Editorial: High interest rates may kill job gains
The post-pandemic hiring surge is over. Job seekers in nearly every industry are having a harder time finding employment. As the latest jobs report showed on Friday, the unemployment rate has ticked up to 4.3 percent. Though that is low by historical standards, it's a significant jump from 3.5 percent a year ago.
More than 7.1 million people are now out of work. That's up by more than 1 million from last summer. Americans without college degrees have been especially hard-hit.
Since the post-pandemic inflation spike, the
Fed officials still have time to prevent a downturn. Economists rely on what's known as the Sahm Rule to gauge when a recession arrives. It's based upon the observation that when the unemployment rate rises significantly in a year, it has always heralded a
These periods of low unemployment have led many companies and government agencies to drop college-degree requirements for many jobs. This has opened up career prospects for the 119 million Americans who have no college degree of any kind. The trend of more flexible jobs have particularly helped women with kids.
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All of this is why it's concerning to see signs that the labor market is turning, with unemployment rising and hiring slowing sharply outside of health care and government. That's a major change from last year, when almost every sector was hiring robustly.
"I would not like to see material further cooling in the labor market," Federal Reserve Chair
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