The job market snapped back last month with the addition of 215,000 jobs after a lull caused by Hurricane Katrina, the Labor Department reported yesterday.
While the number of new jobs was about average for a month in the United States with the unemployment rate at 5 percent, it cheered political leaders and others worried about a long-lasting impact from the nation’s worst storm.
President Bush, who was hurt by public doubts about the economy and a fall in consumer confidence after the hurricane, heralded the improvement yesterday.
“We have every reason to be optimistic about our economic future,” Mr. Bush said. “This economy is in good shape.”
Katrina put nearly 600,000 people out of work, primarily in the flooded New Orleans area. The unemployment rate for the 900,000 people evacuated from the impact area remains high at 20.5 percent, the department said, but is 12.5 percent for those who returned to the city of New Orleans.
The report showed that outside the stricken areas, the job market remained robust and generated enough jobs to quickly overcome the shortfall caused by the storms.
“We are back on track,” said Stuart Hoffman, chief economist at PNC Financial Services Group. “The job market has clearly recovered from the setbacks and dislocations caused by the series of hurricanes.”
Federal Reserve Chairman Alan Greenspan also expressed satisfaction with the economy’s resilience.
“Despite the disruptions of Hurricanes Katrina, Rita and Wilma, economic activity appears to be expanding at a reasonably good pace as we head into 2006,” he told a conference in Philadelphia.
The financial markets reacted with caution, however, fearing the resumption of healthy job growth could prompt the Fed to raise interest rates further. The Dow Jones Industrial Average declined 35 points to 10,878.
Consumers also remain wary, though recent surveys show they have been encouraged by the recent increase in job opportunities and drop in gasoline prices, which spiked to record levels because of lost production in the Gulf of Mexico caused by the storms.
While the hurricanes knocked out oil and gas drilling facilities and put many out of work, some job-seekers found employment in the devastated areas because of the flurry of rebuilding and debris-removal activities.
Construction jobs jumped by 37,000 during November after rising 35,000 in October. Professional and technical services jobs increased by 22,000. Even manufacturing posted a second month of small job gains, thanks to a flood of orders for restocking and rebuilding from the Gulf region.
“The overall economy’s strong underpinnings have helped it weather the Gulf storms,” said David Huether, chief economist at the National Association of Manufacturers. He expects the run of orders since the storms to keep industries busy well into next year.
Average wages rose a solid 3.2 percent from last year — the best growth in nearly three years. Increases in services jobs were widespread. Health care and education led with a hiring surge of 36,000.
Workers in leisure and hospitality businesses benefited from the drop in gas prices, which prompted consumers to spend more on eating out and other discretionary activities. Jobs at restaurants soared by 38,500.
The booming housing market accounted for a quarter of the job gains, generating jobs in construction, realty, architecture, mortgage banking and building supply, said Christian E. Weller, analyst at the Center for American Progress.
But he noted that most economists expect a cooling of the market, which would deplete the growth in jobs in the months ahead.
“New jobs are certainly welcome, but it is crucial to keep this employment growth in perspective,” he said. Wage growth for most workers has been subpar and only recently attained the levels that prevailed before the 2001 recession, he said.
“For this business cycle, i.e. since March 2001, the labor market performance is still too weak to allow middle-class families to escape the debt trap,” he said.
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