Business & Economy

Overnight Finance: Unemployment rate lowest since 2000 | Trump asks China to slash trade deficit $200B by 2020 | NJ gov signs bill to skirt GOP tax law provision

Happy Friday and welcome back to Overnight Finance, where we are celebrating Star Wars Day with a few laughs and a vigorous defense of Porgs. I’m Sylvan Lane, and here’s your nightly guide to everything affecting your bills, bank account and bottom line.

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THE BIG DEAL: The U.S. economy added 164,000 jobs in April, a modest number that was less than expected as the nation’s labor market maintains a steady rate of growth. 

The unemployment rate fell to 3.9 percent – the lowest level since December 2000 – from 4.1 percent in March, where it had held for six months, the Labor Department reported on Friday. Analysts expected an April gain of about 190,000 jobs.

The economy is maintaining growth even as President Trump’s threats of steep tariffs on China and some U.S. allies have unnerved businesses and stock markets, injecting uncertainty into the economy. The Hill’s Vicki Needham breaks down the data for us here.

 

Wage growth still lags: With a tightening labor market, job growth is expected to slow down somewhat as the unemployment rate drops into the rarely seen 3-4 percent range.

And wage growth remains stubborn, while companies have been slow to raise wages despite getting a boost to their bottom lines from the GOP’s tax-cut bill.

Businesses continue to complain that they can’t find enough qualified workers to fill openings.

In April, average hourly earnings were up 2.6 percent for the year.

Jason Furman, former head of the Council of Economic Advisers under President Obama who now teaches at Harvard, said that while the 3.9 percent unemployment rate “is positively exciting,” the slow rate of pay increases is “pretty disappointing.”

Robert Frick, corporate economist with the Navy Federal Credit Union, said the slower pace of wage growth shows that “workers are not sharing in the expansion as they should, and that has consequences for the expansion given two-thirds of [gross domestic product] is consumer spending.”

“We need wage increases well above 3 percent for consumer spending to accelerate at a healthy pace,” Frick said.

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Recapping the week with Overnight Finance: