May Employment and Unemployment -- 45 Consecutive Months of Job Gains
157,000 New Jobs Created, 1.9 Million Created in Last Year
http://www.bls.gov/news.release/pdf/empsit.pdf).
Highlights of the report:
· Non-farm payroll employment increased by 157,000 new jobs in May, following increases of 80,000 in April and 175,000 in March.
o May marks the 45th consecutive month with payroll job gains.
- Over 8 million new payroll jobs have been created in that period.
- Over the year ending in May, payroll employment grew by more than 1.9 million.
o Since the enactment of tax relief in 2003 (i.e., from June 2003 through May 2007), monthly payroll job gains have averaged a healthy 178,000. In contrast, average monthly payroll job losses between the beginning of 2001 and enactment of pro-growth tax relief were -83,000.
· The unemployment rate remained unchanged at 4.5% in May.
o The unemployment rate has ranged from 4.4% to 4.6% since last September.
o The unemployment rate remains well below the recent peak of 6.3% in June 2003.
Rachel Greszler
Economist, Senate Republicans
Joint Economic Committee
(202) 224-2944
Rachel_Greszler@jec.senate.gov
The Bureau of Labor Statistics released a report today on employment and unemployment for May (available at
Highlights of the report:
· Non-farm payroll employment increased by 157,000 new jobs in May, following increases of 80,000 in April and 175,000 in March.
o May marks the 45th consecutive month with payroll job gains.
- Over 8 million new payroll jobs have been created in that period.
- Over the year ending in May, payroll employment grew by more than 1.9 million.
o Since the enactment of tax relief in 2003 (i.e., from June 2003 through May 2007), monthly payroll job gains have averaged a healthy 178,000. In contrast, average monthly payroll job losses between the beginning of 2001 and enactment of pro-growth tax relief were -83,000.
· The unemployment rate remained unchanged at 4.5% in May.
o The unemployment rate has ranged from 4.4% to 4.6% since last September.
o The unemployment rate remains well below the recent peak of 6.3% in June 2003.
Rachel Greszler
Economist, Senate Republicans
Joint Economic Committee
(202) 224-2944
Rachel_Greszler@jec.senate.gov