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April 2, 2010 2:36 PM

Economy Adds 162K Jobs in March, Most in 3 Years

(CBS/AP)  The nation's economy posted its largest job gain in three years in March, while the unemployment rate remained at 9.7 percent for the third straight month.

The increase in payrolls is the latest sign that the economic recovery is gaining momentum and healing in the job market is beginning. Still, the healing is likely to be slow, and most economists don't expect new hiring to be fast enough this year to rapidly reduce the unemployment rate.

"What we need in the economy is to have 200,000 to 250,000 jobs per month on a sustained basis to really eat into and drop that unemployment rate," CBS MoneyWatch.com editor at large Jill Schlesinger said.

The Labor Department said employers added 162,000 jobs in March, the most since the recession began but below analysts' expectations of 190,000. The total includes 48,000 temporary workers hired for the U.S. Census, also fewer than many economists forecast.

Private employers added 123,000 jobs, the most since May 2007.

"This is better news in that the economy is moving in the right direction. It may not be as fast as we'd like to see it but we are finally moving in the right direction," Mark Vitner, senior economist at Wells Fargo, told CBS Radio News.

Still, there are 15 million Americans out of work, roughly double the total before the recession began in December 2007. More Americans entered the work force last month, which prevented the increase in jobs from reducing the unemployment rate.

President Barack Obama told workers at a high-tech battery plant in Charlotte, N.C., that his aggressive — if unpopular — policies helped add jobs.

"We are beginning to turn the corner," he said.

But he also sounded a cautionary note. "We shouldn't underestimate the difficulties we face," he said. "We're still going through a hard time."

The economy likely began recovering in the middle of last year, but is only now showing modest job gains.

"It is still disappointing that it took roughly nine months before we started to see any meaningful rebound" in jobs, Paul Ashworth, senior U.S. economist at Capital Economics, wrote in a note to clients.

The stock market is closed Friday. Interest rates rose in the bond market after the report. Investors often sell Treasurys and favor riskier assets like stocks and commodities when the economy is improving.

Manufacturers added 17,000 jobs, the third straight month of gains. Temporary help services added 40,000, while health care added 37,000. Leisure and hospitality added 22,000.

Even the beleaguered construction industry added 15,000 positions, though that likely reflects a rebound from February, when major snowstorms may have kept many construction workers off payrolls.

The average work week increased to 34 hours from 33.9, a positive sign. Most employers are likely to work current employees longer before they hire new workers.

The department also revised January's job total to show a gain of 14,000, up from a previously reported loss of 26,000. February's job numbers were also revised higher by 22,000 to show a loss of 14,000. The economy has now added jobs in three separate months since the recession began.

Still, more Americans said they were working part-time even though they preferred full-time work. When they and discouraged workers who have given up searching for jobs are included, the "underemployment" rate ticked up to 16.9 percent from 16.8 percent.

"What needs to happen is we first see employers add temps to the payrolls. Then they extend the hours of their current workers. Then, hopefully, demand … picks up and they need to hire full-time employees. It looks like we're a few months away from that," Schlesinger told CBS Radio News.

And average hourly earnings fell by two cents to $22.47. That shows that high unemployment is enabling companies to hold down wages. Average weekly earnings rose by about $3 to $629.37, partly reflecting the longer work week.

In a stark illustration of how hard it remains for many people to find jobs, the number of those out of work for six months or longer increased to 6.5 million, a record high.

More than 44 percent of those out of work are long-term unemployed, also a record.

"For those laid off, unemployment is stretching longer and longer and putting severe distress on families," said Christine Owens, executive director of the National Employment Law Project, a nonprofit advocacy group.

Still, Friday's jobs report follows positive data earlier this week that showed consumers are increasing their spending and manufacturing activity is growing at its fastest pace in more than five years. Economists are increasingly confident that the nation will avoid a "double-dip" recession, in which growth slows after a short burst at the end of last year.

"The stars are starting to align here," said Brian Bethune, chief U.S. financial economist at IHS Global Insight.

The economy is likely to expand at a roughly 3 percent pace in the current January-to-March quarter, analysts predict. That's roughly half the 5.6 percent pace seen in the final quarter of last year.

Normally, growth in the 3 percent range would be considered respectable. But the nation is emerging from the worst recession since the 1930s. Growth needs to be in the 5 percent range or higher to quickly drive down the unemployment rate. Both the Federal Reserve and Obama administration expect joblessness will remain above 9 percent through the end of this year.

© 2010 CBS Interactive Inc. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed. The Associated Press contributed to this report.
Add a Comment See all 39 Comments
by edixope4842 April 21, 2010 6:03 PM EDT
test
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by tsigili April 5, 2010 10:35 AM EDT
Sorry, temporary Census workers, do not comprise a jobs recovery. Just political spin from the Dems, that is a blatantly misleading lie.
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by fredianob April 4, 2010 9:22 PM EDT
How does the news of 165,000 new community service and non-profit jobs paying 10$/hr stack up against the reality of 3.5 million new graduates hitting the pavement in May and June?
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by wakeup2021 April 4, 2010 9:21 PM EDT
Obama only created about a million more jobs per month (3/10) than Bush (1/09). Why would anyone think this was good news? Clearly the republican don't!
- - -
http://blogs.wsj.com/economics/2009/01/09/bush-on-jobs-the-worst-track-record-on-record/tab/article/
Reply to this comment
by wakeup2021 April 4, 2010 9:15 PM EDT
A group of people who were not mad when Bush was losing 780,000 jobs a month and now mad when Obama is creating 160,000 jobs a month.

The Republicans hate Obama and they hate America even more!!!
- - -
http://blogs.wsj.com/economics/2009/01/09/bush-on-jobs-the-worst-track-record-on-record/tab/article/
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by tmittelstaed April 4, 2010 5:10 AM EDT
Before you get too excited you better take a closer look at the actual numbers breakdown:

http://www.bls.gov/news.release/empsit.b.htm

The biggest gains? Temp employment, + census hiring + health care hiring + durable goods manufacturing

The health care jobs that make up that gain are mostly minimum wage stuff - cleaning up after people, etc. You don't hire 40K new doctors and nurses in one month.

The temp jobs may pay better but it's hell on the families dependent on them, you simply cannot make any future financial plans.

Only the manufacturing job gain is worth having. And, while a 41K gain may seem like it's great you have to counterbalance this with the 21K LOSS of financial service sector jobs - ie: banking, insurance - most of which pay as well or better - that happened in the same month.

Obviously, government job gain is utterly pointless since government workers taxes are all recycled right back to paying their salaries, in other words the government workers don't actually produce anything.

It's good we aren't losing jobs, but this sure looks like much ado over nothing - if this is a recovery, it's a jobless one.
Reply to this comment
by lakota2012 April 3, 2010 3:46 PM EDT
danielmic: "Unemployment was still at 10.8% in August of 1983..."
-----------------------




Yep....over 2 and a half years into "ronnie the rat" raygun's failed "trickle-down" economic lunacy that the republiCONS like to pull on Americans so often, we had a full year of over 10% unemployment.

Seeing the creation of 162,000 jobs in most sectors including manufacturing, retail and construction -- especially after the worst economic catastrophe since the 1930's -- is surely a testament to President Obama's Stimulus Bill and economic policies. Of course the republiCONS will continue to whine and cry about every little thing while attacking everything Obama says and does, but this just proves that the conservitard ideology and policies we've been following for 30 years have been vastly flawed and only good for the wealthiest Americans!

Time to boot out the rest of the obstructionist republiCONS in Congress in 2010!
Reply to this comment
by RatPackSixGun April 2, 2010 1:22 PM EDT
Obama took office in the wake of the Democrat's economic meltdown that they created when they stonewalled attempts to regulate Fannie and Freddie before the bubble got out of control and Fannie and Freddie loaded up on bad debt that got dumped on the taxpayer in the form of TARP bailouts.

Don't take my word for it. Watch the dems testify in their own words:

_http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_MGT_cSi7Rs

Gosh I love recorded testimony!
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by omega42 April 2, 2010 2:49 PM EDT
Do you have any where John McCain's pick for treasury secretary is advocating eliminating Glass-Stiegel? Priceless..
by danieltmic April 2, 2010 1:13 PM EDT
Unemployment was still at 10.8% in August of 1983, Ronald Reagan's THIRD year in office. When Reagan took office unemployment was 7.6%. Three years laterit was 10.8%. It was 7.7% when he was re-eleted in 1984.

The month Obama took office from Bush we had lost 700,000 + jobs. In March of 2010 we added 162,000 jobs.

It is working.
Reply to this comment
by danieltmic April 2, 2010 1:06 PM EDT
The Republican "answer" is to go back to the policies that caused this in the first place. Huge unpaid for tax cuts for the wealthy, huge spending that was never paid for.

Obama has CUT taxes by 280 BILLION dollars.

In January of 2009 America lost 700,000 jobs. In March of 2010 we gaines 162,000 jobs. Obama is making it happen.

Republican's HATE good economic news when a Democrat is in office. They cheer when the unemployment rate goes up, they jeer when it goes down.

They are clearly rooting against America. For them to call Obama's policies "Marxist" is laughable. It shows their level of education.
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