WASHINGTON -- The U.S. economy is lifting job growth and wages but not voters' spirits.
Americans are choosing a president against a backdrop of slow but steady growth that has restored the economy from the crushing recession. The government's October jobs report, released Friday, showed hiring remains solid, with 161,000 jobs added. The unemployment rate is a low 4.9 percent.
Yet the recovery, the slowest since World War II, has left many Americans feeling left behind, especially those who lack high skills or education or who live outside major population centers.
"The (typical) U.S. household is in a much better spot than they were eight years ago," said Mark Zandi, chief economist at Moody's Analytics. "But it hasn't been a great decade for anyone, either. You've still got a big chunk of the population who feels this hasn't worked for them."
The economy's weak spots are a top concern for a majority of voters, who say the U.S. economy is in poor shape, according to an Associated Press-GfK poll. At the same time, they say their personal finances are good.
Fifty-three percent of voters said the economy is "poor," and 46 percent said "good," according to the poll, conducted Oct. 20-24. Yet 65 percent say their finances are good, versus 34 percent who rate them poor.
Seventy-three percent of Hillary Clinton supporters said the economy is good; 16 percent of Donald Trump supporters say so.
While 60 percent of whites said the economy is poor, 60 percent of nonwhites call it good. Yet whites and nonwhites are about equally likely to say their personal finances are good.
Consider Charles Muller, 73, who lives outside Trenton, New Jersey, and describes his personal finances as fine. He has a pension from 26 years as a state employee and receives Social Security.
But the broader economy seems fairly weak to Muller. A friend was laid off during the recession, then earned a teaching certificate and still can't find a full-time teaching job. And a friend's daughter who recently graduated from college is stuck as an assistant manager of a dollar store.
"I know a lot of people who are struggling and have been unable to find jobs commensurate with their education levels," Muller said. He is supporting Trump, though he sees the major presidential nominees as "the two worst candidates I've ever been given a choice of."
Here's a snapshot of the U.S. economy on the eve of the elections:
The job market has proven itself resilient.
Employers have added an average of 181,000 jobs a month this year. That's down from last year's 229,000 average. But it's nearly double the monthly pace needed to lower the unemployment rate. The number of people seeking jobless benefits is near a 40-year low -- evidence layoffs are scarce and most Americans are enjoying strong job security.
Blake Zalcberg, president of OFM, a furniture manufacturer in Raleigh, North Carolina, hopes to add nine employees to his 58-person company, including graphic artists, photographers and sales staff. He expects sales to grow by a third next year.
"It's a fairly robust furniture market," he said.
With the unemployment rate down to 4.9 percent from a peak of 10 percent in 2009, businesses have been forced to compete harder for new employees.
That's giving workers more bargaining power when they seek new jobs and boosting pay.
Average hourly wages grew 2.8 percent in October from a year earlier -- the fastest 12-month pace in seven years.
Still, historically speaking, that's not great. Wages typically rise at about 3.5 percent each year in a healthy economy.
Steady hiring and modest pay increases have emboldened more Americans to buy high-cost items such as new cars.
Auto sales are running near last year's record pace of more than 17 million vehicles.
Yet caution still reigns: Americans' spending grew just 2.1 percent in the July- to-August quarter, down from a much healthier 4.3 percent in the previous three months.
The bursting of the last decade's housing bubble wiped out trillions in household wealth, cost more than 5 million Americans their homes and triggered the recession.
Yet the home market mostly has recovered, with nationwide average purchase prices just 7 percent below their 2006 peaks.
Greater home values have helped many families recoup some of their lost wealth. Sales of existing homes have plateaued this year at a nearly healthy level of about 5.4 million.
Doug Duncan, chief economist at Fannie Mae, foresees sales growth slowing next year.
But younger Americans are increasingly likely to buy homes, suggesting millennials are tiring of living in apartments and are starting to move out.
Companies with optimistic outlooks typically spend more on computers, machinery and other equipment to keep up with demand.
Instead, in recent months the opposite has happened: Business investment in new equipment has fallen for four straight quarters.
Some of that pullback occurred because oil drillers slashed spending on steel pipe and other gear in response to sharply lower oil prices.
But many companies likely are holding off on new spending until after the election, when potential economic policy changes will be clearer.
The U.S. economy has failed to grow much more efficient. Since the recession began in 2007, productivity -- or output per hour of work -- has grown at less than one-third the annual pace it did from 2000 through 2007.
Rising productivity is vital to raising living standards, because it enables companies to raise pay without raising prices.
Economists blame a range of factors for the slowdown: Americans are starting fewer new companies, which tend to be quicker to adopt new technologies.
And weaker investment in roads, ports and other infrastructure has slowed shipping and commuting times.
Millions of Americans haven't benefited from the consistent hiring of the past several years.
Middle-income jobs in manufacturing and office work were lost permanently in the recession and have been replaced by lower-paying work in retail and fast food. Many of the unemployed have given up looking for work and are no longer counted as unemployed.
Nicholas Eberstadt, author of a new book, "Men Without Work," notes this has been a long-term phenomenon.
For every unemployed man ages 25 through 54, three others are neither working nor looking for work. That ratio has doubled since 1990.
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