As of today, it looks like predictions of the recovery’s death have been exaggerated once again. Two data points this week—the strong service sector reading from the ISM Non-Manufacturing survey and the strong jobs report—suggest that the weak first quarter was likely only a pause rather than the end.
Let’s start with the service sector. Services constitute about seven-eighths of the economy, so business sentiment matters. The unexpected increase for April, from 55.2 to 57.5, moves a huge portion of the economy even further into the expansionary zone, almost entirely reversing a worrying drop in March. Both the business activity and new orders components of the ISM Non-Manufacturing survey are good forward-looking indicators, and both increased strongly, with new orders hitting a 12-year high.
The good news doesn’t end there. The export order index is up to its highest level since May 2007, and the expansion has broadened to 15 of 18 sectors. Notwithstanding the first-quarter slowdown, this report indicates that economic growth is likely to pick up for the rest of the year.
The jobs report also came in stronger than expected at 211,000 new jobs, well above expectations for a 190,000 increase. This gain was partially offset by a downward revision of the previous month’s data, from 98,000 to 79,000. Still, there’s no denying this better-than-expected performance, which also seems to confirm the idea that the weak March report was due more to weather than any other factor.
The unemployment rate, which is drawn from a separate survey, dropped to 4.4 percent, which is the lowest level in a decade. Even more important, the underemployment rate also dropped to a decade low of 8.6 percent. Meanwhile, wage growth moved up to 0.3 percent, suggesting that the labor market continues to tighten. With a growing shortage of workers, and rising wages, the conditions for faster spending growth are in place.
Job growth and the service sector are two of the four economic signals I watch most closely. This strong reversal from last month’s weak performance is a positive sign. And although there is still a gap between confidence and spending—both for consumers and businesses—the numbers suggest that spending growth may ramp up soon. This is the last missing piece in the recovery.
It is still too soon to declare victory. We need to monitor whether consumers and businesses are indeed walking the walk as well as talking the talk. But I think the economy has given us good reason to hope. Overall, it was a good week.