Americans can expect higher wages as employment increased by 178,000 in June, according to ADP/Moody’s employment report.
Aside from employment growth of 114,000 in the service sector, construction employment rose by 39,000, manufacturing by 14,000, and natural resources and mining by 11,000.
The growth came short of the expected 190,000.
“Job growth is strong, but slowing, as businesses are unable to fill a record number of open positions,” Mark Zandi, chief economist of Moody’s Analytics, said.
Indeed, unemployment dropped to 3.8 percent in May, the lowest level since 1969, while job openings for April reached 6.7 million, more than one for each person considered unemployed.
“Wage growth is accelerating in response, most notably for young, new entrants and those changing jobs,” Zandi said. “Finding workers is increasingly becoming businesses number one problem.”
The official statistics from the BLS, due Friday morning, can still somewhat change the picture, though they usually come close to the ADP numbers.
Many economists consider four percent unemployment natural and a sign of “full employment.”
But unemployment figures can be deceiving, as they do not include those who haven’t sought a job over the previous four weeks.
The data suggests that many of these Americans are now joining the workforce, easing the labor shortage pressures. That, however, also weakens the pressure on employers to raise wages.