ROANOKE TIMES

                         Roanoke Times
                 Copyright (c) 1995, Landmark Communications, Inc.

DATE: FRIDAY, May 4, 1990                   TAG: 9005040864
SECTION: NATIONAL/INTERNATIONAL                    PAGE: A/1   EDITION: EVENING 
SOURCE: Associated Press
DATELINE: WASHINGTON                                LENGTH: Medium


JOBLESS RATE UP TO 5.4

The nation's unemployment rate rose to 5.4 percent in April, the highest level in more than a year, the government said today.

The civilian jobless rate as measured by a household survey was up from the 5.2 percent registered in March. Before that, the unemployment rate had held steady at 5.3 percent for nine months.

The last time the jobless rate reached 5.4 percent was January 1989.

The number of new jobs created edged up only slightly, with a net gain of 64,000. There would havebeen a decline, had not 78,000 temporary census workers been hired.

"The report indicates the bottom dropped out of the labor market in April. It speaks more toward a possible recession than a rebounding economy," said Allen Sinai, chief economist at the Boston Co.

The Labor Department's survey of employers, from The report indicates the bottom dropped out of the labor market in April. It speaks more toward a possible recession than a rebounding economy. Economist Allen Sinai which the job growth figure is derived, is often considered a more reliable indicator of economic activity than the household survey from which the overall unemployment rate is calculated.

Today's Labor Department report showed that the nation's manufacturing sector, which has been in a slump for months, continued to falter as factory jobs fell by 22,000. It was the 12th time in 13 months that manufacturing jobs declined.

The biggest payroll drop in April came in construction, where jobs fell by a seasonally adjusted 99,000 jobs. However, that decline was somewhat overstated because construction jobs were pushed up earlier in the year with January and February's unseasonally warm weather, said Janet Norwood, commissioner of the Bureau of Labor Statistics.

She called the slowdown in jobs "not particularly surprising after more than seven years of business expansion."

Meanwhile, the service sector, which has been carrying the economy, added 179,000 jobs, but that was artificially bolstered with the hiring of temporary census workers.

Labor costs, which have been speeding upward and are blamed for worsening the nation's inflation problems, continued to increase, although moderately, today's report showed.

Average hourly earnings posted a 0.3 percent rise in April to $9.95, up from the $9.92 the average worker earned an hour in March. But at least part of last month's rise in labor costs was due to the April 1 increase in the minimum wage, which went from $3.35 an hour to $3.85.

Many economists had predicted the nation's unemployment rate would eventually creep up this year. Since mid-1988, the nation's jobless rate has ranged between 5 percent and 5.5 percent for the lowest range since the early 1970s.



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