DATA POINT Factories cut jobs Some economists argued that the very mixed September jobs report hints at damage from the US-China trade war. For just the second time since mid-2017, the manufacturing industry shed jobs last month. That makes sense because manufacturing is at the front lines of the trade war. "The woes of the manufacturing sector are beginning to weigh on the broader economy," said Scott Clemons, chief investment strategist at Brown Brothers Harriman. Bigger picture, total nonfarm payroll gains have slowed to 161,000 per month this year, compared with 223,000 in 2018. And wage growth decelerated in September. "This is as good as it's likely to get until the trade war is resolved," said Ian Shepherdson, chief economist at Pantheon Macroeconomics. Shepherdson said the same leading indicators that predicted the hiring slowdown are now signaling that nonfarm payroll growth will decelerate to just 50,000 by the end of the year, from 304,000 in January. That means the unemployment rate would then begin to rise. The hope is that trend will be reversed by progress on the trade front. Expectations for a near-term resolution are low, however, especially after President Donald Trump vowed during last month's UN speech to address the "grave economic injustice" of unfair trading practices by China. The last thing the already-slowing economy needs is a breakdown of the trade negotiations that leads to a rise in tensions and fresh rounds of tariffs. "If there is an escalation, we could be headed for Brexit-level uncertainty," Invesco's Hooper said. "That would greatly increase the likelihood that the US goes into a recession." |
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