US unemployment rate falls to 7.9% in September: govt

US unemployment rate falls to 7.9% in September: govt

The fall in the unemployment rate from 8.4% in August was more than expected, but also betrayed signs of Americans' continued struggles to find work.
The fall in the unemployment rate from 8.4% in August was more than expected, but also betrayed signs of Americans' continued struggles to find work.

WASHINGTON: The United States added a less-than-expected 661,000 jobs in September but the unemployment rate fell to 7.9%, the Labor Department said Friday, underscoring the economy's tortured recovery from Covid-19.

The positions gained last month were less than half of the upwardly revised nearly 1.5 million positions added in August, indicating a slowdown in the pace of the employment recovery after business shutdowns beginning in March to stop Covid-19 caused mass layoffs.

"In September, notable job gains occurred in leisure and hospitality, in retail trade, in health care and social assistance, and in professional and business services," the Labor Department said.

"Employment in government declined over the month, mainly in state and local government education."

The fall in the unemployment rate from 8.4% in August was more than expected, but also betrayed signs of Americans' continued struggles to find work.

The labor force participation rate declined 0.3 percentage points to 61.4%, erasing August's gains. The number was 2.0 points lower than its level in February before the pandemic struck.

The Labor Department also acknowledged the impact of a classification error, which means the unemployment rate could be understated by as much as 0.4 percentage point.

Daniel Zhao, economist at recruitment website Glassdoor, credited the improvement in the unemployment rate to the 1.5 million drop in people indicated as being on temporary layoff.

However, he said the 345,000 increase in permanent job losses shown in the report is a bad sign, and the report overall "confirms evidence of slowing but continuing recovery over last few months."

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