U.S. Economy Adds Just 80,000 Jobs in June

Eric Thayer / Reuters

People participate in a job fair in New York, June 11, 2012.

The Labor Department released its monthly Employment Situation Report this morning, announcing that the economy added 80,000 new jobs in June – slightly less than what economists were predicting, and far too small a number to put a dent in the unemployment rate or to be a harbinger of sustained and vigorous economic recovery.

Economists surveyed by Bloomberg news were expecting 90,000 new jobs added, after weak numbers in Europe and a pronounced slowdown in manufacturing activity further dampened prospects for the economy.

There were a few bright spots in June: a report from the private payroll processing company ADP predicted that the private sector would add 176,000 new jobs, while auto sales were strong and indications of a nascent housing recovery were present.

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But it appears that the headwinds of uncertainty in Europe and Asia, paired with high unemployment and weak demand at home, are preventing employers from undertaking the kind of hiring that could induce an economic comeback. Even the high end of economists’ expectations – 167,000 new jobs — wouldn’t have represented a robust-enough number to indicate a swift or sustained recovery. According to the Congressional Budget Office, The U.S. economy must to add at least 90,000 jobs a month to keep up with population growth, although that number is an estimate and could range higher depending on how many workers decide to rejoin the labor force in a given month.

So what does this jobs report mean for the economy going forward? The U.S. economy can apparently do no better than tread water. The employment numbers of the past few months have been pretty dim, but not dim enough to spur action from Congress or the Federal Reserve. And with the 2012 Presidential election in full swing, political realities virtually guarantee that there will be no new fiscal policy initiatives out of Washington.

There is a chance that the Federal Reserve will announce a third round of quantitative easing — a so-called QE3 program of bond buying in an attempt to stimulate the economy — but Fed Chairman Ben Bernanke has been reluctant to launch such an initiative. And while June’s jobs numbers are bad, they may not be dismal enough to whet the his appetite now.

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However, recent poor manufacturing data led some economists to speculate that QE3 could be announced as soon as the Fed’s next meeting, which runs from July 31 to Aug. 1. As Tom Porcelli at RBC Capital Markets told Reuters this week:

“With both the growth and inflation components slowing sharply, this puts the Fed firmly in play at the August 1 meeting.”

Of course the real losers in this situation aren’t the politicians, but the more than 5.4 million Americans among the long-term unemployed. According to the National Employment Law Center, recent changes to the federal unemployment benefits program and the expiration of some state programs will cause half a million of these workers to lose their benefits by the end of August. While politicians and bureaucrats in Washington and Brussels fight a trench war for the slightest political advantage, and while C-suite executives in New York and London focus on their next quarterly earnings report, workers’ skills steadily erode as they become more alienated from the labor market. That’s a problem that will only make the next few jobs reports bleaker, not better, and push any hope for real recovery further into the future.

25 comments
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boonteetan
boonteetan

Like an old car with little proper care, the economy cannot start its engine again smoothly. When the engine does rev, it jerks, the car moves forward a bit and stalls. The procedure keeps repeating. 

Time to change the engine?   (vzc1943)

Christopher Kidwell
Christopher Kidwell

Big deal. I don't think that it would be doing any better and actually, think that it would be doing significantly WORSE if we had a Republican in the White House right now.

Bottom line is that many jobs in America have gone overseas and the nitwits in Congress still refuse to put into place punitive tariffs in order to encourage those jobs to come back to the United States, like they should.

suhail tufail
suhail tufail

It is very fine news for American's. Although the jobs number are not so much. But it important for us economy. So it is great news.

vstillwell
vstillwell

Whatever happens in the near-term, it looks like the only people what will get relief are the rich. I'm sure the first thing our new congress will do is cut capital gains taxes. 

Christopher Kidwell
Christopher Kidwell

I doubt it considering most people I have talked with are voting Democrat come fall, even the staunch "Republican for Life" people.

vstillwell
vstillwell

I just hope voters wise up on trickle down economics. Taking money from the middle class and the poor and handing it to the wealthy in the hopes of fixing this economy is absurd. 

Gary McCray
Gary McCray

The media has been touting economic recovery for the past 2 years.

What nonsense, the problems affecting our economy have barely been scratched and the gap between the 1% and everybody else is just growing wider.

Food and service costs are way up and somehow the establishment controlled "cost of living" barely reflects the harsh realities we all face.

They are trying to get us to spend more (of what) so that we can all share the illusion for a little bit longer that its really all going to be OK.

It isn't!

Mello Melu
Mello Melu

 The media always throws out hype illusions when it comes like this. The economy is still bad, jobs are still bad.

I wish I could have graduated college but I can't because now I simply CANNOT afford it and tuition keeps going up and up.

You know the economy is bad where you can't even get a low-job of washing tables at a restaurant.

Supernevadasmith
Supernevadasmith

Maybe at this point it would be more than wise to take the dismal employment figures

out of the realm of Politics. Jobs,or lack thereof,is now a Human Crisis of still untold magnitude.The US and the rest of the world to different degrees,are and will continue

to ceaselessly endure this serious Human Tragedy. Many informed economists will point out that there are now Structural barriers to any return to full employment i.e. technology. Continued high unemployment is now part of the Human Condition.

It is now time for Our Leaders to act as Statesman again. The time for petty partisanship bickering is over. No one will win playing the blame game. Certainly not the long suffering unemployed. This Human crisis will not end soon, this will now become a permanent fixture.This crisis will undoubtedly test and try every Americans: Heart, Spirit and Soul.It would be best for US All, if we all begin to prepare for this long hard winter of discontent and try to unite to ease the suffering.

Supernevadasmith
Supernevadasmith

And anyone that promises a quick fix to this intractable problem is engaging in "Wishful Thinking" or snake oil selling.

TucsonTerpFan
TucsonTerpFan

Quote:  “But it appears that the headwinds of uncertainty in Europe and Asia, paired with high unemployment and weak demand at home, are preventing employers from undertaking the kind of hiring that could induce an economic comeback.”

It's also the policies of this administration and the continued uncertainties with the new year in the area of tax cuts expiring, new taxes in Obama care (21 new taxes), and the continued missuse of regulatory polices (by the EPA and other executive controled agencies) that are also responisible for the strugling US economy. 

All of these things, which Time in its covering for the Obama administration will not address, are killing job growth and investment in this country.  Many of these polices the White House directly controls, but the president's ideology comes first. 

The uncertanties these policies create are preventing small, medim-sized, and even large business for expanding and hiring.

What this Time article leaves out is cover for the administration as its writers work for Obama's re-election.  (At least the writer did not use one of Obama's favorite excusses:  The Japanese tsunami!)

More and more of Time's "news" articles reflect the magazines opinion pieces.  It's hard for Time to report anything "bad" about Obama, but that's what happens when you're in love!  

(Do you even see the name "Obama" anywhere in this Time article about the US economy?  No, not when it's "bad" news.)

Rich Hastings
Rich Hastings

Maybe it's states like AZ dragging down the productive states?

TucsonTerpFan
TucsonTerpFan

AZ has a balanced budget, erased most debt, and now a small surplus.  (Of course, all states under their constitutions (except VT) are required to balance their yearly budget.  Too many have done so by adding more debt -- that's not being "productive.")

Of course, there's the "productive" succes of Ill, Calif, NY, and you can't fail to point out how well the city of Detroit is doing; LA is broke as are a host of Calif cities.  (Bankruptcy anyone?)

You've got to love all those states and productive cities that are not "dragging down" [the rest of] "the productive states." 

So, to answer your question, "maybe" it isn't AZ "dragging down the "productive states."   For many, it's a self-inflicted process.

superlogi
superlogi

80,000 jobs is not treading water.

Herojig
Herojig

as the media continues to spin good news from bad... 

AlterYourEgo
AlterYourEgo

 Then what is it?  It sure ain't a Michael Phelps performance.

AlterYourEgo
AlterYourEgo

QE3 would do nothing of value.  Money supply and broader liquidity in mainline banking channels are not the problems we face.  The big issues are structural impedements to job creation: fair and unfair foreign competition, a dumbed-down workforce, ever-increasing regulatory burdens on small businesses (from local, state and federal authorities), regulations that penalize useful secured (and unsecured) debt formation by small businesses and households, etc....  The structural debts of state, local and federal governments also keep them from being able to do useful infrastructure development and investments in education in useful fields like science, engineering, medicine, etc.

Kent
Kent

The more telling statistic is that of the 80,000 jobs added (number to be downgraded next month,) 25,000 were TEMPORARY (number to be upgraded next month!)

Deborah
Deborah

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Deborah
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Raymond Chuang
Raymond Chuang

In short, all that momentum Obama got last month just vanished when economic reality hits home....

Mello Melu
Mello Melu

 I can't wait until elections roll around so Obama can finally get the boot!