Interest rates could be killing 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, the unemployment rate has ticked up to 4.3%. Though that is low by historical standards, it's a significant jump from 3.5% a year ago. More than 7.1 million people — each of them requiring housing, food and security — 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 — including work-from-home and part-time shifts, even in factories — 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. It's notable that the unemployment rate for Americans without a high school diploma is now 6.7% (up from 5.3% a year ago). For people who graduated from high school but not college, the unemployment rate has shot up to 4.6% (from 3.3% a year ago).
"I would not like to see material further cooling in the labor market," Federal Reserve Chair
An editorial from The
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