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US employers add 9,16,000 jobs in March as hiring accelerates

The increasingly bright outlook for the labor market follows a year of job losses

job-opening

America's employers unleashed a burst of hiring in March, adding 9,16,000 jobs in a sign that a sustained recovery from the pandemic recession is taking hold as vaccinations accelerate, stimulus checks flow through the economy and businesses increasingly reopen.

The March increase—the most since August—was nearly double February's gain of 4,68,000, the Labor Department said Friday. The unemployment rate declined from 6.2 per cent to 6 per cent.

Even with last month's robust increase, the economy remains more than eight million jobs short of the number it had before the pandemic erupted a little over a year ago. But with the recovery widely expected to strengthen, many forecasters predict enough hiring in the coming months to recover nearly all those lost jobs by year's end.

The increasingly bright outlook for the labor market follows a year of epic job losses, waves of coronavirus infections and small business closures. Numerous signs suggest that the economy is improving. Consumer confidence in March reached its highest level since the pandemic intensified.

A survey found that manufacturing grew in March at its fastest pace since 1983. And vaccinations are increasingly being administered, although new confirmed infections have risen from lower levels in recent weeks.

The USD 1,400 checks in President Joe Biden's USD 1.9 trillion economic relief plan have sharply increased consumer spending, according to Bank of America's tracking of its debit and credit cards. Spending jumped 23 per cent in the third week of March compared with pre-pandemic levels, the bank said.

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