美国恐怖数据几点公布?
4月15日3:00(北京时间) 每月第一个星期三发布 最新的数据是3月28日发布的,内容如下 U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS) reports the unemployment rate for March was 6.0 percent, little changed from last month’s revised rate of 6.1 percent. Over the past 12 months, unemployment has averaged 7.6 percent. The national unemployment rate is currently below the U.S. Bureau of Economic Analysis’ estimate for the natural rate of unemployment, which means that in real terms there are few unemployed workers who are underemployed or miscalibrated to their current jobs and therefore capable of taking other work if one were available.
Over the year ended in March, employment increased by a total of 493,000, with increases across all major worker groups except young people aged 16–24, whose jobless rate actually rose by nearly half a point to 13.9 percent after having fallen earlier this year to its lowest level since December 2008. While employment growth has been slowest among teenagers, they still account for more than one-quarter of those at risk for long-term unemployment—that is, those unemployed for 50 weeks or longer—and about six out of ten of these longest-term unemployed teens lack a high school diploma, have low skills, or both.
In March, average hourly earnings for all employees on private nonfarm payrolls edged up by $0.02, to $23.79. Over the last 12 months, wages have grown at an annualized rate of 2.3 percent. In March, the biggest gains in pay occurred in professional and technical services, up $0.34 per hour; healthcare, up $0.21; and transportation and warehousing, up $0.17. Wages declined in finance and insurance ($0.23) and retail trade ($0.19).
The share of employers reporting difficulty filling jobs held steady at 38.5 percent in February, down slightly from 40.1 percent reported a year ago. The proportion of open jobs requiring advanced degrees remained unchanged at 29.6 percent in March, while openings requiring only a high school degree fell again to 12.5 percent, similar to October's record low of 12.2 percent. Overall, 77.3 million Americans were employed in March, compared to 77.5 million in January—a decrease of less than 0.1 million.
Econom