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Where Americans Found Jobs: Construction, Retail, Factories

Construction led the way in February in a month of powerful hiring for the U.S. economy.

Mnet 110208 Manufacturing 1

Construction led the way in February in a month of powerful hiring for the U.S. economy.

The sector added 61,000 jobs, the most in any month since 2007, before the Great Recession began. The gains came in part from builders and contractors working in both residential and commercial construction. Heavy and civil engineering companies also posted gains. Over the last 12 month, the sector has added a solid 254,000 jobs.

Retailers also delivered an impressive result, adding more than 50,000 jobs, the most in two years. The Labor Department cautioned that that gain might be slightly exaggerated because fewer people were laid off after the holiday shopping season than the government was expecting.

Nonetheless, the figure stands in contrast to a year earlier, when the retail sector was enduring deep job losses. The hiring in retail last month was led by clothing stores, home improvement and garden supply stores and general merchandise stores.

Manufacturing added 31,000 jobs, led by auto and auto parts, fabricated metal products and machinery. Financial services, which includes banking, insurance and real estate, added 28,000 jobs. That was the biggest such jump since 2005.

Overall, employers added a strong 313,000 jobs in February. The unemployment rate held steady at 4.1 percent.

Industry (change from previous month) February 2018 January 2018 Past 12 months
Construction 61,000 40,000 254,000
Manufacturing 31,000 25,000 224,000
Retail 50,300 14,800 35,000
Transportation, warehousing 15,400 11,800 147,600
Information (Telecom, publishing) -12,000 -16,000 -62,000
Financial services 28,000 8,000 143,000
Professional services (Accounting, engineering, temp work) 50,000 33,000 495,000
Education and health 23,000 63,000 449,000
Hotels, restaurants, entertainment 16,000 39,000 325,000
Government 26,000 1,000 49,000
Source: Labor Department
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