As usual, the devil is in the detail. The jobs created were almost exclusively service sector jobs which is the lowest paying sector. For those who read the report, you will see the higher paying jobs in construction and goods-producing sector actually went down. Essentially, this is saying there are more people working cleaning houses than people building houses. And the income gap continues to grow. You really want to celebrate that?
Jobs are jobs. You have to get back to full employment before the economy can enjoy the benefit of wage pressures.
I agree to some extent with your assertion, but wage pressure is typically industry specific. For example, if their is a housing boom then carpenters wages will be pressured up. But wage pressure is almost exclusively the domain of the skilled worker. If that were not the case then we wouldn't need a minimum wage requirement. Wage pressure is caused by shortage of workers to do specific jobs, such as nursing, engineering, computer programming, etc. the service sector does not typically experience shortages.