The economy accelerated in June, with employers adding 288,000 jobs, another sign that growth is finally rebounding.
The Labor Department also said that the unemployment rate fell 0.2 percentage point to 6.1 percent, the lowest since September 2008, when the economy's fortunes turned sharply lower as Lehman Brothers collapsed and the financial crisis ensued.
Nearly six years later, some of the scars remain - like a historically low rate of Americans in the work force. But the job market has been showing signs of health, even as the overall economic growth rate has been anemic.
The pace of hiring in recent months has been stronger despite a very weak first quarter, when the economy shrank at an annual rate of 2.9 percent. Although the weakness was initially blamed on weather, as well as more technical factors like inventory swings, the depth of the contraction caught some economists off guard, especially those who began the year with a more positive outlook for 2014.
Economic growth is thought to have picked up in the second quarter, which ended Monday, with experts estimating a growth rate of just over 3 percent in the period.
On Wednesday, a private survey of payrolls by ADP showed a gain of 281,000 jobs, well above the 205,000 increase economists had been expecting for June.
The average gain in the Labor Department data expected by Wall Street economists whom Bloomberg surveyed before the release stood at 215,000, with the unemployment remaining flat at 6.3 percent.
The monthly jobs report typically comes on the first Friday of each month but was moved up a day as the federal government is closed on Friday for the holiday.
Entities 0 Name: Labor Department Count: 2 1 Name: Lehman Brothers Count: 1 2 Name: ADP Count: 1 3 Name: Bloomberg Count: 1 Related 0 Url: http://ift.tt/1xlMB4V Title: Jobs Growth Adds More Sunshine to U.S. Economic Performance Description: Nearly seven years after the last recession began, the U.S. economy has been ticking along at a good clip lately. Private employers added 281,000 jobs in June, according to a report on Wednesday from the , a number that exceeds the most optimistic forecast of economists surveyed by Bloomberg.