US employers went on a hiring binge last month, adding 313,000 jobs, the most since July 2016, and drawing hundreds of thousands of people into the job market, per the AP. The figure of 313,000 easily surpassed the 205,000 economists had predicted, reports the Wall Street Journal. The Labor Department says wage gains, meanwhile, fell from the previous month to 2.6% year-over-year growth. Strong hourly wage growth had spooked markets in February because it raised the specter of inflation. But January's figure was revised one-tenth of a point lower to 2.8%. The influx of new workers kept the unemployment rate unchanged at 4.1%.
The surge of job gains likely reflects burgeoning confidence among businesses that the Trump administration's tax cuts will accelerate growth. Consumers are also optimistic, likely because after-tax income grew at the fastest pace in a year last month, aided by the tax cuts. The biggest job gains were in construction (61,000), retail and professional and business services (50,000 each), manufacturing (31,000), and financial activities (28,000), per CNBC.
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