- The latest
jobs report shows the USeconomy 's recovery has been steadier than previously thought. - The economy added 709,000 more jobs than originally reported in the final 2 months of 2021.
The US economy is steamrolling its way into a remarkable stretch of job growth.
The latest jobs report released Friday showed the economy added 467,000 jobs in January. The figure smashed forecasters' expectations of dismal growth due to
January's surprise beat came after two months where job growth as initially reported came in well below economists' estimates, with job reports in both November and December disappointing observers.
But January's strong hiring wasn't the only good news in the report. The Bureau of Labor Statistics revised its previous data for November and December, finding that the economy added 709,000 more jobs than previously reported, closing out 2021 with the
The following chart shows how the revisions impacted month-over-month changes in nonfarm payrolls last year:
"January 2022 will be remembered as the month the virus ceased to be boss. It wreaked havoc & death at a terrible scale. But the economy no longer cares," Jason Furman, a former top Obama administration economist, wrote on Twitter. "People returned to the workforce. The economy added jobs.
Despite a better than expected report amid Omicron in January, a record number of workers were employed but out of work because of illness. This number was 3.6 million in January, up from 1.7 million the previous month.
"The bottom line is that the recovery has been faster and steadier than measured," Betsey Stevenson, a professor of public policy and economics at the University of Michigan, wrote on Twitter.
At the industry level in January, leisure and hospitality businesses experienced the largest jump in hiring with firms adding 151,000 payrolls. The sector has led the hiring recovery throughout the pandemic, largely due to the sector shedding the most jobs when the pandemic slammed into the economy.
Other revisions showed warehousing and storage as the sector adding the most jobs in recent months, per Indeed economist Nick Bunker. Wages climbed as well, though
"The nice nature of this report, it was not just what happened in January, but also finding out that payroll gains were so much stronger in 2021. [It] looked like that monthly average gain in payrolls was over a half million a month, which is great to see," Bunker told Insider. "I do think it's also noticeable to see how the distribution of gains when it comes to
"Hopefully we can keep up this strong pace of payroll gains while also potentially seeing some more gains from some of the sectors that have been hit hardest," Bunker said.
Insider's Ben Winck contributed to this report.