
FOR DELIVERY: 9:30 A.M., E.D.T.
FRIDAY, JULY 5, 1996
Advance copies of this statement are made available to
the press under lock-up conditions with the explicit
understanding that the data are embargoed until 8:30 a.m.
Eastern Daylight Time.
Statement of
Katharine G. Abraham
Commissioner
Bureau of Labor Statistics
Friday, July 5, 1996
Good morning. I am pleased to be here to comment on
the employment and unemployment data that were released
this morning.
Payroll employment continued to expand in June, and
the unemployment rate declined to 5.3 percent.
Nonfarm payroll employment, as measured by the
establishment survey, grew by 239,000 in June, following
a larger increase in the prior month. The average
monthly gain in nonfarm payrolls was 265,000 in the
second quarter of this year, compared with 200,000 in the
first quarter and 173,000 in the latter half of 1995.
Much of the recent pickup in employment growth is
due to strength in the retail trade industry. The
industry added 75,000 workers in June, its third straight
month of robust job growth following essentially no net
growth in the first quarter. Almost half of the June
increase in retail trade was in eating and drinking
places. Retailers of building materials and garden
supplies added 13,000 jobs over the month, marking the
fourth consecutive month of sizable job gains for that
industry, and there was continued strength among auto
dealers and service stations, and furniture and home
furnishings stores.
The services industry added 99,000 jobs in June,
slightly below the average monthly gain for the industry
over the past year. Employment in business services rose
by 38,000 (mostly in help supply services) and there were
notable gains in hotels, and in agricultural, auto
repair, and engineering and management services. Overall
job growth in services was held back by an unusually
small gain in health services and an employment decline
in amusement and recreation.
Elsewhere in the service-producing sector of the
economy, June job growth totaled 21,000 in
transportation, 12,000 in wholesale trade, and 11,000 in
finance, insurance, and real estate. Total government
employment was about unchanged, as a substantial gain in
local education offset a decline among State governments
and continued losses at the Federal level.
Among the goods-producing industries, construction
added 23,000 jobs in June, continuing its recent pattern
of strong job growth. In the first half of this year,
employment in construction expanded by 183,000.
Manufacturing employment was essentially unchanged in
June, as increases among a number of durable goods
industries, notably fabricated metals and transportation
equipment, were offset by losses in nondurables,
especially food processing and apparel. The factory
workweek edged up to 41.8 hours and overtime held at 4.6
hours.
Average hourly earnings rose by 9 cents in June.
This unusually large increase follows a rise of 1 cent in
May (as revised) and 4 cents in April. As I often have
noted, changes in hourly earnings can vary widely from
month to month, so that undue significance should not be
attached to any one months data. Since last summer,
however, the over-the-year increases in average hourly
earnings have been running ahead of those for the prior
several years.
Turning to the data from the household survey, the
unemployment rate fell three-tenths of a percentage point
to 5.3 percent in June. Among adult women, the jobless
rate fell from 5.0 percent to 4.6 percent following an
increase in the prior month. The jobless rates for most
other major demographic groups did not change appreciably
in June. Prior to June, the overall unemployment rate
had hovered between 5.4 percent and 5.8 percent for 20
months.
In summary, payroll employment rose in June, and the
unemployment rate fell to 5.3 percent. Job growth has
been stronger in the first half of 1996 than in the
latter half of 1995.
My colleagues and I now would be glad to answer your
questions.
Contact: (cpsinfo@bls.gov) Division of Labor Force Statistics-BLS
Last modified: August 06, 1996
URL: http://www.bls.census.gov/cps/pub/jec_0696.htm