After a year of pumping up their payrolls, US employers sharply cut back hiring in March, in a fresh sign of a slowdown in the world's leading economy.
Labour Department data today showed the economy generated a disappointing 126,000 net new jobs in March, half of what was expected and the worst month since December 2013.
The department also trimmed 69,000 from the two previous months, dimming the picture for growth after a year that averaged 287,000 new hires a month across the country.
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Hiring in the huge service sector slowed but still was a firm 142,000 new positions.
But total jobs in government and in the goods-producing industries declined, with a notable net loss of 11,000 jobs in the mining sector as oil industry layoffs mount with the plunge in crude prices.
Economist Douglas Holtz-Eakin, former head of the Congressional Budget Office, called the report "awful."
"The headwinds of cold weather, higher dollar, and low oil prices are all good excuses for a bad month. But once again the economy has failed to shift to an anticipated higher gear - an ominous development," he said.
The one good sign was in wages, a data point closely eyed by economists and the Federal Reserve for signs of labour market tightening and inflation.
After coming in flat last month, average hourly wages rose by 7 cents to USD 24.86, a solid gain that put the year-on-year increase to 2.1 per cent, still modest but ahead of inflation.
Even so, analysts pointed out, average weekly hours worked fell, pulling down slightly average weekly earnings, a sign of relative weakness in economic growth.
Economists noted a number of factors that could explain some of the weakness in March: harsh weather in some parts of the country, the very strong dollar, China's economic slowdown, and the continuing effect of the West Coast ports slowdown between November and February.
"A range of factors including the weather and the global economic slowdown have affected economic data for the first quarter," Jason Furman, chairman of President Barack Obama's Council of Economic Advisers, said in a statement.
Chris Low of FTN Financial pointed in a different direction.
"For our money, it is the collapse of the oil economy, and it likely will continue to weigh on activity" through the second quarter, he said.