-- Private businesses added 166k jobs in September, says ADP

-- Government shutdown, if brief, should have no impact on jobs

-- Current modest job growth "is not consistent" with tapering

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   By Kathleen Madigan 
 

Businesses added jobs at a moderate pace September, according to a tally of private-sector hiring released Wednesday.

Private-sector jobs in the U.S. increased by 166,000 in September, according to a national employment report calculated by payroll processor Automatic Data Processing Inc. (ADP) and forecasting firm Moody's Analytics.

Economists surveyed by Dow Jones Newswires expected ADP to report a higher September increase of 178,000 jobs. The August ADP employment increase was revised to 159,000 from 176,000 reported a month ago.

"The job market appears to have softened in recent months. Fiscal austerity has begun to take a toll on job creation," the report said.

Mark Zandi, chief economist at Moody's Analytics, which compiles the ADP data, said the federal government shutdown is unlikely to show up in the jobs data unless it extends past mid-October and runs up against efforts to raise the U.S. debt ceiling.

He said the first sign of economic stress could be a sell-off in financial markets. But he added, that could be good since falling stock prices could push political leaders to come to agreements on the budget and debt limit.

The ADP estimate is typically released ahead of the Bureau of Labor Statistics' employment situation report on the following Friday. But the shutdown will likely delay the release of the September payrolls report.

In a survey taken before the shutdown, economists expected September nonfarm payrolls to increase 181,000 and the jobless rate to hold at 7.3%. The BLS data include government workers; the ADP numbers don't.

With the payrolls report delayed, the ADP report grows in importance as a timely measure of the labor markets. The general tone of the ADP report indicates hiring by the private sector eased last month, perhaps limited by worries about the federal budget and rising interest rates.

Zandi said the current trend in monthly job gains between 150,000 and 175,000 "is not consistent" with the Federal Reserve starting to taper its bond-buying program. "We need to 200,000 or so before policymakers act," he said, especially in light of the uncertainty brought by the shutdown.

While the Fed could act at its December meeting, "it feels to me that [tapering] will be early next year," Zandi said.

According to ADP, firms employing between 1-49 workers increased payrolls 74,000 in September. Medium-sized businesses with payrolls of 50-499 workers added 28,000 employees. Large firms, businesses with 500 or more employees, hired 64,000 workers.

Service-sector jobs increased by 147,000 last month, while the factory sector added a slim 1,000 new positions. Financial services cut 4,000 jobs.

Another report covering the September labor markets echoed the ADP survey.

Bright.com estimates 164,000 new jobs were created last month. The job search engine company uses its aggregation of job postings along with government, financial, real estate, and other data sources.

ADP, of Roseland, N.J., offers payroll processing, human resource and benefit administration services to about 600,000 clients worldwide. Economics firm Moody's Analytics is a subsidiary of Moody's Corporation.

--Write to Kathleen Madigan at kathleen.madigan@wsj.com

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