Major jobs revision today could show the labor market is weaker than previously thought
The latest
jobs report points to a labor market that's faltering, but the slowdown
may have begun much earlier. Economists expect the Bureau of Labor Statistics
to issue a major downward revision today, showing the nation added hundreds of
thousands fewer jobs than first reported.
On
Sept. 9, the BLS will release its preliminary benchmark revision to labor
market data at 10 a.m. ET, which aims to better account for businesses that
have opened or closed. Economists say the revision, covering the 12-month
period through March 2025, could show that hiring during that time was about
800,000 jobs lower than previously reported.
The
report could draw attention from the Trump administration, as the president
last month questioned the validity of the monthly jobs report —
and fired the commissioner of the BLS — after the data included a
significant downward revision. Hiring experts and economists point to a job
market that's stalling out as some businesses are bearing increased tariff
costs while others are tapping artificial intelligence as a way to lower labor
costs and replace workers.
"The
labor market will likely look even worse after the release of the preliminary
benchmark revision to payrolls on Sept. 9," Bill Adams, chief economist
for Comerica Bank, noted in an email.
The
revision could show that employment was reduced by about 775,000 for the 12
months through March, Adams estimated. That would indicate that the average
monthly job growth in 2024 actually stood at 100,000 per month, down from the
165,000 previously reported, he added.
The
revision would cover only the first three months of Mr. Trump's second
administration, with the bulk of the timeframe occurring in the last year of
former President Biden's administration.
Job
growth has slowed dramatically in recent months, with the employers adding an
average of 29,000 jobs each month from June through August, the most recent BLS
data shows.
Whydoes the government revise its jobs data?
Jobs
revisions occur each month, with the BLS updating its data to reflect more
recent information it has received from businesses about the pace of hiring.
That's because some companies respond late to the BLS' surveys, which means the
agency receives an influx of new information after it has issued its initial
monthly jobs report, prompting the fresh numbers.
But
once a year, the BLS also issues an annual revision based on fresh data from
the Quarterly Census of Employment and Wages (QCEW), which tracks employment
and wages reported by employers that cover more than 95% of U.S. jobs.
While
the monthly jobs report relies on about 50,000 responses for each period, the
QCEW covers 11 million workplaces — but that scope requires more time for
collecting the data versus the BLS' monthly report, Adams of Comerica
said.
"The
QCEW's detail lets it directly measure jobs added at newly-opened workplaces
and lost at closing ones, which account for several millions of employment
churn each year," he added.
Trumpnominates replacement commissioner
President
Trump in August announced E.J. Antoni as his nominee to lead the
Bureau of Labor Statistics on Monday. Antoni, a fellow at conservative think
tank the Heritage Foundation, has criticized the BLS, questioning its
methodology.
"DOGE
needs to take a chainsaw to the BLS...," he wrote in a November post on
X.
In
a statement Monday backing the BLS, the National Association for Business
Economics (NABE), a professional association of global economists, applied
economists, data scientists and academics, said it "stands firmly with the
dedicated economists and statisticians at BLS and across the federal
statistical agencies."
The
association went on to urge policymakers and others in the business and
economics community "to defend the integrity of the U.S. statistical
system and ensure it remains the global gold standard," it said.
"The
Bureau of Labor Statistics needs a knowledgeable and qualified commissioner who
will uphold the agency's mission and protect its trusted professional staff
from political pressure. A commissioner with deep expertise and independence is
essential to maintaining public trust, ensuring impartial analysis, and
safeguarding the credibility of U.S. statistics," NABE added.
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