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Only
115,000 jobs added in April; unemployment rate dips to 8.1 percent
By Liz
Goodwin | The Lookout
May 5, 2012
Only
115,000 jobs were added to the economy in April, according to the Labor
Department, while the unemployment rate dipped slightly to 8.1 percent.
The slight
drop in the unemployment rate is due to the nearly 350,000 unemployed
people
who gave up looking for work last month and dropped out of the labor
force
entirely. At least 200,000 jobs would have had to be added last month
just to
keep up with the growth in the labor market. April’s report missed
expectations—economists predicted 163,000 jobs would be added.
While the
private sector grew modestly, state, local and federal government jobs
hit the
chopping block: 15,000 public employees were laid off last month.
April’s
disappointing jobs numbers follow a winter boom, when nearly 250,000
jobs per
month were added between December and February. That grace period ended
in
March, when only 154,000 jobs were added, and many economists attribute
the
mini-boom to the unseasonably warm winter weather.
On Fox News
Friday morning, Mitt Romney called the report “terrible” and
“disappointing.”
Obama has emphasized that economic indicators are improving, albeit
slowly,
while Romney blames the unemployment crisis on Obama’s policies. The
Federal
Reserve has predicted the unemployment rate will be between 7.8 and 8
percent
by Election Day.
Earlier
this week the Labor Department reported that jobless claims fell 27,000
to
365,000. That was the steepest weekly drop in a year.
About 12.5
million Americans were unemployed in April, including 5.1 million who
have been
looking for work for more than 27 weeks. But many more millions of
Americans
have given up looking for work altogether. The labor force
participation rate
is at the lowest point since 1981.
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