WASHINGTON, D.C. — US job openings rose slightly to 8.1 million in May despite the impact of higher interest rates intended to cool the labor market.
Vacancies rose from a revised 7.9 million in April, the first reading below 8 million since February 2021, the Labor Department reported Tuesday. April openings were marked down from an originally reported 8.1 million.
Layoffs rose to 1.65 million in May from 1.54 million in April. The number of Americans quitting their jobs — a sign of confidence in their prospects — was basically unchanged.
“The report was another sign that the labor market is holding firm … The expansion looks solid,” said Robert Frick, economist at the Navy Federal Credit Union.
The US economy and job market have been remarkably resilient in the face of the Federal Reserve’s (Fed) campaign to raise interest rates to rein in inflation. The Fed hiked its benchmark rate 11 times in 2022 and 2023, lifting it to a 23-year high.
Defying expectations of a recession, the US economy kept growing and employers kept hiring.
But lately, there have been signs the economy is losing some steam. Job openings have come steadily down since peaking at 12.2 million in March 2022. The job market is still strong. There are 1.25 jobs for every unemployed American, but that’s down from a 2-to-1 ratio in January 2023.
Fed policymakers welcome lower job openings — a relatively painless way to cool a hot job market and reduce pressure on companies to raise wages, which can feed inflation.
From January through March this year, the economy grew at an annual pace of just 1.4 percent, slowest since spring 2022. Consumer spending, which accounts for around 70 percent of US economic activity, expanded just 1.5 percent after advancing at a pace of more than 3 percent in each of the last two quarters of 2023.
The Labor Department is expected to report on Friday that employers added 190,000 jobs last month, down from 272,000 in May, according to a survey of forecasters by the data firm FactSet.
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