U.S. adds 171,000 jobs, unemployment 7.9% - MarketWatch
The U.S. economy gained a better-than-expected 171,000 jobs in October
and more people were hired in the prior two months than previously
believed, but the unemployment rate ticked up to 7.9% from 7.8%, the
government said Friday. Economists surveyed by MarketWatch expected a
120,000 increase in jobs, with an unemployment rate of 7.9%. Employment
gains for September and August were revised up by a combined 84,000. The
number of new jobs created in September was revised to 148,000 from a
prior estimate of 114,000, while August's figure was revised to 192,000
from 142,000. The latest jobs report, coming just four days before the
presidential election, is unlikely to change the trajectory of the race.
Hiring has picked up over the past four months, but unemployment
remains high. Yet the improved hiring trend is a welcome sign to Wall
Street that the U.S. economy is still continuing to expand. The biggest
increase in hiring last month occurred in professional services, health
care, retail and leisure and hospitality. Average hourly wages,
meanwhile, fell 1 cent to $23.58. The average workweek was unchanged for
the fourth month in a row at 34.4 hours
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