U.S. Unemployment Falls To 4.9% Before Election

On Friday, the monthly U.S. jobs report will offer the latest official pulse on America's economy. Already, America is near full employment and the jobless level has been hovering right under 5%. Overall, Americans' confidence in their job opportunities is at its highest point in 15 years, a Pew Research survey found. And consumer confidence too is at a nine-year high.

By Patrick Gillespie
America’s economy stayed on track before the U.S. election.
The U.S. economy added 161,000 jobs in October, a solid gain yet below the 191,000 jobs added in September, according to the Labor Department. It is the last look at the health of the economy for Americans voters before they cast their ballots.
Unemployment fell a tick to 4.9%. That’s down by half since 2009, when unemployment peaked at 10%.
Wage growth — one of the last metrics to move in the right direction post-recession — continued to show signs of accelerating.
Wages grew 2.8% in October compared to a year ago, the fastest monthly growth since June 2009.
The jobs report has become a divisive subject in the presidential election.
Donald Trump has called the official unemployment rate a “hoax” and he’s tried to discredit the Labor Department’s official numbers.
Trump says the unemployment rate is closer to 10%, using a broader measure of unemployment, which also counts some part time workers as unemployed.
Labor Department has never relied on this measure to describe the country’s key unemployment rate.
October’s gains marked the 73rd consecutive month of job gains for the U.S. economy.

The-CNN-Wire ™ & © 2016 Cable News Network, Inc., a Time Warner Company. All rights reserved.

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