Local
Foreign
Business
Sports
Leisure
BM
Kadazan Dusun
Archives
Latest News
 
Nst-studio
Classifieds
In_sites_link
Football-link
Smbb-logo
Buuan kavavagu do MOSTI kihizab monihombus kahantazan tavasi |  Miobpinai osuvon pulis id kiis minomoduso songuhun pakalaja |  SWEPA PAPANTOD DO BOOGIZAN KALAJA OM POINGIDOPUAN: MUSA |  Pemimpin m'rakat bidas cadangan pembangkang Dewan Negara dimansuh |  Suri rumah, abang kandung bunuh pekerja ladang diburu polis |  Ibu bapa perlu awasi, pantau anak-anak layari internet elak budaya negatif, kata Hamisa |  DBKK roboh 4,442 rumah setinggan di bandaraya, kata Muhammad Ammir |  Ahmad Shabery fokus kembangkan infrastruktur komunikasi, caj internet lebih rendah |  Swepa dipuji tingkat usahawan, profesional wanita |  Jangan politikkan segala tindakan pihak berkuasa, kata Ahmad Zahid |  DALANG TIDAK AKAN DIDEDAH |  Arsenal prove critics wrong! |  Life after Fergie begins |  Indonesia in quarters |  Juniors forget scoring boots! | 
 Foreign

US economy creates 163,000 jobs, shielding Obama

5th August, 2012

WASHINGTON: The US economy created a solid 163,000 jobs in July, official data showed Friday, helping President Barack Obama dull Republican attacks despite a slight uptick in the jobless rate.

The Labor Department said unemployment rose 0.1 points to 8.3 percent, in a monthly report that was nevertheless heralded as evidence that the world’s largest economy is still on track.

Economists had predicted a much more modest creation of 100,000 jobs during July, after a weak increase of 64,000 in June.

“Finally, we have some good news on the employment front,” said Nigel Gault, an economist with IHS Global Insight. “The report will alleviate fears that the US might be tipping back into recession.”

The service, manufacturing and food and drink sectors were among those showing gains, as the economy created more jobs than at any time since February.

With fewer than 100 days to go until the US presidential election, White House contenders seized on the report’s seemingly mixed message in order to shape the tone of the debate.

Republican Mitt Romney zeroed in on the politically symbolic unemployment rate, now the highest since February.

“Today’s increase in the unemployment rate is a hammer blow to struggling middle-class families,” Romney said in a statement, as he pledged to create 12 million jobs in his first term.

However, Obama’s top economic adviser Alan Krueger echoed the Labor Department’s observation that the unemployment rate was “essentially unchanged.”

“The rate rose from 8.217 percent in June to 8.254 percent in July,” he said, well within the report’s margin of error.

The unemployment rate and the job creation figures are taken from two separate Labor Department surveys released simultaneously.

The mixed picture provided by the two surveys may make it difficult for Romney to steer the debate back onto the economy and away from issues that have seen him drop in the polls.

Over the past month, Romney has faced criticism for not releasing more tax returns, as well as for diplomatic missteps, his dealings at Bain Capital and his tax plan—which independent analysts said would raise rates for the middle class.

As a result, Obama has opened up a two-point lead in national tracking polls in key swing states like Florida, Ohio and Pennsylvania, leaving Romney with plenty to do if the election is not to slip through his fingers.

Obama reacted soberly to the report, saying more work was needed to climb out of the deepest crisis since the 1930s.

Democrats will also take hope from the fact that unemployment among Hispanics fell 0.7 points to 10.3 percent and the rate for adult women stood at a relatively low 7.5 percent—both groups are crucial for Obama to win the election.

   
Email Print
   
 
 
E-browse
Actionline