Good news, bad news: Hiring burst, but jobless rate up

? The economy got what it needed in April: A burst of hiring that added a net 290,000 jobs, the biggest monthly total in four years. It showed employers are gaining confidence as the recovery takes deeper root.

But people who had given up on finding jobs are gaining confidence, too, and are now looking for work. That’s why the unemployment rate rose from 9.7 percent to 9.9 percent and will likely go higher.

Especially encouraging was that the job gains came largely from private employers, the backbone of the economy. They boosted payrolls by a surprisingly strong 231,000, the most since March 2006.

The new jobs, generated by sectors across the economy, are the first sign that the recovery is adding significant numbers of new jobs — even if not enough to absorb the influx of jobseekers.

“Companies feel more comfortable that growth in the economy and in their own sales is here to stay and that they can start preparing for the future and add to their payrolls,” said Joel Naroff, president of Naroff Economic Advisors.

The unemployment rate rose as 805,000 people without jobs entered the labor force in April to search for work.

“Individuals are gaining confidence in their ability to find a job and are now throwing their hats into the ring,” said John Challenger, CEO of outplacement firm, Challenger, Gray & Christmas.

Kelley Bryan had dropped out of the market last year to attend culinary school after 20 years as a secretary. But she started looking for work again in March.

“I was starting to get to the point where I felt like I needed to get a job,” she said. “I was living off unemployment and just feeling guilty.”

Not for long. She soon was hired as a restaurant manager in suburban St. Louis. Demand has picked up enough that she’s looking to switch jobs again and is interviewing at hotels.

“It’s a competitive field, but there are plenty of jobs,” she said.

Many economists predict the unemployment rate will rise as people who had given up on finding a job feel better about their prospects. The labor force includes employed people and people actively seeking work — not those who have stopped looking.

The unemployment rate in October hit 10.1 percent, a 26-year high. Some economists now think the rate could go a bit higher and peak at 10.2 percent by June. Still, that’s far lower than some forecasts earlier this year of 11 percent. Unemployment hit a post-World War II high of 10.8 percent at the end of 1982 as the country was emerging from a severe recession.

President Barack Obama called April’s job growth “very encouraging news” but said much remains to be done to put more Americans to work.

Wall Street appeared to look past the positive U.S. jobs report and instead focused on Europe’s spreading debt crisis. Stock prices fluctuated wildly. The Dow Jones industrial average closed down nearly 140 points.

The number of jobs added in April signaled that businesses are more confident, thanks to rising customer demand. Consumers increased spending in March by the largest amount in five months. Factory production grew in April at the fastest pace in nearly six years. Demand grew briskly for a variety of services in that same month.

Also heartening: Employment in February and March turned out to be stronger than previously thought. Payrolls grew by 230,000 in March, better than the 162,000 first reported. And 39,000 jobs were actually added in February, compared with the previous estimate of a loss of 14,000.