US job openings rose unexpectedly to record 11.5 million

    • A worker oversee molten iron during cookware production at a factory in South Pittsburg, Tennessee.
    • A worker oversee molten iron during cookware production at a factory in South Pittsburg, Tennessee. PHOTO: BLOOMBERG
    Published Wed, May 4, 2022 · 07:36 AM

    US employers saw record levels of job openings and workers quitting in March, pointing to intensifying labour-market tightness that will keep pushing wages higher at a rapid clip.

    The number of available positions increased to 11.5 million in the month from 11.3 million in February, the Labour Department's Job Openings and Labour Turnover Survey, or JOLTS, showed Tuesday (May 3). The median forecast in a Bloomberg survey of economists called for 11.2 million openings.

    Meantime, a series high of 4.5 million Americans quit their jobs in March, in data back to 2000. The quits rate, a measure of voluntary job leavers as a share of total employment, rose slightly to 3 per cent.

    The vacancy figures suggest that employers' needs for workers remained strong in March as employers staff up to meet solid consumer demand for goods and services. Businesses are also still struggling to recruit qualified workers, which has put upward pressure on wages and led to a surge in job openings.

    There were 1.9 jobs for every unemployed worker in March, up from February. Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell has pointed to that figure as an indication of the tightness in the American labour market. Combined with soaring inflation, the data reinforces expectations that the central bank will be more aggressive with their monetary policy tightening in upcoming meetings, starting Wednesday.

    The data come ahead of Friday's monthly jobs report from the Labour Department, which is currently forecast to show the US added 390,000 jobs in April.

    The increase in job openings was driven by retail trade and durable goods manufacturing. That echoes data from the Institute for Supply Management Monday, which found that manufacturers are still struggling to solve labour shortage issues.

    Vacancies decreased in transportation, warehousing, and utilities; state and local government education; and accommodation and food services.

    Quits increased in professional and business services and construction, the JOLTS data showed.

    While staffing has improved for some companies, many continue to point to challenges on earnings calls. Domino's Pizza said last week that when adding up all of the lost operating hours in the first quarter, US stores were cumulatively closed for the equivalent of almost 6 days.

    "The labour market is still very much a job seeker's market," Nick Bunker, economic research director at Indeed, said in a note. "Something dramatic will have to happen for this to change anytime soon."

    Hires were little changed at 6.7 million in March. By industry, leisure and hospitality rose. BLOOMBERG

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