(Total Views: 163)
Posted On: 04/05/2024 6:01:01 PM
Post# of 124260
He Locjaw, Biden knew enough about tech to get the Chips and Science Bill done. AND he knows enough to drive these kind of numbers.
Now why in TF should the country turn the economy back over to the Party of recessions AND junk science. It's happened too often to be a coincidence.
Job growth totaled 303,000 in March, better than expected, and unemployment was 3.8%
Published Fri, Apr 5 2024 8:30 AM EDT Updated 4 Min Ago
Job creation in March easily topped expectations in a sign of continued acceleration for what has been a bustling and resilient labor market. Nonfarm payrolls increased 303,000 for the month, well above the Dow Jones estimate for an increase of 200,000 and higher than the downwardly revised 270,000 gain in February, the Labor Department's Bureau of Labor Statistics reported Friday.
The unemployment rate edged lower to 3.8%, as expected.
In the key average hourly earnings measure, wages rose 0.3% for the month and 4.1% from a year ago, both in line with Wall Street estimates.
Job growth came from many of the usual sectors that have powered gains in recent months. Health care led with 72,000, followed by government (71,000), leisure and hospitality (49,000) and construction (39,000). Retail trade contributed 18,000 while the "other services" category added 16,000.
Now why in TF should the country turn the economy back over to the Party of recessions AND junk science. It's happened too often to be a coincidence.
Job growth totaled 303,000 in March, better than expected, and unemployment was 3.8%
Published Fri, Apr 5 2024 8:30 AM EDT Updated 4 Min Ago
Job creation in March easily topped expectations in a sign of continued acceleration for what has been a bustling and resilient labor market. Nonfarm payrolls increased 303,000 for the month, well above the Dow Jones estimate for an increase of 200,000 and higher than the downwardly revised 270,000 gain in February, the Labor Department's Bureau of Labor Statistics reported Friday.
The unemployment rate edged lower to 3.8%, as expected.
In the key average hourly earnings measure, wages rose 0.3% for the month and 4.1% from a year ago, both in line with Wall Street estimates.
Job growth came from many of the usual sectors that have powered gains in recent months. Health care led with 72,000, followed by government (71,000), leisure and hospitality (49,000) and construction (39,000). Retail trade contributed 18,000 while the "other services" category added 16,000.
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