The U.S. economy seems healthy on the surface, but cracks in the jobs market have formed, suggesting many Americans aren’t doing nearly as well as you might think.
Before the government shutdown in Washington, D.C., the Bureau of Labor Statistics reported that unemployment had risen to 4.3% in August, up from 3.4% in 2023, and the highest since 2021.
The shutdown means we haven’t seen any more official updates from the BLS, but private-sector jobs data haven’t been overly encouraging for job hunters.
On Nov. 5, payroll processing giant ADP reported the U.S. economy created 42,000 jobs, reversing a loss of 32,000 in September. That was more than economists had hoped, but hardly enough to make most people think the job market is healthy — especially since average monthly job growth was about 130,000 in 2024.
Now, Bank of America, which boasts 69 million customers, has released its latest jobs data, and the findings do little to ease concerns.
The increase in the BLS’s unemployment rate through August was enough to convince the Federal Reserve to begin cutting interest rates again. It lowered the Fed Funds Rate by a quarter-percentage point in September and October in an attempt to shore up hiring.
Unfortunately, the moves may not be enough to move the needle. The U.S. economy has expanded this year, but real GDP growth has been heavily driven by a surge in spending on building and outfitting data centers to train and run AI applications, such as ChatGPT and Google’s Gemini, rather than runaway demand across manufacturing and services.
Harvard economist Jason Furman estimated earlier this year that, absent AI spending, GDP would have only grown 0.1% through the first six months — hardly barn-burning growth that supports hiring.
The outsized impact of this spending on the economy may be hiding a bigger problem than the Fed realizes. Without solid data from the BLS, the Fed’s forced to make monetary policy decisions that are more conservative than they might be otherwise.
That’s especially true because the inflation data we do have shows prices are rising again, crimping consumers’ budgets. The Consumer Price Index for September (cobbled together late last month because of the shutdown) showed inflation at 3%, up from 2.3% in April before most of President Donald Trump’s tariffs were enacted.
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