Kate Andrews Kate Andrews

Can America’s 2.5 million jobs miracle be replicated in Britain?

Photo by Getty Images

The US economy created 2.5 million jobs last month – the biggest monthly jobs gain since records began a century ago, albeit only a partial recovery from the 22 million jobs lost during lockdown. These figures have blown expectations out of the water. Economists were predicting yet more unemployment: the consensus was unemployment reaching 8.3 million, or 20 per cent in May, up from 14.7 per cent in April. Defying the odds, unemployment actually fell to 13 per cent, signalling an unexpectedly early start in the rebounding of the American economy. The biggest winners were workers in hospitality, who made up almost half of the new jobs, followed by construction. ‘This is a mind-blowing number and shows that the economy is improving,’ said Naeem Aslam, chief market strategist at AvaTrade.

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The UK is moving out of lockdown at a snail’s pace compared to its European counterparts

US unemployment may still stand at 13 per cent, but a recovery of this scale had not been expected.

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