The US economy added 242,000 jobs in February, figures show, far better than the 190,000 expected by economists.
The
Labor Department numbers underlined the strength of the US economy and
may allow the Federal Reserve to gradually raise interest rates this
year.
The figure for February was also much higher than the 151,000 jobs added in January.
The unemployment rate was unchanged from January at 4.9% - an eight-year low.
Another 30,000 jobs were also added to the revised December and January figures.
Luke
Bartholomew, investment manager at Aberdeen Asset Management, said:
"This should scotch suggestions that the US is about to tip into
recession. It's yet more evidence that the labour market is in good
shape, although wage growth was more disappointing."
Last week, official figures indicated that the US economy expanded at an annualised pace of 1% in the quarter, compared with an initial estimate of 0.7%.
The
strong jobs market and improved growth outlook, together with signs
that inflation is creeping up, could prompt the Fed to raise rates in
the summer.
Services growth
It
did so in December for the first time in nearly a decade - a decision
that had been criticised by some for holding back the economic recovery.
The
services sector created 245,000 jobs last month after adding 153,000
jobs in January, while construction added 19,000 positions and
government added 12,000.
However, mining lost a further 18,000
jobs after shedding 9,000 positions the previous month, and the
manufacturing sector shed 16,000 jobs, reversing some of January's
surprise increase.
Meanwhile, the US trade deficit rose in January as exports fell for a fourth consecutive month.
The
Commerce Department said the gap between exports and imports climbed to
$45.7bn in January from a revised $44.7bn in December.
Exports
of goods and services fell 2.1% in January to $176.5bn - the lowest
since June 2011. US exporters have been hurt by a global economic
slowdown and by a strong dollar that makes US products more expensive
overseas.
Imports fell 1.3% to $222.1bn - the lowest since April 2011.
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