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A help wanted sign in a window of a business in Arlington, Va., on April 7, 2023.ELIZABETH FRANTZ/Reuters

The U.S. economy created far more jobs than expected in May and annual wage growth reaccelerated, underscoring the resilience of the labour market and reducing the likelihood the Federal Reserve will be able to start rate cuts in September.

The Labour Department’s closely watched employment report on Friday also showed the unemployment rate ticked up to 4.0 per cent from 3.9 per cent in April, reaching a symbolic threshold below which the jobless rate had previously held for 27 straight months.

The unexpectedly strong report made plain that while the labour market has softened around the edges in recent months, its still-solid performance is set to keep the Fed on the sidelines and taking its time in deciding when to begin lowering borrowing costs.

Financial markets slashed the odds of a September rate cut, reducing the probability to about 55 per cent from about 70 per cent before the report, based on rate futures contracts.

“So much for slowing. The headline payrolls number is eye popping. … The Fed will take this to mean that they can still focus squarely on inflation without worrying much about growth,” said Brian Jacobsen, chief economist at Annex Wealth Management.

Non-farm payrolls increased by 272,000 jobs last month, the Labour Department’s Bureau of Labour Statistics said. Revisions showed 15,000 fewer jobs created in March and April combined than previously reported. Economists polled by Reuters had forecast payrolls advancing by 185,000. Estimates ranged from 120,000 to 258,000. May’s employment gains were higher than the 232,000 monthly average for the past year.

The health care sector added 68,000 jobs, spread across ambulatory health care services, hospitals, nursing and residential-care facilities. It continued to lead employment gains as companies seek to boost staffing levels after losing workers during the pandemic.

Government payrolls increased by 43,000 positions. Employment in the leisure and hospitality sector rose by 42,000 jobs, with slightly more than half that total coming from employment in food services and drinking places.

The U.S. economy created far more jobs than expected in May and annual wage growth reaccelerated, underscoring the resilience of the labor market and reducing the likelihood the Federal Reserve will be able to start rate cuts in September.

Reuters

Professional and business services hired 32,000 more workers, driven by management, scientific and technical consulting services and architectural and engineering-related services. Social assistance and retail hiring also trended up last month. There were small job losses at department stores and home furnishings retailers.

The U.S. central bank is expected to leave its benchmark overnight interest rate unchanged at its meeting next week in the current 5.25-per-cent to 5.50-per-cent range, where it has been since last July.

Average hourly earnings rose 0.4 per cent after increasing 0.2 per cent in April. Wages increased 4.1 per cent in the 12 months through May following an upwardly revised 4.0-per-cent annual rise the prior month. Wage growth in a 3.0-per-cent to 3.5-per-cent range is seen as consistent with the Fed’s 2-per-cent inflation target. The average workweek was unchanged at 34.3 hours.

The U.S. central bank is closely monitoring labour-market conditions and economic growth to ensure it doesn’t keep rates too high for too long and overcool the economy as it tries to return inflation back to its 2-per-cent target.

Overall economic output in the first quarter grew at the slowest rate in nearly two years and other data so far in the current quarter, aside from monthly payrolls growth and inflation, on balance have been weaker than expected.

Data earlier this week showed job openings declined in April and the number of available jobs per job-seeker reached its lowest level since June, 2021.

Some economists questioned the divergence between the strong job gains and the rise in the unemployment rate. The two figures are derived from separate surveys within the report.

“The fact that you have these two numbers saying such different things, makes it very hard for investors and even harder for central bankers to know exactly what’s going on,” said Brian Nick, senior investment strategist at the Macro Institute.

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