U.S. unemployment rate dips on census hiring

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A wave of census hiring lifted U.S. payrolls by 431,000 in May, but job creation by private companies grew at the slowest
pace since the start of the year. The unemployment rate dipped to 9.7 percent as people gave up searching for work.

The Labor Department's new employment snapshot released Friday suggested that outside of the burst of hiring of temporary
census workers by the federal government many private employers are wary of bulking up their work forces.

That indicates the economic recovery can only plod along and won't have the energy to quickly bring relief to millions
of unemployed Americans.

Virtually all the job creation in May came from the hiring of 411,000 census workers. Such hiring peaked in May and will
begin tailing off in June.

By contrast, hiring by private employers, the backbone of the economy, slowed sharply. They added just 41,000 jobs, down
from 218,000 in April and the fewest since January.

The unemployment rate, which is derived from a separate survey than the payroll figures, fell to 9.7 percent from 9.9 percent.
The dip partly reflected 322,000 people leaving the labor force for any number of reasons. The number of people saying they
were employed fell as did the number of people who said they were out of work.

All told, 15 million people were unemployed in May.

Counting people who have given up looking for work and part-timers who would prefer to be working full time, the underemployment
rate fell to 16.6 percent in May from 17.1 percent in April. Even with the drop, the figures show just how difficult it is
for jobseekers to find work.

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