Reuters-U.S. job growth
likely accelerated in January, with wages expected to have increased steadily,
suggesting a strong start for the Trump administration as it seeks to
boost the
economy and employment.
Nonfarm payrolls
probably increased by 175,000 jobs last month, in part as warm weather
bolstered hiring in the construction sector, according to a Reuters survey of
economists. That would be a pick-up from the 156,000 jobs created in December.
President Donald
Trump vowed during last year's election campaign to deliver 4 percent annual
gross domestic product growth, largely on the back of a plan to cut taxes,
reduce regulations, increase infrastructure spending and renegotiate deals in
the United States' favor.
Although details on
the policy proposals remain sketchy, consumer and business confidence have
surged in the wake of Trump's election victory last November.
But with the economy
near full employment, some economists are skeptical of the 4 percent growth
pledge. Annual GDP growth has not exceeded 2.6 percent since the 2007-08
recession.
"Time will tell
if Trump can keep the economy's winning streak alive. It's not going to be easy
to bring back those manufacturing jobs lost since the late '90s," said
Chris Rupkey,
chief economist at
MUFG Union Bank in New York.
The Labor Department
will publish its closely watched employment report on Friday at 08:30 a.m.
(08:30 a.m. ET).
With the minimum
wage taking effect in more than a dozen states in January, average hourly
earnings are forecast to have risen by 0.3 percent after increasing 0.4 percent
in December. However, the year-on-year gain in earnings is expected to fall to
2.8 percent from 2.9 percent in December as the jump in wages seen in January
2016 drops out of the picture.
Rising wages could
pave the way for the Federal Reserve to raise interest rates this year. The
unemployment rate is forecast unchanged at 4.7 percent.
"Solid job
growth should help, in part, lead to lower unemployment and firming wage
pressures, and justify the Fed hiking interest rates twice this
year," said Sam Bullard, a senior economist at Wells Fargo Securities in
Charlotte, North Carolina.
The Fed, which hiked
rates in December, has forecast three rate increases this year. On Wednesday,
the U.S. central bank kept its benchmark overnight interest rate unchanged in a
range of 0.50 percent to 0.75 percent. It said it expected labor market
conditions would strengthen "somewhat further."
UPSIDE SURPRISE
LIKELY
January payrolls
could beat expectations. The ADP National Employment Report on Wednesday showed
that private employers added 246,000 jobs last month, up from 151,000 in
December. At the same time, the Institute for Supply Management's measure of
factory employment hit its highest level since August 2014.
With its January
employment report, the government will publish its annual "benchmark"
revisions and update the formulas it uses to smooth the data for regular
seasonal fluctuations. It will also incorporate new population estimates.
In an early
benchmark estimate last year, the government said the level of employment in
March of last year was likely 150,000 lower than it had reported.
As the labor market
nears full employment, the pool of workers is shrinking, which is slowing job
growth. Job gains averaged 180,000 per month in 2016, down from 229,000 in
2015.
The shift in
population controls will mean figures on the labor force or number of employed
or unemployed in January will not be directly comparable with December.
The labor force
participation rate, or the share of working-age Americans who are employed or
at least looking for a job, has been bouncing around near multi-decade lows,
pointing to slack in the jobs market. Some of the decline reflects demographic
changes.
"I think we
will hit full employment later this year," said Ryan Sweet, a senior
economist at Moody's Analytics in West Chester, Pennsylvania. "There is
still shadow slack in the jobs market. But if we continue to create more than
100,000 jobs per month, we are going to work through that slack."
All sectors of the
economy are expected to have added jobs in January. Manufacturing payrolls are
forecast to have increased for a second straight month as the oil-related drag
on the sector eases. Construction employment likely rebounded after being
depressed by cold weather in December.
Retail payrolls
probably declined as workers hired during the holiday season were laid off. A
sharp drop is likely after retailers, including Macy's (M.N),
Sears (SHLD.O),
American Apparel and Abercrombie & Fitch (ANF.N)
announced job cuts amid store closures.
Department store
sales are being undercut by online retailers, led by Amazon.com (AMZN.O).
Government
employment likely increased in January for a third straight month. Economists
see no impact from a freeze on the hiring of civilian federal government
workers, which took effect on Jan. 22 - well after the survey period for
nonfarm payrolls. It will hurt job growth in the coming months.
"The actual
impact, while still ambiguous, will likely be more modest, and we estimate that
it will reduce job gains by about 20,000 per month," said Daniel Silver,
an economist at JPMorgan in New York.
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