Businesses in the United States boosted payrolls more than forecast in February, while the jobless rate remained unchanged from January’s 8.3 percent.
In its closely watched monthly report, the U.S. Labor Department said Friday that employers hired 227,000 new workers last month. In addition, the report revised upward the number of people hired in January to 284,000.
Until February, the jobless rate had fallen for five straight months in the U.S. — an indication that the world’s largest economy is steadily recovering from the severe economic downturn that was the country’s worst since the Great Depression of the 1930s.
The economy has played a dominant role in the country’s presidential election campaign. President Barack Obama, a Democrat, is seeking a second four-year term in next November’s national election, but the 8.3 percent jobless rate is the same as in February 2009, his first full month in office. It remains well above the country’s typical 5 percent figure.
The president’s chief Republican opponents — one-time venture capitalist Mitt Romney, former Pennsylvania senator Rick Santorum and ex-House Speaker Newt Gingrich — have all sharply criticized his handling of the economy, and say they could improve job creation at a faster pace.