In last month's report, the U.S. economy created only 266,000
jobs, well below the anticipated million-jobs increase, and the unemployment
rate ticked up by 0.1 percent to 6.1 percent. Labor force participation
rose by 0.2 to 61.7 percent, but this merely gets participation back to its
August (pandemic) level and remains well below the rate prior to the arrival of
the coronavirus. In short, demand conditions in the economy are fine and
improving, but the state of supply, particularly of labor, is holding growth
down.
Here is a brief summary of the major economic indicators since the last jobs
numbers:
- The Producer Price Index for
final demand increased 0.6 percent in April;
- The Consumer Price Index
increased 0.8 percent in April;
- Real average hourly earnings
were unchanged from March to April;
- Orders for durable goods
(including defense and aircraft) decreased 1.3 percent in April;
- New home sales decreased 5.9
percent in April;
- The Price Index of U.S. imports
increased 0.7 percent in April;
- ISM Services Index increased
1.3 percentage points to 64.0 percent in May;
- ISM Manufacturing Index
increased half a percentage point to 61.2 percent in May;
- Consumer Confidence Index
decreased three-tenths of a point from 117.5 to 117.2 in May;
- ADP reported private sector
employment increased by 978,000 jobs in May.
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