The economy is booming. So why is the job market lagging?
[February 11, 2026] By
PAUL WISEMAN
WASHINGTON (AP) — The U.S. economy is on a tear. So why is the American
job market limping behind?
The Labor Department is expected to report Wednesday that companies,
government agencies and nonprofits added 75,000 jobs last month,
according to a survey of forecasters by the data firm FactSet. That
would be an improvement over December’s 50,000 – but it’s inconsistent
with strong economic growth and well short of the hiring boom of just a
couple of years ago.
Moreover, the January numbers are likely to be overshadowed by Labor
Department revisions that will sharply reduce 2025 job creation – and
might even wipe it out altogether. The job market's weakness reflects
the lingering impact of high interest rates, billionaire Elon Musk's
purge last year of the federal workforce and uncertainty arising from
President Donald Trump's erratic trade policies, which have left
businesses unsure about the economic outlook.
Dreary numbers have been coming in ahead of Wednesday’s report.
Employers posted just 6.5 million job openings in December, fewest in
more than five years.
Payroll processor ADP reported last week that private employers added
22,000 jobs in January, far fewer than economists had forecast. And the
outplacement firm Challenger, Gray & Christmas reported that companies
slashed more than 108,000 jobs last month, the most since October and
the worst January for job cuts since 2009.

Several well-known companies announced layoffs last month. UPS is
cutting 30,000 jobs. Chemicals giant Dow, shifting to more automation
and artificial intelligence, is cutting 4,500 jobs. And Amazon is ending
16,000 corporate jobs, its second round of mass layoffs in three months.
The sluggish job market doesn’t match the economy’s performance.
From July to September, America’s gross domestic product – its output of
goods and services – galloped ahead at a 4.4% annual pace, fastest in
two years. Consumer spending was strong, and growth got a boost from
rising exports and tumbling imports. And that came on top of solid 3.8%
growth from April through June.
Economists are puzzling out whether job creation will eventually
accelerate to catch up to strong growth, perhaps as President Donald
Trump’s tax cuts translate into big tax refunds that consumers start
spending this year. But there are other possibilities. GDP growth could
slow and fall into line with a weak labor market or advances in AI and
automation could mean that the economy can roar ahead without creating
many jobs.
Labor Department numbers currently show that U.S. employers added an
unimpressive 49,000 jobs a month in 2025. (In the hiring boom of
2021-2023, by contrast, they were creating 400,000 jobs a month.)

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Hiring sign is displayed in front of a restaurant in Chicago,
Thursday, Feb. 5, 2026. (AP Photo/Nam Y. Huh)
 But last year’s already lackluster
numbers are sure to be marked down sharply on Wednesday when the
government releases annual benchmark revisions, meant to take into
account the more-accurate jobs numbers that employers report to
state unemployment agencies. A preliminary estimate of that
revision, released last September, showed it could erase 911,000
jobs in the year that ended in March 2025. Economists expect that
Wednesday’s final benchmark revision will be somewhat smaller than
that.
Adding to the muddle: The Labor Department is also
revising more-recent payroll numbers to reflect better information
about how many businesses have opened or shut down. Shruti Mishra,
U.S. economist at Bank of America, believes those revisions likely
reduced job creation by 20,000 to 30,000 a month from April 2025
onward. Federal Reserve chair Jerome Powell has said the current
numbers may overstate job creation by 60,000 a month.
Altogether, Stephen Brown of Capital Economics wrote in a
commentary, the revisions could mean that the American economy
actually lost jobs in 2025, the first annual drop since the pandemic
and lockdown year of 2020.
As revisions muddy the hiring numbers, Bank of America’s Mishra
wrote in a commentary last week, the unemployment rate is providing
a better gauge of how the job market is doing. She expects that it
stayed low at 4.4% in January.
Despite recent high-profile layoffs, the unemployment rate hasn’t
looked as dismal as the hiring numbers.
That is partly because President Donald Trump’s immigration
crackdown has reduced the number of foreign-born people competing
for work.

As a result, the number of new jobs that the economy needs to create
to keep the unemployment rate from rising – the “break-even’’ point
-- has tumbled. In 2023, when immigrants were pouring into the
United States, it reached a high of 250,000, according to economist
Anton Cheremukhin of the Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas. By
mid-2025, Cheremukhin found, it was down to 30,000. Researchers at
the Brookings Institution believe it could now be as low as 20,000
and headed lower.
The combination of weak hiring but low unemployment means that most
American workers are enjoying job security. But those who are
looking for jobs – especially young people who can be competing at
the entry level with AI and automation – often struggle to land one.
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