Manufacturing Job Losses Continue Despite Modest Nonfarm December Employment Gain
Nonfarm payroll employment ticked up by 50,000 in December. Meanwhile, October and November’s job gains were revised downward by 76,000 to a loss of 173,000 jobs and a gain of 56,000 jobs, respectively. Following the government shutdown, employment is still down by 67,000 from September. The 12-month average stands at 49,000 job gains per month. On the other hand, the unemployment rate edged down 0.1 percentage point from November to 4.4% in December, while the labor force participation rate also ticked down 0.1 percentage point to 62.4%.
Manufacturing employment decreased by 8,000 in December, the eighth consecutive month of job losses, after slipping by 2,000 in November. On the other hand, the collective job losses in September and October of 14,000 were revised upward by 3,000 jobs to a decrease of 11,000 jobs. Manufacturing employment is down 68,000 over the year. Durable goods manufacturing employment edged down by 3,000 in December, while nondurable goods employment fell by 5,000. The most significant gain in manufacturing in December occurred in miscellaneous manufacturing, which added 1,800 jobs over the month. Meanwhile, the most significant loss occurred in plastics and rubber products manufacturing, which shed 4,900 jobs over the month.
The employment-population ratio inched up 0.1 percentage point from November to 59.7% in December but is down 0.2 percentage points from a year ago. Employed persons who are part-time workers for economic reasons declined by 146,000 from November to 5.34 million in December and are up from 4.36 million in December 2024. Native-born employment is down 656,000 from November but up 2,043,000 over the year. Meanwhile, foreign-born employment is up 310,000 over the month and 383,000 over the year. At the same time, the native-born unemployment rate is up 0.4 percentage points over the year to 4.1% in December, while the foreign-born unemployment rate is down 0.2 percentage points to 4.1%.
Average hourly earnings for all private nonfarm payroll employees rose 0.3%, or 12 cents, reaching $37.02. Over the past year, earnings have grown 3.8%. The average workweek for all employees edged down 0.1 hour to 34.2 hours and by 0.2 hours to 39.9 hours for manufacturing employees.