May 10, 2022
Research Brief: Employment
Hiring continues amid low unemployment. Employers added 428,000 new jobs in April, on par with the previous month...

Research Brief: Employment

May 10, 2022 | Marcus & Millichap

Labor Slack Tightens to Pre-Pandemic Norms as Job Growth Sustains Steady Pace

Hiring continues amid low unemployment. Employers added 428,000 new jobs in April, on par with the previous month. While the employment base remains about 1.2 million positions short of the February 2020 headcount, multiple signs point to a recovered labor market. Last month 5.9 million people were unemployed, only 200,000 above the pre-pandemic mark. The underemployment rate also fell to 7.0 percent in April, matching the February 2020 level. This measure takes into account part-time workers seeking full-time roles and people who want a job but stopped looking. The shortfall in staffing is largely attributed to people who left the workforce entirely when the pandemic began, including early retirement. Even so, ongoing inflation may prompt some to return, especially as many companies are augmenting pay in order to fill some of the 11.5 million jobs that are currently open.

Job gains bolster housing needs. Employment growth was widespread last month, ranging from leisure and hospitality to manufacturing, logistics and health care. The broad-based hiring is benefiting household formations across incomes, driving demand for all types of apartments. Class A vacancy fell 250 basis points year-over-year to 3.0 percent in March, a record low. Availability for Class B and C units fell by 200 basis points to 2.4 percent and 2.0 percent, respectively. Absorption is occurring in both the suburbs, as some households seek larger living spaces, and in urban cores, with many employees returning to workplaces. Low vacancy is, in turn, sustaining double-digit Class A and B rent growth.

Sales, hiring demonstrate retail strength. Retail vacancy continued to contract in the first quarter, falling to 5 percent as more consumers ventured out. Reflecting the added shopping activity, inflation-adjusted core retail sales are up 15.6 percent compared to pre-pandemic. About 29,000 roles were created in retail trade last month to help meet the demand. So far, operations have recovered most in suburban settings, but as more offices reopen and business events are held, foot traffic to downtown stores should improve. Rent growth is expected to exceed historical averages this year.

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