Cooling job market no reason for panic yet, economists say

Jobseekers wait in line at a Nov. 2, 2023 career fair in Los Angeles.

Frederic J. Brown | Afp | Getty Images

The unemployment rate rose to 3.9% in October, from 3.8% in September, the BLS said. Average hours worked declined slightly to 34.3 a week, the “very bottom end of the range” typical for good economic times, Pollak said.

“There’s almost no exception in this report: Every indicator suggests a slowing, slackening labor market,” she said.

Yet, there’s cause for optimism. The job market has proven resilient in the face of economic headwinds and remains healthy in historical terms, economists said.

“The days of explosive growth are gone, as the labor market shifts into healthier and more sustainable territory,” said Noah Yosif, lead labor economist at UKG, a payroll and shift management company. “All indicators point to a continued lull in the immediate future. It’s a slowdown, not a collapse.”

Workers have lost some leverage

Why the data isn’t so gloomy

Indeed, there were nearly 50,000 workers on strike during the reference period the BLS uses to compile the jobs report, which was the largest number of workers on strike dating to 2004, Terrazas said.

Those strikes are now largely resolved.

The unemployment rate also remains below 4%, a key barometer.

“It tends to do great things in the labor market” when below 4%, Pollak said. “It tends to cause people to come off the sidelines, cause racial and gender wage gaps to narrow and force employers to improve working conditions and expand their talent pools.”

However, the unemployment rate was 3.5% just a few months ago, in July, and it’s rare to see that big an increase outside of recessions, Andrew Hunter, deputy chief U.S. economist at Capital Economics, said Friday in a research note.

That recent rise isn’t yet “panic-worthy,” but further increases “may begin to trip some recessionary alarm bells,” said Nick Bunker, head of economic research at job site Indeed.

The rise in the unemployment rate may also just be a sign that the extremely hot labor market is loosening a bit, Bunker added.

The labor market cratered in the early days of the Covid-19 pandemic amid mass job loss, a scale unseen since the Great Depression. However, it began heat up in 2021 and 2022 as the U.S. economy reopened and business’ demand for workers spiked to a historic level.

Now, the Federal Reserve has raised interest rates to cool the economy and tame inflation. That increase in borrowing costs for households and businesses is beginning to bite, Pollak said.

“While much in today’s payroll report appeared to confirm a continued slowing in the labor markets, it’s remarkable to witness how dynamic and resilient employment has been in the wake of the pandemic and inflationary shocks,” said Rick Rieder, head of the global allocation investment unit at asset manager BlackRock.

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