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U.S. Non-Farm Payrolls increased by 178k last month, far exceeding expectations; public sector employment declined.
Topic: US Nonfarm Payrolls Surpass Expectations in March, Posting a Year-Plus High
Job growth in the US last month far exceeded expectations, showing a strong rebound and easing market concerns that the economy is about to fall into recession.
Employment Data
The US Department of Labor said Friday that March added 178k nonfarm payroll jobs, significantly above expectations.
This represents a sharp rebound from a net decline of 133k jobs after February was revised downward, and it also beat economists’ expectation of an increase of 59k.
The unemployment rate, derived from another independent survey, fell to 4.3%.
There are special factors behind the decline in the unemployment rate: the labor force shrank by nearly 400k people, meaning the number counted as unemployed fell accordingly. The US labor force participation rate (the share of working or actively seeking employment population) dropped to 61.9%, the lowest level since the autumn of 2021.
Industry Changes
Employment growth was mainly driven by a sizable rebound in the healthcare and social assistance sector, which has been a pillar supporting the labor market for much of the past year. In March, the sector added about 90k jobs.
This reversed the weak tone of February—when large-scale strikes on the West Coast caused tens of thousands of workers to be temporarily off the job.
Blue-collar industries also saw some recovery: manufacturing added 15k jobs, and construction added 26k.
A few weaker areas appeared in the public sector. The federal government cut 18k positions, offsetting net hiring by local governments.
Fewer New Jobs Needed to Support the Economy
Despite some slowdown in the pace of job growth, the unemployment rate has broadly held steady over the past year in the 4%—4.5% range, remaining low throughout.
One factor is that the Trump administration tightened immigration policies, leading to a decline in labor supply. This means employers no longer need to create large numbers of jobs the way they did in the past in order to keep the unemployment rate steady.
Economists disagree on how many additional jobs are needed for the US to maintain employment balance at present. Some think that tens of thousands of jobs must be added each month to prevent the unemployment rate from rising; others argue that even if the job market contracts, it does not necessarily result in more job seekers becoming unemployed. But the market’s prevailing consensus is that during the Trump administration, the employment break-even point has shifted sharply downward.
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