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U.S. job growth slows in April

U.S. employers pulled back on hiring in April, adding 160,000 jobs, as the unemployment remained at a low five per cent, roughly where it has been since fall.
Recruiters speak to attendees at a job fair in Pittsburgh, Penn., in this March 30, 2016 photo. The U.S. government said Friday that the pace of hiring cooled in April. (Keith Srakocic/Associated Press)

U.S. employers pulled back on hiring in April, adding 160,000 jobs, the fewest in seven months, after a streak of robust monthly gains. The unemployment rate remained at a low 5 per cent, roughly where it has been since fall.

Last month's hiring gain marked a drop from the average increase of 200,000 over the past three months. Weak U.S. economic growth may be making some employers more cautious about hiring.

Still, the government's report Friday pointed to a U.S. job market that continues to generate steady hiring and to outperform those of most other major countries.

Worker pay also showed signs of picking up. Average hourly pay rose 2.5 per cent in April from a year earlier, above the sluggish 2 per cent annual pace that has been typical for the past six years.

Slow growth

Patrick O'Keefe, director of economic research at the accounting and advisory firm CohnReznick, suggested that April's slower job growth reflects the broader slump in economic growth. The U.S. economy expanded at just a 1 per cent annual rate over the past six months.

"It's not going to set off cheers or jeers," O'Keefe said of the jobs report.

The proportion of adults who either have a job or are looking for one declined in April after four months of increases. The increase in job seekers had been a positive sign because it indicated that many Americans became optimistic enough to resume looking for work amid signs of stronger hiring.

The slowdown in economic growth in the United States and overseas has led to volatility in financial markets and complicated the Federal Reserve's plans to gradually raise interest rates. Fed policymakers have signalled that they could raise rates twice this year. But a hiring slump, if sustained, could disrupt those plans.

'Disappointing numbers'

"By adding to signs that economic weakness is lingering into the second quarter, these disappointing numbers greatly reduce the likelihood of the Fed hiking rates this side of the presidential election," Chris Williamson, chief economist at Markit, wrote in a research note.

In its report Friday, the government also slightly revised down its estimate of job growth for February and March by a combined 19,000, although each month's gain remained at a healthy level above 200,000.

April's slower job growth might not signal a sustained pullback. Hiring slumped as recently as January only to snap back in the following months.

Across industries, job growth fell sharply last month in retail, construction and governments, and remained weak in manufacturing. Retailers shed 3,100 jobs, down from an average gain of 52,500 in the first three months of the year.

Unseasonably cool weather in the Northeast may have delayed shopping for summer clothes, causing stores to cut workers.

The U.S. job market is still outperforming many of its counterparts overseas. The unemployment rate in the 19 European nations that share the euro currency is more than twice the U.S. rate at 10.3 per cent. Some of those countries are faring better, though: Unemployment rates in Germany and the Czech Republic are both below the U.S. rate.

Canada's unemployment rate stayed steady at 7.1 per cent in April.