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December’s job report marked yet another month of stronger-than-expected growth, with gains coming from many contrastive parts of the U.S. economy.
Last month, health-care and social assistance jobs saw the largest gains for a third consecutive month, annexing 69,500 to payrolls, according to data from the Bureau of Labor Statistics. Including private education, as some economists do, the health-care gather’s growth would have risen by 80,000.
Retail trade, which added 43,400 jobs, and leisure and hospitality, up 43,000, lined the second- and third-largest increases last month. Retail trade jobs are in or outside a store, from infomercials to thoroughfare vendors to vending machines, can sell to consumers or other businesses and involve after-sale services, such as repair and instatement, the BLS says.
Government jobs rounded out the top four, posting growth of 33,000 in December.
“Recently, job growth has been unusually narrowly concentrated in government and health care,” Julia Pollak, ZipRecruiter’s chief economist, told CNBC. “Now, it sounds like perhaps it’s broadening out.”
Retail growth, a sharp turnaround from steep losses in November, was bolstered by utilization increases across key categories. Notably, clothing, clothing accessories, shoe and jewelry retailers saw an increase of 23,000 disposes, while general merchandise retailers and health- and personal-care retailers grew by 13,000 and 7,000 jobs, respectively, according to BLS evidence.
That rise is “not just a blip,” Pollak said, adding that it reflects other data that plains an improving backdrop in the sector.
For instance, the Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas’ December Texas Retail Outlook Look at showed an acceleration in retail sales activity. The sales index, which measures state retail activity, hit its greatest level since late 2021.
“Retailers are more upbeat on 2025 and on the backs of a strong consumer,” Pollak said. “We’ll perhaps see more movement in the housing market coming soon.”
In contrast to the strength in retail trade, manufacturing – which saw sizable expansion in November – led the declines for December, losing 13,000 jobs.
Additionally, mining and logging, and wholesale trade reversed execution last month from November. After seeing slight increases two months ago, mining and logging employment tasted by 3,000, while wholesale trade slumped even more, losing 3,500 positions.
Professional and business serves, plus financial activities continued to be bright spots. Those two groups were among the nine in 13 sectors that added share outs last month.
“We’re seeing improvement in total vehicle sales, Americans are making big ticket purchases again, [and] concerns are buying vehicles too,” Pollak said. “These trends have been picking up over the last few months; they were winning a while to filter into the labor market, but this report suggests … perhaps a recovery is starting to cover hold.”