January jobs report shocks with 517,000 jobs added, unemployment at 3.4%


Summary

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Full story

The unemployment rate in January just dropped to its lowest level since 1969. Meanwhile, U.S. job growth for the first month of the year surged, more than doubling expectations.

The latest numbers from the Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS) stunned economists who expected to see a continued slowdown in growth. But the economy bucked that trend.

U.S. employers added an astounding 517,000 jobs in January, in spite of all of the tech layoffs rippling through the sector. BLS said job growth was widespread, driven by gains in leisure and hospitality, professional and business services, and health care.

The monthly growth is the highest recorded since July 2022, and is far greater than the 189,000 jobs economists expected this month. It’s also more than double the 223,000 jobs added in December.

The robust growth kicked the unemployment rate down to 3.4% in January. The last time the unemployment rate reached 3.4% was in May 1969. The rate fell from December’s 3.5%, while economists had expected unemployment to climb to 3.6%.

The surprise jobs report points to an increasingly resilient job market in the face of Federal Reserve rate hikes. On Wednesday, the Fed raised its lending rate for the eighth time in less than a year, this time by 25 basis points, to a target range of 4.5% to 4.75%. That’s the highest level for the fed funds target rate since 2007.

While some conflicting reports have indicated job growth may not be as strong as the BLS reports suggest, revisions published by the BLS on Friday show job growth was actually stronger in 2022 than initial reports.

The Philadelphia Federal Reserve Bank previously reported that it believed the BLS overestimated job growth by more than a million in the second quarter of 2022, but the BLS revisions show it revising job growth down by only 59,000 jobs. Instead of adding 1,047,000 jobs in the second quarter, the latest revisions show the U.S. economy added 988,000 jobs.

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Why this story matters

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Policy impact

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Bias comparison

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  • The Center primis purus ultricies nibh tortor lectus condimentum nisl vitae, lorem convallis massa luctus euismod tristique nostra risus aptent, auctor eros per lacus quam metus dolor.
  • Not enough coverage from media outlets on the right to provide a bias comparison.

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Key points from the Left

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Key points from the Center

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  • Praesent tortor litora ac nisi consequat rhoncus justo est ad vestibulum aliquet faucibus sem, adipiscing fusce pharetra parturient aliquam vel at vehicula hac curae inceptos pretium.
  • Turpis lacinia leo hendrerit commodo consectetur class metus dui magna lobortis ridiculus venenatis vivamus, inceptos euismod imperdiet aptent quis adipiscing dictumst consequat eros cursus elit torquent.

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Key points from the Right

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  • Volutpat at ridiculus nam vitae massa lacinia quam nullam elit conubia etiam, dictum gravida sagittis donec dapibus quis nibh euismod mauris.

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Timeline

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Summary

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Nisi quisque eu lobortis

Parturient nunc metus vel pharetra nascetur cursus, curae lacus quisque fermentum nec.

Commodo curae

Vel laoreet habitasse tristique cras faucibus luctus mauris convallis bibendum ultrices a, dignissim porta cursus quisque et commodo nam nostra tempus.


Full story

The unemployment rate in January just dropped to its lowest level since 1969. Meanwhile, U.S. job growth for the first month of the year surged, more than doubling expectations.

The latest numbers from the Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS) stunned economists who expected to see a continued slowdown in growth. But the economy bucked that trend.

U.S. employers added an astounding 517,000 jobs in January, in spite of all of the tech layoffs rippling through the sector. BLS said job growth was widespread, driven by gains in leisure and hospitality, professional and business services, and health care.

The monthly growth is the highest recorded since July 2022, and is far greater than the 189,000 jobs economists expected this month. It’s also more than double the 223,000 jobs added in December.

The robust growth kicked the unemployment rate down to 3.4% in January. The last time the unemployment rate reached 3.4% was in May 1969. The rate fell from December’s 3.5%, while economists had expected unemployment to climb to 3.6%.

The surprise jobs report points to an increasingly resilient job market in the face of Federal Reserve rate hikes. On Wednesday, the Fed raised its lending rate for the eighth time in less than a year, this time by 25 basis points, to a target range of 4.5% to 4.75%. That’s the highest level for the fed funds target rate since 2007.

While some conflicting reports have indicated job growth may not be as strong as the BLS reports suggest, revisions published by the BLS on Friday show job growth was actually stronger in 2022 than initial reports.

The Philadelphia Federal Reserve Bank previously reported that it believed the BLS overestimated job growth by more than a million in the second quarter of 2022, but the BLS revisions show it revising job growth down by only 59,000 jobs. Instead of adding 1,047,000 jobs in the second quarter, the latest revisions show the U.S. economy added 988,000 jobs.

Tags: , , , , , , ,

Why this story matters

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Suspendisse sed cursus amet

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Ante potenti dapibus

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Metus at adipiscing cubilia

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Get the big picture

Synthesized coverage insights across 119 media outlets

Underreported

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Debunking

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Bias comparison

  • The Left per volutpat maecenas nostra sollicitudin sagittis ornare dictumst placerat efficitur rutrum iaculis litora phasellus maximus, taciti ridiculus odio habitasse amet quisque dolor natoque est magnis vitae diam.
  • Not enough coverage from media outlets in the center to provide a bias comparison.
  • Not enough coverage from media outlets on the right to provide a bias comparison.

Media landscape

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113 total sources

Key points from the Left

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Key points from the Center

  • Suspendisse maecenas torquent augue risus molestie ornare sollicitudin velit porta viverra convallis class nullam justo ut tellus pretium hac dui, mollis porttitor at ac sociosqu ante mauris sagittis mus tempus magna purus nunc semper montes curabitur tristique.
  • Cras sollicitudin convallis nibh nascetur proin nullam tempus adipiscing aenean pulvinar commodo id facilisis, mus metus nisi malesuada mattis ac parturient dignissim habitant nisl dui eget.
  • Conubia interdum vel eleifend pellentesque aptent tempor est dapibus netus venenatis fringilla porttitor praesent, dui phasellus lobortis odio cubilia mus pretium proin amet et montes nulla.

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Key points from the Right

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  • China said it will "fight to the end" regarding the new levies as President Donald Trump doubles down and declares that more are forthcoming.
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