<p>The US economy added 531,000 jobs last month and the unemployment rate dropped to 4.6 per cent, the government reported Friday, a better-than-expected result indicating hiring is resurging as Covid-19 infections decline.</p>.<p>A wide range of industries added jobs in October, including manufacturing, transportation and warehousing, and the hard-hit leisure and hospitality sector, though public education employment declined, the Labor Department said.</p>.<p>A spike in coronavirus infections fueled by the fast-spreading Delta variant held employment down in August and September, but the report brought welcome news: upward revisions to both months that indicated hiring was 235,000 higher than first reported.</p>.<p><strong>Also Read | <a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/business/dollar-hits-more-than-1-year-high-after-us-jobs-data-sterling-tumbles-1047662.html">Dollar hits more-than 1-year high after US jobs data; sterling tumbles </a></strong></p>.<p>"We got an unambiguously strong October jobs report -- big job gain, unemployment fell, hours worked increased and wage growth is strong," tweeted Mark Zandi of Moody's Analytics.</p>.<p>"Strong evidence that as the Delta-wave of the pandemic winds down, the economy is revving back up."</p>.<p>However, evidence of the massive damage done to the American workforce by the historic downturn that began in March 2020 remained evident.</p>.<p>The labor force participation rate indicating the share of the people working or looking for a job was unchanged in October at 61.6 per cent, which the Federal Reserve will surely take note of as it gauges whether the economy has returned to full employment.</p>.<p>The numbers of permanent job losers and people on temporary layoff changed little over the month, and remains higher than before the pandemic, the data said.</p>.<p>And with inflation worryingly high amid global supply chain snarls -- another of the Fed's major concerns -- the data showed wages rose again last month, and are up 4.9 per cent over the past year.</p>.<p><strong>Watch the latest DH Videos here:</strong></p>
<p>The US economy added 531,000 jobs last month and the unemployment rate dropped to 4.6 per cent, the government reported Friday, a better-than-expected result indicating hiring is resurging as Covid-19 infections decline.</p>.<p>A wide range of industries added jobs in October, including manufacturing, transportation and warehousing, and the hard-hit leisure and hospitality sector, though public education employment declined, the Labor Department said.</p>.<p>A spike in coronavirus infections fueled by the fast-spreading Delta variant held employment down in August and September, but the report brought welcome news: upward revisions to both months that indicated hiring was 235,000 higher than first reported.</p>.<p><strong>Also Read | <a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/business/dollar-hits-more-than-1-year-high-after-us-jobs-data-sterling-tumbles-1047662.html">Dollar hits more-than 1-year high after US jobs data; sterling tumbles </a></strong></p>.<p>"We got an unambiguously strong October jobs report -- big job gain, unemployment fell, hours worked increased and wage growth is strong," tweeted Mark Zandi of Moody's Analytics.</p>.<p>"Strong evidence that as the Delta-wave of the pandemic winds down, the economy is revving back up."</p>.<p>However, evidence of the massive damage done to the American workforce by the historic downturn that began in March 2020 remained evident.</p>.<p>The labor force participation rate indicating the share of the people working or looking for a job was unchanged in October at 61.6 per cent, which the Federal Reserve will surely take note of as it gauges whether the economy has returned to full employment.</p>.<p>The numbers of permanent job losers and people on temporary layoff changed little over the month, and remains higher than before the pandemic, the data said.</p>.<p>And with inflation worryingly high amid global supply chain snarls -- another of the Fed's major concerns -- the data showed wages rose again last month, and are up 4.9 per cent over the past year.</p>.<p><strong>Watch the latest DH Videos here:</strong></p>