U.S. economy added more than 500,000 jobs in 2025
The U.S. economy added 50,000 jobs in December, according to Bureau of Labor Statistics.
The rate of job growth has remained steady over the past several months. Healthcare, food services and social assistance drove the rate of job creation up in December.
In 2025, the economy added 584,000 jobs. Heather Long, chief economist at Navy Federal Credit Union, said it was a difficult year for job seekers.
“2025 was the worst year for hiring outside of a recession since 2003,” Long wrote in a post on social media.
The unemployment rate in December remained steady at 4.4%.
In December, health care employment trended upward with 21,000 added jobs. In the year as a whole, health care jobs increased by an average monthly rate of 34,000. This monthly gain is less than in 2024, where the average gain was 56,000.
Even still, health care and hospitality jobs drove hiring for the year. Employment in food services and drinking places increased by 27,000 in December.
Social assistance added 17,000, with most gains coming from individual and family services at 13,000.
“The U.S. is experiencing a jobless boom,” Long said. “Growth is strong, but there is a ‘hiring recession’ with almost no hiring outside of healthcare and hospitality.”
In the year overall, health care added 405,000 jobs and social assistance added 308,000 jobs.
Retail trade lost 25,000 jobs in December, driven by declines in warehouse clubs and general merchandise retailers.
Average hourly earnings rose by 12 cents in December to $37.02.
Jed Kolko, senior fellow at the Peterson Institute, said immigration policy has slowed workforce growth which has contributed to less job growth in reports.
“People are working,” Kolko wrote on social media. “But the workforce is shrinking because of immigration policy.”
Event Calendar
[pdem_events format="calendar" size="xlarge" layout="stacked" exclude_category="sports,library" limit="22" debug="no"]
Latest News Stories
Litchfield City Council Sets New Hunting Registration Rules, Allows Two Stands Per Hunter
WATCH: LA leaders, lawmakers discuss wildfire legislation
‘Fraud tourists’ plead guilty in Minnesota fraud case
Illinois lawmakers push uniform election reporting to enhance voter confidence
GOP leaders eye second DHS funding stopgap after Dems reject White House offer
Texas sheriff proposes bipartisan solution to border issue
Mills fires back at Oz threats of federal intervention
Trump warns Canada over bridge, deal he says will eliminate hockey
FBI named high profile man ‘co-conspirator’ to Epstein, files show
Lawmaker: Conversion therapy funding ban ‘hypocritical’ amid youth gender care doubts
Poll: Americans skeptical of Trump’s 10% credit card cap
Arizona attorney general refuses to resign despite pressure over her comments on ICE