U.S. economy likely generated a solid 160,000 jobs last month, but
Trump's trade wars cloud outlook
[March 07, 2025] By
PAUL WISEMAN
WASHINGTON (AP) — The U.S. labor market likely kept on churning out jobs
last month, economists say, but the outlook is cloudy and getting
cloudier as the Trump administration wages trade wars, purges federal
employees and seeks to deport millions of immigrants.
When the Labor Department releases February jobs numbers Friday, they’re
expected to show that employers added 160,000 jobs. That's far from
spectacular but it's solid, and it's up from 143,000 in January. The
unemployment rate is forecast to stay at a low 4%, according to
economists surveyed by the data firm FactSet.
“Despite rising concerns about the health of the economy, momentum
remains positive,’’ Lydia Boussour, senior economist at the tax and
consulting firm EY, wrote in a commentary.
Billionaire Elon Musk’s purge of federal workers is not expected to have
much impact on the February jobs numbers. The Labor Department conducted
its survey of employers too early in the month for the Department of
Government Efficiency layoffs to show up.
“We expect to see a more visible dent to federal payrolls in March and
subsequent months,’’ Boussour said.
Diane Swonk, chief economist at accounting giant KPMG, expects that
hiring at leisure and hospitality companies — which include hotels,
restaurants, theaters — bounced back last month after falling during
January’s wildfires in Los Angeles.
“The key issue will be who shows up for the jobs,’’ she wrote in a
commentary. Swonk noted that the Trump administration has revoked asylum
for nearly 1 million Venezuelan and Haitian refugees, “which may keep
them from showing up to work or filling vacancies that native-born
workers tend to shun.’’
The American job market has remained remarkably resilient, but it has
cooled from the red-hot hiring of 2021-2023. Employers added a decent
average of 166,000 jobs a month last year, down from 216,000 in 2023,
380,000 in 2022 and a record 603,000 in 2021 as the economy rebounded
from COVID-19 lockdowns.

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A person waits in a line for a prospective employer at a job fair,
Thursday, Aug. 29, 2024, in Sunrise, Fla. (AP Photo/Lynne Sladky,
File)
 Hiring continued despite high
interest rates that had been expected to tip the United States into
recession. The economy’s unexpectedly strong recovery from the
pandemic recession of 2020 set loose an inflationary surge that
peaked in June 2022 when prices came in 9.1% higher than they’d been
a year earlier.
In response, the Federal Reserve raised its benchmark interest rate
11 times in 2022 and 2023, taking it to the highest level in more
than two decades. The economy remained sturdy despite the higher
borrowing costs, thanks to strong consumer spending, big
productivity gains at businesses and an influx of immigrants who
eased labor shortages.
Inflation came down – dropping to 2.4% in September -- allowing the
Fed to reverse course and cut rates three times in 2024. The
rate-cutting was expected to continue this year, but progress on
inflation has stalled since summer, and the Fed has held off.
Economists expect that workers' average hourly earnings rose 0.3%
last month, down from a 0.5% increase in January, a drop likely to
be welcomed by the Fed — but not enough to get the central bank to
cut rates at its next meeting March 18-19. In fact, Wall Street
traders aren’t expecting another cut until May, and they're not
especially confident about that one, according to the CME Group’s
FedWatch tool.
Economists say the economic outlook is growing more uncertain as
Trump imposes — or threatens to impose — a series of taxes on
imported goods.
“Steep tariff increases could cause adjustments in business
decisions with knock-on effects on hiring and wages as business
leaders navigate higher input costs and retaliatory measures,”
Boussour said. “This could lead to a more severe job slowdown,
weaker income and restrained consumer spending amidst much higher
inflation.’’
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