- Key insight: The U.S. added 115,000 jobs in April while unemployment held steady at 4.3%.
- Supporting data: Newly unemployed workers rose by 358,000 in April to 2.5 million.
- Forward look: The report could complicate an already divided Federal Reserve as it considers whether to combat inflation spurred by geopolitical risks or foster employment by cutting rates.
The economy added 115,000 jobs in April, though the unemployment rate stayed level at 4.3% according to Bureau Labor Statistics
Job gains primarily came from the health care, transportation and warehousing and retail sectors, while the BLS said the federal workforce continued to shed jobs. The numbers represent a resilient topline figure, though underlying data showed continued signs of cooling in the labor market, including a rise in newly unemployed workers and an increase in people working part time out of necessity.
Health care added 37,000 jobs, transportation and warehousing gained 30,000 and retail added 22,000 personnel. Federal government recruitment fell by 9,000 jobs in April and is down 348,000, or 11.5%, since its peak in October 2024.
Wage growth remained modest, with average hourly earnings rising 0.2% in April and 3.6% over the past year. However, some indicators suggested underlying softness in the labor market. The number of people working part time out of necessity rose by 445,000 to 4.9 million Americans. The number of newly unemployed workers, defined as people who were jobless for less than five weeks, increased sharply by 358,000 people to reach a total of 2.5 million Americans. The rate of labor force participation was effectively unchanged at 61.8%.
The numbers will inform the Federal Reserve's decision about whether to adjust rates pursuant to its dual mandate of stable prices and full employment. The labor market has been somewhat mixed in recent months, with
The Federal Open Market Committee held rates steady in recent months, with Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell
As the U.S.
The central geopolitical variable is not Iran itself, but whether disruption to global energy flows becomes