The January Jobs Numbers Are Here
Spencer Brown
According to the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS), the economy added 353,000 jobs in the first month of 2024, yet the unemployment rate remained at 3.7 percent despite January's headline number beating expectations for just 180,000 jobs to be added.
The government report showed job gains in professional and business services, health care, retail trade, and social assistance while mining, quarrying, and the oil and gas extraction industries saw employment decline.
The rosy picture painted by the BLS and its headline number, however, is not the whole story. Notably, the job gains reported by BLS are contradicted by trends in the recent ADP, unemployment claim, and Challenger reports.
The Bureau of Labor Statistics itself "cautioned" in December 2023 that "population adjustments can affect the comparability" of jobs report data when fresh estimates were introduced for the new year that can "effect...selected labor force measures between December 2023 and January 2024." That means this first jobs report of the new year can't be directly compared to monthly reports from 2023.
Notably, the January report did not reflect the tens of thousands of job cuts announced by major companies at the start of 2024. Google, Amazon, iRobot, Salesforce, BlackRock, and Zoom have already announced or laid off hundreds of employees each according to tracking from the Wall Street Journal. Xerox is laying off a few thousand employees, Wayfair is laying off more than 1,600 workers, UPS is set to cut some 12,000 positions in 2024, Microsoft will lay off nearly 2,000 members of its video game staff, and more than 2,300 Macy's employees will be cut.
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https://townhall.com/tipsheet/spencerbrown/2024/02/02/january-jobs-report-n2634535