U.S. economy likely created modest 130,000 jobs last month as Trump
trade wars lift recession fears
[April 04, 2025] By
PAUL WISEMAN
WASHINGTON (AP) — The U.S. job market is slowing at a time when
Americans are increasingly anxious about what President Donald Trump’s
trade wars are going to do to the economy.
When the Labor Department releases employment numbers for March on
Friday, they are expected to show that U.S. businesses, government
agencies and nonprofits added 130,000 jobs last month, down from 151,000
in February, according to a survey of forecasters by the data firm
FactSet. The unemployment rate is forecast to tick up to 4.2% in March
from 4.1% in February.
Those would unspectacular but not terrible hiring numbers. But the fear
is that things might get worse from here.
President Donald Trump’s trade wars – including the sweeping “Liberation
Day’’ import taxes he announced Wednesday – threaten to drive up prices,
disrupt commerce and invite retaliatory tariffs from America’s trading
partners.

Another threat comes from the president’s promise to deport millions of
immigrants who are working in the United States illegally. In the past
several years, those workers have eased labor shortages and helped the
economy keep growing. If they’re deported or frightened out of the job
market, companies could have to cut back on what they do or increase
wages and raise prices, potentially feeding inflation.
Likewise, purges of the federal workforce by Elon Musk’s Department of
Government Efficiency (DOGE) to threaten weigh the labor market and push
up unemployment.
Still, the impact of Musk’s firings is only starting to show up.
“We do not expect DOGE-driven job cuts to be a sizable drag” in the
overall March hiring numbers, Shruti Mishra, economist at Bank of
America, wrote in a commentary. “The numbers are too small to move the
needle on the broader labor market.’’
Mishra forecasts 185,000 new jobs last month, considerably higher than
economists’ consensus, partly because she expects hiring at leisure and
hospitality companies like hotels and restaurants to rebound after being
pushed down by unusually cold weather in January and February.
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 The job market has cooled from the
red-hot hiring days of 2021-2023. Employers added 151,000 jobs in
February and 125,000 in January. Not bad but down from monthly
averages of 168,000 last year, 216,000 in 2023, 380,000 in 2022 and
a record 603,000 in 2021 as the economy surged back from COVID-19
lockdowns.
The economy has been remarkably durable in the face high interest
rates.
In 2022 and 2023, the Federal Reserve raised its benchmark interest
rate 11 times to combat inflation. Economists expected the higher
borrowing costs to tip the United States into recession. But they
didn’t. Consumers kept spending, employers kept hiring and the
economy kept growing.
Inflation came down – allowing the Fed to cut rates three times last
year. But then progress against inflation stalled, forcing the Fed
to put off more rate cuts this year.
Now there are increasing worries about the health of the economy.
The University of Michigan’s consumer sentiment survey last month
showed that two-thirds of American consumers expected unemployment
to rise over the next year — the highest reading in 16 years.
“The U.S. economy is in good shape at the start of the second
quarter, but the ongoing trade war has increased the risk of
near-term recession dramatically,” Ershang Liang of PNC Economics
wrote in a commentary Thursday.
Still, the slowdown, if one is coming, may not show up in Friday’s
job numbers.
Thomas Simons, chief economist at Jefferies, says the March numbers
may be inflated by seasonal adjustments and end up getting revised
lower in coming months. “After we see more data, and eventually a
number of revisions, this period of time in the labor market will
probably look quite a bit worse than it does now,” he wrote in a
commentary Thursday.
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