What To Expect From The April U.S. Jobs Report

 | May 01, 2019 01:22AM ET

Demand for workers remains strong given the economy’s robust performance, yet the shrinking pool of available labour means competition for staff is intense. This is constraining employment growth and pushing up pay, which will support consumer spending while adding to medium-term inflation risks.h3 Job growth constrained by supply, not demand/h3

The monthly change in non-farm payrolls has been fairly choppy in recent months, swinging from 312,000 in January to just 33,000 in February before rebounding to 196,000 in March. It is possible that the US government shutdown contributed to the volatility with government contractors bearing the brunt of the disruption. However, this should be over and done with by now, and we are looking for a much “cleaner” set of data in Friday’s April jobs report.

The combination of firm demand for workers yet constrained supply means we look for payrolls growth of 175,000 for April versus the consensus forecast of 187,000

Demand indicators have remained firm with the Federal Reserve’s Beige Book, covering the period for early April, suggesting that “employment continued to increase nationwide” with gains “most highly concentrated in high-skilled jobs”. The problem for companies remains the shortage of available workers from which to hire, particularly in construction and manufacturing. This is constraining employment growth with the National Federation of Independent Businesses stating that 39% of surveyed members have job openings that are hard to fill. This is the highest proportion in the survey’s 44-year history.

h3 US payrolls growth And NFIB survey highlighting lack of available workers/h3