WASHINGTON (MarketWatch)
The U.S. added a meager 80,000 jobs in June, the
government reported Friday, falling short of market expectations and confirming
that the labor market cooled off considerably in the second quarter
Economists
surveyed by MarketWatch expected a 100,000 increase
The unemployment rate,
meanwhile, was unchanged at 8.2%
Employment gains for May and April were
basically unchanged
The number of new jobs created in May was revised up to
77,000 from an original estimate of 69,000, while April's figure was revised
down to 68,000 from 77,000
The biggest gains in June occurred in the fields of
professional services (47,000), health care (13,000) and manufacturing (11,000)
Yet the private sector only added 84,000 jobs in total
The average workweek
last month rose 0.1 hour to 34.5, while average hourly earnings climbed 6 cents
to $23.50.
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Billie, with academic training in Fundamental Mathematics and professional experience in Large Multinationals in the Information Technology sector, having held positions in high-level management positions, maintains that it is time to reduce Unproductive Public Expenditure and help the Private Sector in everything that is possible.
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Calendario económico en tiempo real proporcionado por Investing.com España.
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