Defying fears of a pandemic-driven Great Depression and bucking Federal Reserve interest rate hikes as well, the U.S. job ...
The January jobs report, to be released Friday morning by the Labor Department, will provide the first look at employment in ...
The number of people who applied for unemployment benefits in early February rose slightly, but they remained at very low ...
Dallas Federal Reserve Bank President Lorie Logan on Thursday signaled she was ready to keep interest rates on hold for ...
Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell appears confident in the US labor market. But that means any signs of a slowdown could ...
Trump, via the Elon Musk-spearheaded Department of Government Efficiency, is in the process of gutting some federal agencies.
Across a number of metrics, the labor market looks remarkably stable even as it has cooled. Monthly jobs growth has stayed solid and the unemployment rate has barely budged from its current level of 4 ...
Economists forecast a steady pace of hiring, slightly dampened by fires and cold snaps and clouded by annual data adjustments.
The U.S. labor market probably started 2025 the way it spent most of last year: Generating decent, but unspectacular, job ...
Consensus forecasts call for a still-robust 170,000 jobs added last month, though that’d be the lowest January total since ...
Annual data revisions could show slower job growth in 2024 than we previously thought.
The Federal Reserve’s record of forecasting has frequently led it to respond too late to changes in economic and financial conditions. Read more here.