Jobs Market Runs Red Hot In January, But Economists Fear Downturn Is Coming

The Daily Caller

Jobs Market Runs Red Hot In January, But Economists Fear Downturn Is Coming

John Hugh DeMastri on February 3, 2023

The U.S. added 517,000  jobs in January, more than two and a half times what economists anticipated, as the unemployment rate nudged down to 3.4%, the Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS) reported Friday.

Economists had predicted that the nation would add roughly 187,000 jobs, and that the unemployment rate would nudge up to 3.6% from 3.5%, roughly where it has lingered for the past several months, The Wall Street Journal reported. Previously, Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell had estimated that the unemployment rate would climb to roughly 4.6% by the end of 2023, as markets slowed in response to the Fed’s anti-inflationary campaign of interest rate hikes, in a Dec. 14 press conference.


“I don’t think there’s any doubt that the unemployment rate will rise this year considering that the current 3.5% rate matches the half-century low reached just prior to the pandemic and that the Fed needs to continue raising rates to counter excessive inflation,” Heritage Foundation senior fellow Rachel Greszler told the Daily Caller News Foundation. “What will matter most is whether the rise in the official unemployment rate comes primarily from layoffs or from people rejoining the workforce.”

In terms of the overall unemployment rate, significant layoffs would have a similar impact to a significant return to the labor force, Greszler told the DCNF. With the BLS reporting roughly 11 million job openings in the U.S., Greszler estimates that as many as 2.8 million workers may rejoin the labor force, “adding to the economy and reducing welfare costs.”

A variety of companies, including shipping giant FedEx and electric vehicle company Rivian, announced layoffs this week, the WSJ reported.

“The labor market is going to cool pretty considerably in 2023,” Jonathan Pingle, chief U.S. economist at investment bank UBS told the WSJ. “We’re expecting an economic contraction to unfold over the latter three quarters of the year.”

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