U.S. employment growth likely picked up in September, putting pressure on the Federal Reserve to raise interest rates and signaling that steam could be building in the economy ahead of America's presidential election.
Nonfarm payrolls are expected to have risen by 175,000 last month from 151,000 in August, according to a Reuters survey of economists.
That would be around the average monthly job growth so far this year, which Fed Chair, Janet Yellen, said last month was "unsustainable" and could over time cause the economy to overheat. Yellen has said the economy needs to create just under 100,000 jobs a month to keep up with population growth.
The Labor Department will release its employment report today in the evening and data is expected to show the unemployment rate holding steady at 4.9 percent.
"A strong jobs report is going to bolster the case for a rate increase," Richmond Fed President, Jeffrey Lacker, told reporters this week in Huntington, West Virginia.
It will be the last employment report before the Fed's November policy meeting. Investors see almost no chance of a rate increase at that meeting, given how close it is to the US presidential election.
Yellen had said last month the Fed is likely to raise rates once this year. Some Fed policymakers have vocally defended a go-slow approach to rate increases, but three have voted for a hike last month when the Fed kept rates steady.
Republican candidate, Donald Trump, has accused the Fed of playing politics by holding rates low, a charge Yellen and other Fed policymakers have denied. Trump has also made reversing job losses at U.S. factories a central campaign promise.
In September, manufacturing employment was expected to fall, which would be the fourth straight month it was down or flat. The sector has shed 39,000 jobs this year.
A firming overall labor market and rising wages, however, could be an asset for Democratic presidential candidate, Hillary Clinton, who has argued that President Barack Obama, also a Democrat, has helped the economy.
Economists expect hourly wages for private sector workers rose 2.6 percent in September from the same month in 2015. The annual growth rate has shown signs of accelerating over the last year although it remains slower than before the 2007-09 recession.
The Fed lifted its benchmark for interest rates at the end of last year for the first time in nearly a decade, but has held it steady amid concerns over persistently low inflation.
The expected pace of job growth in September would come after a slowdown in August that many economists believe reflected challenges adjusting the data for changes in the weather.
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