U.S. hiring likely slowed to 130,000 new jobs last month amid
uncertainty over Trump's policies
[June 06, 2025] By
PAUL WISEMAN
WASHINGTON (AP) — The American job market likely continued to slow last
month, hobbled by worries over President Donald Trump’s trade wars,
deportations and purges of the federal workforce.
The Labor Department's numbers on May hiring Friday are expected to show
that businesses, government agencies and nonprofits added 130,000 jobs
last month. That would be down from 177,000 in April but enough to stay
ahead of people entering the workforce and keep the unemployment rate at
a low 4.2%, according to a survey of forecasters by the data firm
FactSet.
Mainstream economists expect Trump’s policies to take a toll on
America’s economy, the world’s largest. His massive taxes on imports —
tariffs — are expected to raise costs for U.S. companies that buy raw
materials, equipment and components from overseas and force them to cut
back hiring or even lay off workers. Billionaire Elon Musk’s Department
of Government Efficiency (DOGE) has slashed federal workers and
cancelled government contracts. Trump’s crackdown on illegal immigration
is expected to make it harder for businesses to find enough workers.
For the most part, though, any damage has yet to show up in the
government’s economic data.
The U.S. economy and job market have proven surprisingly resilient in
recent years. When the inflation fighters at the Federal Reserve raised
their benchmark interest rate 11 times in 2022 and 2023, the higher
borrowing costs were widely expected to tip the United States into a
recession.

Instead, the economy kept growing and employers kept hiring.
But former Fed economist Claudia Sahm warns that the job market of 2025
isn’t nearly as durable as the two or three years ago when immigrants
were pouring into the U.S. job market and employers were posting record
job openings.
“Any signs of weakness in the data this week would stoke fears of a
recession again,” Sahm, now chief economist at New Century Advisors,
wrote in a Substack post this week. “It’s too soon to see the full
effects of tariffs, DOGE, or other policies on the labor market;
softening now would suggest less resilience to those later effects,
raising the odds of a recession.’’
Recent economic reports have sent mixed signals.
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A help wanted sign is posted in Lansdale, Pa., Friday, April 28,
2023. (AP Photo/Matt Rourke, File)
 The Labor Department reported
Tuesday that U.S. job openings rose unexpectedly to 7.4 million in
April — seemingly a good sign. But the same report showed that
layoffs ticked up and the number of Americans quitting their jobs
fell, a sign they were less confident they could find something
better elsewhere.
Surveys by the Institute for Supply Management, a
trade group of purchasing managers, found that both American
manufacturing and services businesses were contracting last month.
And the number of Americans applying for unemployment benefits rose
last week to the highest level in eight months.
Jobless claims — a proxy for layoffs — still remain low by
historical standards, suggesting that employers are reluctant to cut
staff despite uncertainty over Trump’s policies. They likely
remember how hard it was to bring people back from the massive but
short-lived layoffs of the 2020 COVID-19 recession as the U.S.
economy bounced back with unexpected strength.
Still, the job market has clearly decelerated. So far this year,
American employers have added an average 144,000 jobs a month. That
is down from 168,000 last year, 216,000 in 2023, 380,000 in 2022 and
a record 603,000 in 2021 in the rebound from COVID-19 layoffs.
Trump’s tariffs — and the erratic way he rolls them out, suspends
them and conjures up new ones — have already buffeted the economy.
America’s gross domestic product — the nation’s output of goods and
services — fell at a 0.2% annual pace from January through March
this year.
A surge of imports shaved 5 percentage points off growth during the
first quarter as companies rushed to bring in foreign products ahead
of Trump’s tariffs. Imports plunged by a record 16% in April as
Trump’s levies took effect. The drop in foreign goods could mean
fewer jobs at the warehouses that store them and the trucking
companies that haul them around, wrote Michael Madowitz, an
economist at the left-leaning Roosevelt Institute.
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