This undated screenshot provided by PepsiCo shows the Super Bowl advertisement for PepsiCo's Frito-Lay's Doritos. PepsiCo's"Crash the Super Bowl" ads are back for the seventh straight year. Two 30-second commercials made by consumers will make it on the air. Fans voted for one winner and Doritos chose the other.(AP Photo PepsiCo)
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This undated screenshot provided by PepsiCo shows the Super Bowl advertisement for PepsiCo's Frito-Lay's Doritos. PepsiCo's"Crash the Super Bowl" ads are back for the seventh straight year. Two 30-second commercials made by consumers will make it on the air. Fans voted for one winner and Doritos chose the other.(AP Photo PepsiCo)
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This undated screenshot provided by Audi shows the company's Super Bowl advertisement. Audi's 60-second ad in the first quarter, with an ending voted on by viewers, shows a boy gaining confidence from driving his father's Audi to the prom, kissing the prom queen and getting decked by the prom king. (AP Photo/Audi)
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This frame grab provided by Coca Cola, shows a moment in the Super Bowl 2013 Coca Cola campaign. You don't have to be a football player to be a part of the action on Super Bowl Sunday. Coca-Cola is asking people to vote for an online match between three groups competing for a Coke on Game Day. (AP Photo/Coca Cola)
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This undated screenshot provided by Ford shows the company's Super Bowl advertisement. Ford Motor Co. enlisted late-night talk show host Jimmy Fallon to choose road trip stories submitted by Twitter to base its Super Bowl commercial for Lincoln. The story line for the 30-second ad was developed from 6,117 Tweets about road trips and features rapper Joseph "Rev Run" Simmons, and Wil Wheaton, who acted in the iconic science-fiction series "Star Trek: The Next Generation.."( AP Photo/Ford)
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All Nippon Airways Executive Vice President Kiyoshi Tonomoto speaks during a press conference on its earnings in Tokyo Thursday, Jan. 31, 2013. ANA was sticking to its profit forecast despite flight cancellations caused by the worldwide grounding of Boeing 787 jets. (AP Photo/Koji Sasahara)
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In this Wed. Dec. 5, 2012, photo, containers are unloaded from cargo ships at the Port of Los Angeles. Most economists agree that the snapshot of U.S. economic growth released Wednesday, Jan. 30, 2012, is going to look dismal. (AP Photo/Nick Ut)
Changes to 2012 US job gains after gov't revisions
U.S. employers added 157,000 jobs in January, and hiring was much stronger at the end of 2012 than previously thought, providing reassurance that the job market held steady even as economic growth stalled.
The Labor Department's annual revisions showed bigger job gains in most months last year. Employers added 335,000 more jobs in 2012 than previously estimated. Overall, job gains averaged about 180,000 jobs per month last year, compared to the earlier estimate of 153,000.
Here are how the revisions look for each month:
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jobs, labor department, employment, economics, changes, job, job market, economic growth, earlier estimate, labour economics, business, labor, reassurance, revisions, wage slavery, job gains, annual revisions, bigger job gains, gov't revisions, u.s. employers, estimation