Briefing | America’s economy

Jobs are not enough

New figures show that the speed at which America’s economy can grow without stoking inflation has fallen

|WASHINGTON, DC

AMERICAN workers have had no news this good for years. In June employers added 288,000 jobs, bringing the total for the year to 1.4m, the best six-month stretch since 2006. Unemployment has sunk to 6.1%, the lowest rate in almost six years. It could hit levels long regarded as “full employment” within a year. Help-wanted signs are proliferating, with vacancies up by 20% since January.

Such an ebullient labour market is usually the token of a booming economy. Not now. In the first quarter gross domestic product fell by 2.9% at an annual rate, the worst showing since the recession. This was a result in part of bad weather. Yet the second quarter will only be strong enough to make up the ground lost in the first. Economists had thought 2014 would be the best year since the recession; with growth in the first half of around zero, it is shaping up to be the worst.

This article appeared in the Briefing section of the print edition under the headline "Jobs are not enough"

America’s lost oomph

From the July 19th 2014 edition

Discover stories from this section and more in the list of contents

Explore the edition

More from Briefing

America’s $61bn aid package buys Ukraine time

It must use it wisely

America is uniquely ill-suited to handle a falling population

Which is a worry, because much of it is already shrinking


Homeowners face a $25trn bill from climate change

Property, the world’s biggest asset class, is also its most vulnerable