Saturday, 04 October 2025
Jakarta
--:--
Tokyo
--:--
Hongkong
--:--
New York
--:--
The shutdown meant no jobs report
Saturday, 4 October 2025 01:44 WIB | ECONOMY |Amerika

If it just seems like the first Friday of the month wasn't the same without being able to pore through the Bureau of Labor Statistics' hotly watched monthly jobs report, don't worry. You probably didn't miss much.

While the BLS has gone dark with the shutdown in Washington, other reports outside the government data suggest the labor market just plodded along in September.

The Dow Jones consensus forecast was for growth of 51,000 in nonfarm payrolls with the unemployment rate holding steady at 4.3%.

High-frequency data that includes job postings, private payrolls and state-by-state figures for initial jobless claims indicate that while employment growth continues to be anemic, the labor market overall isn't capsizing, at least not anytime soon.

"We fight with the army we have at moments like this, where it's critically important that we're figuring out whether the economy is in a moment of transition," Chicago Federal Reserve President Austan Goolsbee said in a CNBC interview Friday. "This is what we have, and thus far it still continues to point to a pretty stable labor market."

The Chicago Fed is one of those organizations looking to provide alternates to BLS data that had come under harsh White House criticism prior to this week's shutdown.

Though the timing was coincidental, the central bank district in September unveiled its own dashboard of data measuring key labor market metrics including unemployment, the hiring rate and the layoff rate.

Bottom line: The unemployment rate held flat at 4.3%, though another hundredth of a point or two would have pushed it to 4.4% the highest sinceOctober 2021 but still low by historical standards.

Other nongovernmental data showed similar trends: Conditions overall are softening, with job availability gradually shrinking.

But employers are still reluctant to part with workers given the lessons from the Covid pandemic, when a rash of layoffs in the early stages was followed by the monumental task of refilling those jobs. At one point, open positions outnumbered available workers by more than 2 to 1.

"A lot of the new entrants in the market, young workers, recent graduates, people who are already unemployed [are] having a hard time getting into the market," said Cory Stahle, senior economist at job postings site Indeed, which itself provides an encompassing menu of labor market data. "Regardless of what the unemployment rate is, people taking longer to find jobs is a sign of some economic distress for some households."

Source: Investing.com

RELATED NEWS
US ISM Services PMI declines to 50 in September vs. 51.7 forecast...
Friday, 3 October 2025 21:13 WIB

The business activity in the US service sector stagnated in September, with the Institute for Supply Management's (ISM) Services Purchasing Managers Index (PMI) declining to 50 from 52 in August. This...

The U.S. Senate Will Vote On Conflicting Plans To End The Government Shutdown, Though Neither Is Likely To Pass ...
Friday, 3 October 2025 19:16 WIB

The U.S. Senate will vote again on Friday on conflicting plans between Democrats and Republicans to end the government shutdown, which is now entering its third day, though there are no signs that eit...

Trump eyes cuts to 'Democrat Agencies' in government shutdown...
Friday, 3 October 2025 03:47 WIB

U.S. President Donald Trump said he will meet with his budget director Russell Vought on Thursday to determine which "Democrat Agencies" to cut, as he looks to inflict pain on his political opposition...

Why US Economic Data Is "Pending"...
Thursday, 2 October 2025 23:47 WIB

The bottom line: The release of official US data is delayed because the federal government is currently in shutdown. While the budget hasn't been passed, the Antideficiency Act prohibits federal agenc...

US Supreme Court to Hear Arguments in Trump's Effort to Fire Federal Reserve Governor Cook; Will Remain in Office for the Time Being ...
Thursday, 2 October 2025 19:23 WIB

The US Supreme Court said Wednesday that it will hear arguments in January on Donald Trump's attempt to fire Federal Reserve Governor Lisa Cook, who will remain in office for the time being, setting u...

LATEST NEWS
Dow Extends Record High

The S&P 500 closed mostly flat on Friday, the Dow Jones extended its record run, rising 240 points finisheing at 46,758 after briefly surpassing 47,000 during the session, while the Nasdaq slipped 0.3% as the US government shutdown entered its...

Fed's Logan warns inflation pressures persist, could be made worse

Federal Reserve (Fed) Bank of Dallas President Lorie Logan struck a nervous tone on Friday, warning that despite a rapidly-weakening labor market, a lot of potential policy moves could accidentally spark another round of renewed inflationary...

The shutdown meant no jobs report

If it just seems like the first Friday of the month wasn't the same without being able to pore through the Bureau of Labor Statistics' hotly watched monthly jobs report, don't worry. You probably didn't miss much. While the BLS has gone dark with...

POPULAR NEWS
US ISM Manufacturing PMI improved a tad in September
Wednesday, 1 October 2025 21:21 WIB

The Institute for Supply Management's (ISM) data showed the Manufacturing PMI edging higher to 49.1 in September, up from 48.7 in August and...

Asia markets trade mixed after Wall Street gains ahead of a potential U.S. government shutdown
Wednesday, 1 October 2025 07:33 WIB

Asia-Pacific markets opened mixed Wednesday, following gains on Wall Street ahead of a potential U.S. government shutdown as lawmakers continue to...

European shares flat as healthcare gains counter broader market weakness
Wednesday, 1 October 2025 14:38 WIB

European shares were flat on Wednesday, with gains in heavyweight healthcare stocks offsetting the decline in the broader market, as investors...

Asian Stocks Rise, Chips Lead; Markets Remain Calm in the Face of US Shutdown
Thursday, 2 October 2025 07:50 WIB

Asian markets opened higher, following a global rally that pushed world indexes to new records, despite the US entering its first government...