The unemployment rate remained 4.1 percent for a third straight month, the lowest level since 2000, the Labor Department said today.
For all of 2017, employers added nearly 2.1 million jobs, enough to lower the unemployment rate from 4.7 percent a year ago.
Still, the data indicates that job gains are slowing, which typically happens when unemployment falls to ultra-low levels and fewer people are available to be hired.
Average job gains have declined to 171,000 this year from a peak of 250,000 in 2014. Last year's job gains were the fewest since 2010.
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Still, the December job growth, while modest, underscores the economy's continued health in its ninth year of recovery. Last month's pace of hiring is enough, over time, to lower the unemployment rate.
The unemployment rate for African-Americans reached a record low of 6.8 per cent in December. And the jobless rate for veterans of Afghanistan and Iraq fell to 3.3 percent, also a record low.