The numbers: The rapidly growing economy generated a sizzling 250,000 new jobs in October, keeping the unemployment rate at a 48-year low and pushing the increase in worker pay to the highest level in more than nine years.

Economists polled by MarketWatch had forecast a 208,000 increase in new nonfarm jobs.

Yet another strong month of hiring kept unemployment at 3.7%, the lowest rate since 1969.

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The creation of more than 20 million jobs since 2010 and the plunging unemployment rate are also delivering higher take-home pay for workers. The amount of money the average employee earns rose 0.2% last month to $27.30 an hour, the government said Friday.

The result: The increase in pay over the past 12 months climbed to 3.1% from 2.8%, touching 3% for the first time since the end of the Great Recession in mid-2009.

Read:Economists say ‘wow’ to jobs report as wage growth picks up

What happened: The increase in hiring last month was broad based — not a single major industry shed jobs.

Hotels and restaurants added 42,000 people to their staffs, health-care companies hired 36,000 workers, manufacturers filled 32,000 jobs and construction companies took on 32,000 new employees.

Retailers and financial companies only added a smattering of jobs, however.

Employment gains for September and August basically unchanged. The U.S. has added an average of 213,000 jobs a month through the first 10 months of 2018, well above the 182,000 pace during the same period last year.

Read: U.S. productivity jumps 2.2%, caps best back-to-back gain in four years

Big picture: The strongest labor market in decades is powering a U.S. economy that’s likely to set a record for the longest expansion ever by next year. Steady work and rising incomes are giving households the purchasing power to keep the good times going.

The surge in hiring, however, does have a downside.

A shrinking pool of available labor made worse by an influx of retiring baby boomers is forcing companies to pay higher wages and benefits, for one thing.

These and other shortages could push inflation even higher, cap stock-market gains and goad the Federal Reserve into raising interest rates enough to slow the economy.

Read:Trump complaints or no, Fed December interest-rate hike looks like ‘done deal’

Such worries lay in the future, however. For now there’s little about the economy about which to complain.

Read: Worker pay and benefits growing at fastest pace since recession

What they are saying?: “The unemployment rate is the lowest since 1969, wage growth is the strongest since 2009, and the number of job openings has exceeded active jobseekers since March,” said economist Bill Adams at PNC Financial Services.

“The labor market remains torrid despite firms complaining that they are having increasing difficulty finding qualified workers,” said chief economist Stephen Stanley of Amherst Pierpont Securities.

Market reaction: The Dow Jones Industrial Average DJIA, -0.18% and the S&P 500 SPX, -0.56% turned sharply lower in the afternoon, ending lower for the first time in four sessions. Stocks slumped in October and are well off recent record highs.