U.S. unemployment rate last month slipped to 6% as some 916,000 jobs were added to the economy, the Department of Labor said Friday.

Friday’s jobs report comes amid glimmers of hope that the end of the pandemic is within sight, as COVID-19 cases fall across the country and vaccine access is finally opening up.

The economy, however, still bears deep scars from the health crisis. Before COVID-19 shocked the economy, the unemployment rate in the U.S. was at a historic low of 3.5%.

The leisure and hospitality industry added some 280,000 jobs last month, with nearly two-thirds of them in food services and drinking places (which saw an uptick of 176,000 jobs).

Employment in public and private education also rose last month, with an uptick of 76,000 in local government education, a rise of 50,000 in state government education and an increase in 64,000 jobs in private education.

Construction, meanwhile, added some 110,000 jobs last month.

Robust job gains in the leisure and hospitality sector is “a good indication that employers in that sector are starting to feel more optimistic about at least the medium to short term future,” Nick Bunker, the director of economic research at hiring site Indeed, told ABC News ahead of Friday’s report.

“Gains there are very good see because not only is that indication that there’s some optimism there, but also those are the kinds of jobs that have been hit hardest,” he added.

Employment in leisure and hospitality is still down by 3.1 million jobs, or 18.5%, compared to February 2020, the BLS said.

Broken down by racial groups, the unemployment rate for white workers last month was 5.4% versus 9.6% for Black workers, 7.9% for Hispanic workers and 6% for Asian workers.

“The impact of the pandemic and the fallout in the labor market have been disproportionately borne by workers of color and women — women of color in particular — so it’s important … that we’re seeing job gains particularly for people who have been hit hardest,” Bunker said.

Friday’s jobs report beat analyst’s expectations, offering some optimism for the pace of the recovery.

“Springtime is here for the economic recovery, as today’s jobs report showed the economy growing at its fastest pace since September,” Daniel Zhao, a senior economist at Glassdoor, said in a commentary Friday morning. “March’s jobs report is the most optimistic report since the pandemic began.”

“While the pandemic is not over yet, the finish line appears close and the economy is surging forward in a last sprint toward a full reopening,” Zhao added. “If that momentum continues, we may be looking at a bright summer with monthly gains of over a million jobs, getting us much closer to pre-pandemic employment.”

Free America Network Articles

Leave a Reply

Next Post

Crime Prevention Research Center: Gun control measures affect law abiding citizens

OAN NewsroomUPDATED 6:10 AM PT – Friday, April 2, 2021 As Joe Biden and the Democrats push harder for tighter gun control across the country, many are pushing back on this idea. One America’s John Hines spoke with Dr. John Lott, the president of the Crime Prevention Research Center, to […]

You May Like