US labor market resilient ahead of tariff turbulence
Reuters
May 2, 2025

A bar chart that ranks the number of jobs added or lost in the most recent month by sector.
WASHINGTON - U.S. job growth slowed marginally in April and
employers continued to hoard workers, but the outlook for the labor
market is increasingly darkening as President Donald Trump's protectionist trade policy heightens economic uncertainty.
The
Labor Department's closely watched employment report published on
Friday, which also showed the unemployment rate held steady at 4.2% last
month, helped to assuage fears that the economy was nearing recession
after gross domestic product
contracted in the first quarter amid a tariff-induced flood of imports.
Nonetheless, it is too early for the labor market to show the impact of
Trump's on-and-off again tariff policy.
Posting
on his Truth Social media platform, Trump renewed his call for the
Federal Reserve to "LOWER ITS RATE!!!" In the midst of the swirling
uncertainty, labor market resilience gives the U.S. central bank cover
to keep its benchmark overnight interest rate in the 4.25%-4.50% range
next week.
"The
'R' word that the labor market is demonstrating in this report is
resilience, certainly not recession," said Olu Sonola, head of U.S.
economic research at Fitch Ratings. "For now, we should curb our
enthusiasm going forward given the backdrop of trade policies that will
likely be a drag on the economy."
Nonfarm
payrolls increased by 177,000 jobs last month after rising by a
downwardly revised 185,000 in March, the Labor Department's Bureau of
Labor Statistics said. Economists polled by Reuters had forecast 130,000
jobs added after a previously reported 228,000 advance in March.
The
survey of establishments also showed February's payrolls count was
revised down by 15,000 jobs to 102,000. The cumulative 58,000 downgrade
for the prior two months left April's payrolls gain close to
expectations.
The economy needs to create roughly 100,000 jobs per month to keep up with growth in the working-age population.
Healthcare continued to dominate job growth, adding 51,000 positions across hospitals and ambulatory services.
Transportation
and warehousing employment increased by 29,000, mostly warehousing and
storage, couriers and messengers as well as air transportation,
reflecting the deluge of imports in the first quarter as businesses
sought to get ahead of duties.
Financial
activities payrolls rose 14,000, while social assistance employment
increased 8,000 and government hiring overall rose 10,000. Construction
payrolls advanced 11,000 and hiring in the leisure and hospitality
industry increased 24,000, with most of the jobs at restaurants and
bars.
But federal government employment
declined 9,000 and is down 26,000 since January amid the Trump
administration's unprecedented and often chaotic campaign spearheaded by
tech billionaire Elon Musk's Department of Government Efficiency, or
DOGE, to drastically shrink the government.
Despite
news headlines of mass firings at government agencies, the decline in
federal payrolls has been relatively modest. That is because fired
employees who have been reinstated by courts and subsequently put on
paid leave are counted as employed. The same applies to those who have
accepted buyout offers. Economists expect federal payrolls to drop
significantly after September, when severance pay runs out for many.
Manufacturing
payrolls decreased 1,000 amid declines in employment at motor vehicle
assembly plants as well as computer and electronic products factories.
The drop in factory jobs is likely to accelerate.
Though Trump this week softened duties on imported auto parts, Anderson Economic Group estimated automakers will still face a $2,000 to $12,000 tariff hit per vehicle. General Motors (GM.N)
, opens new tab cut its 2025 profit forecast on Thursday and said it expected a $4 billion to $5 billion tariff drag.
The White House boosted tariffs on Chinese goods to 145%, sparking a trade war with Beijing. China has ordered its airlines not to take further deliveries of Boeing (BA.N) planes. Ryanair (RYA.I), Europe's largest low-cost carrier, on Thursday threatened to cancel orders for hundreds of Boeing aircraft if the tariff war leads to materially higher prices.
, opens new tab Stocks on Wall Street traded higher. The dollar fell against a basket of currencies. U.S. Treasury yields rose.
With
the labor market resilience mostly because of a reluctance by employers
to let go of workers after struggling to find labor during and after
the COVID-19 pandemic, some economists argue the employment report is
probably no longer a good leading indicator of the underlying state of
the economy.
A column chart titled "Monthly change in US government jobs" that tracks the metric over the past year.
They point to deteriorating business sentiment and companies
either pulling their 2025 financial forecasts or offering light
earnings guidance for the second quarter as signs of a looming sharp
labor market slowdown.
Surveys,
including from the Institute for Supply Management, the Conference
Board and University of Michigan, have uniformly painted a bleak
economic picture. Most economists anticipate the tariff drag could
become evident by summer in the so-called hard data, including
employment and inflation reports.
"Depending
of course on how events play out, the most likely trajectory for the
economy is that the worst period will be the summer, by which time the
full impact of the tariffs imposed in April will likely have set in,"
said Stephen Stanley, chief U.S. economist at Santander U.S. Capital
Markets.
For
now the labor market is holding up. The average workweek was unchanged
at an upwardly revised 34.3 hours in April. The workweek was previously
reported to have averaged 34.2 hours in March. Economists expect
businesses will reduce hours first before embarking on mass layoffs.
A bar chart that tracks the average hourly earnings over the past 13 months.
Average
hourly earnings rose 0.2% after gaining 0.3% in March. That left the
annual increase in wages unchanged at 3.8% in April, enough to support
consumer spending and the economy for now. The household survey from
which the unemployment rate is derived showed strength and also some red
flags.
Household
employment increased 436,000, absorbing most of the 518,000 people who
entered the labor force. Fewer people worked part-time for economic
reasons.
But
more people are experiencing long bouts of joblessness. The median
duration of unemployment increased to 10.4 weeks, among the highest
since the pandemic, from 9.8 weeks in March. The number of workers with
multiple jobs increased.
"If
the labor market holds up and the Trump administration walks back the
most egregious tariffs, the economy could skirt a deep recession," said
Jeffrey Roach, chief economist at LPL Financial.
1 comment:
I guess it depends on what you are shopping for. I reduce the price of items based on when and where I shop. Seniors and First Responders including retirees often overlook discounts that are readily available. I just saved 10% on remodeling items through a Big Box store. I purchased the items with my credit card that gives double points for home improvement items in May. I pay off the charges each Friday and never pay to fly. Need a new car for around town driving. Go to Hertz. They were selling EV Teslas for pennies on the dollar.
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