Business is booming in the US, as a record number of Americans are getting back to work.

The nation’s economy got another rave review on Friday as the latest April jobs report showed businesses added 263,000 jobs, dipping the unemployment level to a five-decade low of 3.6 percent.

“The economy is unbelievable,” President Trump told reporters at the Oval Office on Friday while hosting Slovakian Prime Minister Peter Pellegrini.

“Our economy is raging,” the president added.

The number of people without jobs decreased across the board, with unemployment down among men, women, whites, Asians and Hispanics, according to federal Labor Department statistics.

At 3.6 percent, the country’s unemployment rate hasn’t been this low since 1969, when Neil Armstrong and Buzz Aldrin became the first people to land on the moon.

The US is on track to add 2 million jobs for the ninth straight year.

The jobs report showed solid economic growth is still encouraging strong hiring nearly a decade into the economy’s recovery from the Great Recession. The economic expansion is set to become the longest in history in July.

The stock market reacted decisively Friday, with the Dow Jones Industrial Average jumping nearly 200 points to close at a near-all-time high of 26,504.

The outlook was quite different from one year ago, when trade tensions with China and the rise of short-term interest rates left the stock market tumbling.

“We can all agree that AMERICA is now #1,” Trump tweeted Friday morning. “We are the ENVY of the WORLD — and the best is yet to come!”

Federal Reserve Chairman Jerome Powell signaled that he would put rate hikes on hold.

Vice President Mike Pence hinted that the Fed should be more lenient in setting an interest rate to let the economy continue to flourish.

“I think it might be time for us to consider lowering interest rates,” Pence told CNBC’s Eamon Javers on Friday. “We just don’t see any inflation in this economy at all.”

Phil Shawe, CEO of Manhattan-based translation-services provider TransPerfect, said his company has hired hundreds of employees over the past few years.

“The job market is great for incoming hires. Despite the competitiveness for new hires, we’ve brought in some fantastic people, and we’re committed to growing in the city,” Shawe told The Post.

“It’s a great time for grads to be coming out they coming to a healthy job market. It’s great the economy and the city in general.”

Among those hires is Eric Hom, 25, of Manhattan, who found a position as an engineer at TransPerfect.

“As a recent graduate, I felt like I had enough to time to look around really look into my options,” said Hom, who graduated from Baruch College.

“I wanted to find a place where I could grow. I get presented every day with new problems. It’s the process that drives me and keeps me going.”