| Report Says U.S. Manufacturing Is Growing With No End in Sight --''''> 
 By SYLVIA NASAR -- July 3, 1999
 
 After idling in May, the great American job
 engine is purring again.
 
 Despite another big drop in factory jobs, the
 nation's employers added more than a quarter
 of a million new workers to their payrolls in
 June. The overall gain, of 268,000, followed a
 decline of 5,000 in May. Nearly two of every
 three Americans -- a record -- were at work
 last month. And the pay of rank-and-file
 workers jumped 5 cents an hour, to $13.23.
 
 With the labor market tighter than at almost
 any other time in the last three decades,
 Americans who have jobs are starting to act a
 bit cockier -- something that they have
 refrained from doing until very recently. In
 June, the so-called quit rate -- the fraction of
 people looking for work who left their last
 jobs without having lined up another -- rose to
 14.5 percent, the highest level since the end of
 the long, strong 1980s boom. The rate is a
 classic barometer of consumer confidence,
 which by other accounts has recently
 strengthened.
 
 In short, the economic picture that persuaded
 Alan Greenspan, the chairman of the Federal
 Reserve, and his colleagues to nudge up a key
 interest rate by a quarter of a percentage point
 on Wednesday was not materially altered by
 the report issued Friday by the Labor
 Department. Though the economy may no
 longer be in overdrive, as it was last winter, it
 still has enough momentum to keep spending
 and production stronger than the central bank
 -- worried that the longest peacetime expansion
 ever will rekindle inflation -- would like.
 
 "The economy is still very strong," said Joshua
 Feinman, chief economist at Deutsche Asset
 Management. "Whatever concerns Alan
 Greenspan had about a shrinking pool of
 workers, he's still got them."
 
 Labor Secretary Alexis Herman said simply,
 "The sun is shining brightly."
 
 True, the unemployment rate edged up slightly
 to 4.3 percent in June from 4.2 percent in May.
 But Katherine Abraham, the commissioner of
 the Bureau of Labor Statistics, which issues the
 monthly jobs report, said the uptick was not
 statistically meaningful and called the
 unemployment rate "essentially unchanged." It
 has remained between 4.2 percent and 4.4
 percent since November.
 
 In June, the bureau's survey of households (on
 the basis of which the unemployment rate is
 calculated) showed that the number of new
 entrants to the labor force rose even more, by
 nearly 400,000, than the number of new jobs --
 yet another sign that Americans are more
 confident than ever that work is there for the
 asking. Meanwhile, the number of discouraged
 workers -- those who are not looking because
 they think there are no jobs for them -- has
 dwindled to just over 200,000 in the entire
 country, down 90,000 from a year ago.
 
 Among the unemployed are plenty of people
 looking for better positions. A bigger portion
 of people who are job hunting -- not those
 who retired or returned to school or decided to
 stay home with a child -- told their bosses to
 get lost even though they did not have
 alternative work. This rate, now at 14.5
 percent, is still shy of its peak of 16.5 percent,
 reached in January 1990. But it is a lot higher
 than in mid-1996, when it was below 10
 percent.
 
 The biggest beneficiaries of the current
 demand for labor, of course, are groups of
 workers who have traditionally suffered the
 most joblessness. The unemployment rate for
 African-Americans, already at a record low,
 dropped by a couple of tenths of a percentage
 point last month, to 7.3 percent, half the rate
 during the last recession. Joblessness among
 Hispanic workers, 6.8 percent, also remained at
 close to a record low.
 
 The report issued Friday was only one of many
 recent indications that the economy continues
 to barrel along at a pace well above its
 long-term trend, which most economists
 consider to be 2.5 percent to 3 percent a year.
 With income growing at a rapid clip and
 corporate profits firming, spending by
 consumers and businesses has remained
 robust, and despite the yawning gap between
 the amount of goods imported and exported,
 domestic production has been picking up, too.
 
 The only sector of the economy that had been
 suffering from serious weakness and had
 restrained overall growth -- manufacturing -- is
 pretty clearly on the mend. The most recent
 reading by the National Association of
 Purchasing Management suggests that output
 has expanded for five consecutive months
 even as inventories shrank relative to sales and
 as order backlogs swelled.
 
 The policy makers at the Fed will be looking at
 such numbers before their scheduled meetings
 later this year. "Will the world look different
 on Aug. 24 or Oct. 25 than on June 30? We
 don't think so," said Ed McKelvey, senior
 economist at Goldman Sachs, which estimates
 that the gross domestic product grew at an
 annual rate of 4 percent in the second quarter
 and predicts that the Fed will probably raise
 rates more.
 
 Admittedly, the rebound in industrial
 production has not translated into more hiring.
 Factory payrolls shrank by 35,000 in June,
 mostly because of job losses in aircraft,
 electronics and apparel, bringing the total
 number of manufacturing jobs that have
 vanished in the last 15 months to nearly half a
 million. But hiring typically lags behind sales
 increases as companies initially try to fill the
 extra orders by adding hours and improving
 efficiency.
 
 Indeed, the Labor Department reported that
 overtime edged up to 4.7 hours a week in June
 from 4.6 hours in May and the factory
 workweek got a tad longer. It is also possible
 that manufacturers are letting temporary-help
 outfits, which are classified as service firms,
 do the first round of hiring. "We're probably
 not accurately capturing the number of people
 actually work in factories," Feinman
 speculated. The temporary-help industry added
 19,000 workers in June, the ninth straight
 month of increases.
 
 Meanwhile, construction employment
 rebounded in June after dropping sharply in
 May. (It turns out that the May decline was
 mostly a reflection of last winter's warm
 weather, which disrupted the usual seasonal
 hiring pattern.) Although the housing boom
 has already cooled with higher mortgage rates,
 contractors hired 26,000 workers last month,
 many of them plumbers, roofers and
 electricians,
 
 As usual, the part of the economy that did the
 bulk of the hiring in June was the sprawling
 service sector, which includes everything from
 the corner copying store to giant multinational
 banks. These companies hired a total of nearly
 300,000 workers. On one end of the pay and
 prestige spectrum, banks, brokerage firms and
 other financial institutions added some 13,000
 workers. At the other extreme, retailers added
 some 50,000 workers, nearly half of whom
 wound up waiting on tables or working cash
 registers in restaurants or bars. Seasonal
 businesses -- amusement parks, lawn services,
 hotel chains, movie theaters -- did lots of
 hiring, too.
 
 Amazingly, the tight labor market has not
 brought on much inflation. Even with the
 5-cent increase in average hourly earnings, pay
 is up just 3.7 percent from a year ago. That is
 about half a percentage point less than the pay
 increases employers were handing out last
 summer.
 
 Copyright 1999 The New York Times Company
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