US job openings fall to 7.6 million in December, suggesting the job
market is slowing but healthy
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[February 05, 2025] By
PAUL WISEMAN
U.S. job openings fell in December, a sign that the labor market is
cooling but still healthy.
Openings fell to 7.6 million, from 8.2 million in November, the Labor
Department reported Tuesday. They were down from 8.9 million a year
earlier and a peak of 12.2 million in March 2022 when the economy was
rebounding from COVID-19 lockdowns. The openings fell short of the 7.9
million that economists had expected.
The number of layoffs fell, suggesting that Americans enjoy unusual job
security. The number of people quitting their jobs rose modestly but
stayed below pre-pandemic levels. After surging in 2021 and 2022, quits
have come down as workers lose confidence in their ability to find
better pay or working conditions elsewhere.
The Labor Department's Job Openings and Labor Turnover Summary (JOLTS)
showed professional and businesses services companies – a broad category
that includes managers and technical workers — scaled back their job
postings. Openings also fell in healthcare and social assistance and
finance and insurance but ticked higher in arts, entertainment and
recreation.
The American labor market has slowed from the frenzied hiring of
2021-2023. Employers added 186,000 jobs a month in 2024 through
November, not bad but down from 251,000 in 2023, 377,000 in 2022 and a
record 604,000 in 2021. When the Labor Department releases its jobs
report for January on Friday, it's expected to show that hiring slowed
to 160,000 from 256,000, consistent with a healthy but unspectacular job
market. Unemployment is expected to stay at a low 4.1%.
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In this Dec. 18, 2020, file photo a runner passes the office of the
California Employment Development Department in Sacramento, Calif.
(AP Photo/Rich Pedroncelli, File)
 Hiring has remained solid despite
high interest rates. In 2022 and 2023, the Federal Reserve raised
its benchmark interest rate 11 times in an effort to tame inflation.
Price pressures have eased considerably, allowing the Fed to reverse
course and cut the rate three times in 2024. But the progress on
inflation has stalled in recent months and year-over-year increases
in consumer prices remain above the central bank's 2% target.
President Donald Trump's plans to tax imports and deport immigrant
working in the United States illegally also threaten to rekindle
inflation. The Fed has responded with caution, signaling that it
expects to cut rates twice this year, down from the four cuts it had
projected in September.
“The December JOLTS report is consistent with the Fed’s view that
the labor market is healthy enough to tolerate a more cautious
approach to lowering rates, particularly given the uncertainty
surrounding tariff policy, said Nancy Vanden Houten, lead U.S.
economist at Oxford Economics. She added that the report "painted a
familiar picture of the labor market, with a low pace of layoffs
keeping net job growth positive despite a slow pace of hiring.''
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