U.S. economy sheds 92K jobs as unemployment hits 4.4%

NEW YORK, UNITED STATES — The United States labor market lost 92,000 jobs in February, a striking reversal that ended a year-long streak of health care-driven growth. The downturn signals employers’ growing reluctance to add workers amid economic uncertainty, according to The Washington Post.
The unemployment rate ticked up to 4.4%, according to data from the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics, defying forecasters’ predictions of a 50,000-job gain.
The decline marks the second-largest monthly drop in employment since the pandemic. Compounding the bleak outlook, revised figures show the labor market also lost 17,000 positions in December.
Healthcare, tech, and manufacturing drive U.S. job losses
The February contraction resulted from the sharpest fall in healthcare, which shed 28,000 jobs. Labor strikes—such as the walkout by 31,000 employees at Kaiser Permanente in California and Hawaii—temporarily crippled an industry that had recently been the primary engine for U.S. job creation.
However, the pullback was much broader than healthcare, impacting both white-collar and blue-collar workers.
Shifting trade policies contributed to the loss of 12,000 manufacturing jobs. The information sector, which encompasses tech and media, shed 11,000 jobs. Losses were also recorded in transportation and warehousing, construction, leisure and hospitality, and the federal government.
While severe winter weather contributed to the slowdown, economists point to more profound underlying causes. These include indecision surrounding trade policy amid a new global import tax, the disruptive influence of artificial intelligence (AI) on staffing needs, and contractions in the immigrant labor supply driven by aggressive enforcement policies.
“This is definitely a sign that the labor market is not reaccelerating,” said Andrew Flowers, Chief Economist at Appcast, a recruitment advertising company.
The Federal Reserve’s Beige Book confirmed the cooling trend, reporting stable staffing levels but weak hiring overall, exacerbated by muted consumer demand and rising prices.
U.S. wage growth remains stable despite rising unemployment
For those currently employed, conditions remain relatively stable. Wages increased by 3.8% over the last year to an average of $37.32 an hour, and layoffs remain historically low.
Announced job cuts dropped sharply in February to over 48,000—a 55% drop from January—according to the announced job cuts that were reported by the outplacement firm Challenger, Gray, and Christmas.
Yet the landscape is increasingly hostile for job seekers. The labor force participation rate dropped to 62.0%, its lowest level since 2021, suggesting a growing number of discouraged workers are exiting the labor pool entirely.
Because recent labor market expansion was heavily concentrated in the healthcare sector—a reliance economists warned was risky—the broader market was left highly exposed when the industry faltered.
“These reports kind of cancel each other out,” said Guy Berger, a Senior Fellow at the Burning Glass Institute, a labor market research nonprofit. “The reality is pretty mildly pessimistic.”
In a public statement, Labor Secretary Lori Chavez-DeRemer minimized the payroll losses, attributing them primarily to record-breaking strikes and severe weather, while highlighting positive indicators like steady wage gains.
Other economists believe that there is a chance of a rebound in the latter part of the year. According to Joe Brusuelas, RSM’s Chief Economist, internal surveys indicate that employers intend to make major investments in AI and other technologies.
However, as the Federal Reserve is scheduled to convene later in the month to discuss interest rate changes, which would be complicated by the possibility of inflation in the country due to the energy conflict, the future of the working American remains unclear.

Independent




