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Job market data get revised every month. But rarely are the revisions as negative as the ones in Friday’s employment report.
The rise of entrepreneurship and AI-driven solopreneurs is reshaping the labor market—but U.S. data hasn’t caught up.
The U.S. added 258,000 fewer jobs in May and June than the Labor Department first reported, according to federal data ...
Revisions to payroll estimates have almost become commonplace in recent years, but the BLS made substantial revisions for May ...
Job gains in May and June were almost completely wiped away in revisions, the government said Friday. Job gains in May and June said the economy created 258,000 fewer jobs than in prior estimates.
The job market seems to be weakening. U.S. employers added a disappointing 73,000 jobs in July, as payroll growth slowed amid ...
Mortgage rates fell to their lowest levels since March because job growth has been surprisingly weak this summer.
In May, the economy once again shed full-time jobs and only added part-time ones. However, compared to May 2024, full-time employment is up more than 1.5 million, so it’s certainly not all bad news.
The Trump administration’s immigration crackdown is taking a growing toll on a weakening labor market, economists say.
After nearly four months of relentless gains, Wall Street took a step back, with major indexes finishing the week lower.
The US job market seems to have chugged along for the first half of this year — but the risk is rising that employment growth is running out of steam.
May jobs printed at 139,000, exceeding expectations. Job creation seems to undermine earlier prognostications that President Trump's tariffs will trigger a recession.