Everyday Economics: The jobs report mirage: Hiring looks fine until revisions hit

Last week’s jobs report said the U.S. added 130,000 jobs in January. But the more consequential news landed in the fine print: the Bureau of Labor Statistics’ annual benchmark revision drastically rewrote 2025. Payroll growth for 2025 was revised down from +584,000 to +181,000 – about +15,000 jobs per month – and the March 2025 payroll level was revised down by 898,000 on a seasonally adjusted basis.

Put differently: January’s headline gain may be real, but the “trend” we thought we were tracking for most of last year wasn’t. That helps explain why many workers’ lived experience has felt worse than the monthly payroll prints suggested.

A labor market that’s no longer collapsing… but still feels stuck

There is a plausible silver lining. The pace of deterioration may be slowing. The unemployment rate in January ticked down to 4.3%, and wage growth remained moderate. That’s the average – but the average is not the reality for everyone. Young workers and Black workers, in particular, have seen unemployment rise more during this slowdown, a reminder that labor-market softening is rarely evenly distributed.

Survey-based sentiment continues to scream “stuck.” Households might not be panicking about inflation the way they were in 2022, but they’re still cautious about jobs and finances. The New York Fed’s Survey of Consumer Expectations shows inflation expectations clustering around ~3% at the 3- and 5-year horizons, even as near-term expectations eased. And the University of Michigan’s survey shows long-run inflation expectations above pre-pandemic ranges, reinforcing the idea that “2% confidence” hasn’t fully returned.

This is what a modern “jobless expansion” looks like: output grows (helped lately by productivity and AI-linked investment stories), but the job ladder feels harder to climb – especially for entrants and switchers. We’ve “seen this movie before” in the early 1990s, early 2000s, and in the long slog after the Great Recession.

The damage from joblessness is not just short-term

The economic literature is blunt: labor-market weakness leaves scars.

Earnings scarring: Displaced workers often experience large and persistent earnings losses. Classic estimates find long-run earnings losses on the order of about 25% per year for some high-tenure displaced workers, and broader work summarizes “wage scarring” that can last many years.Lower lifetime income: Syntheses of the displacement literature put cumulative lifetime earnings losses around 20% in many contexts.Higher mortality risk: In landmark work linking administrative earnings records to death records, job displacement is associated with elevated mortality – estimates include about 10% to 15% higher annual death hazards even many years after displacement for affected groups.Mental health: A large body of research links unemployment to higher risks of depression and anxiety; systematic reviews and meta-analyses find meaningfully worse mental health outcomes during unemployment and improvement upon re-employment.Property crime: Empirical work estimates that a 1 percentage-point increase in unemployment can raise property crime by roughly 1.6% to 5%, depending on specification and setting.

These aren’t just abstract social costs. They’re macroeconomic headwinds: skill erosion, weaker future earnings power, and reduced mobility all feed back into demand.

Why housing is the canary in this confidence problem

This week’s “macro-to-housing” transmission will be visible in a familiar set of releases:

Homebuilder confidence (NAHB HMI) is due Feb. 17.Personal income/outlays and the PCE price index – the inflation report the Fed cares about most – is due Feb. 20.Key Census housing indicators (starts and new-home sales) remain tangled in release delays around the shutdown, so some housing signals will arrive late and in lumps rather than smoothly.

Here’s the basic logic: when jobs are harder to land, fewer households take big risks. Even when affordability improves at the margin, transactions are a confidence product. Renters stay put longer, first-time buyers wait, and potential sellers hesitate because a move is a bet on your future paycheck.

Builders are reacting to that reality. To keep sales moving, major builders have leaned heavily on incentives, especially mortgage-rate buydowns. One prominent example: Lennar disclosed incentive spending around 14% of final sales price in late 2025. The result is margin pressure, which discourages new housing starts.

Tariffs, inflation, and a Fed that can’t declare victory

Inflation is no longer running away – but it’s also not safely back to target. One reason is tariffs. New York Fed analysis estimates that in 2025, the average tariff rate on U.S. imports rose from 2.6% to 13%, and nearly 90% of the economic burden fell on U.S. firms and consumers.

That leaves the Fed “stuck” in a familiar place: growth that’s still positive, a labor market that’s weaker than it looked a month ago (post-revision), and inflation that remains “somewhat elevated.” The Fed has repeatedly signaled it is balancing risks on both sides of its mandate – explicitly noting that downside risks to employment had risen even as inflation remained elevated.

The week ahead, then, is less about any one data point and more about whether the U.S. economy is settling into a stable, low-hiring equilibrium… or sliding into something more fragile.

Leave a Comment





Latest News Stories

montgomery county Graphic Logo.4

Consultant Error Forces Scramble; County Board Approves FY2026 Budget with Surplus

Montgomery County Board Meeting | Nov. 12, 2025 Article Summary: After discovering a significant vendor error that under-reported expenses by over $1 million during the drafting process, the Montgomery County...
Litchfield Logo Graphic.3

Marshalls or T.J. Maxx? Litchfield Amends Agreement to Court Retailer

Litchfield City Council Meeting | Dec. 4, 2025 Article Summary: The City Council approved an amendment to a development agreement for 1403 W. Ferdon St., allowing the developer to secure...
Litchfield Park-Pool Graphic Logo

Park District Plans Pool Repairs, Approves Staff Training

Litchfield Park District Board Meeting | Dec. 3, 2025 Article Summary: The Litchfield Park District Board authorized funding for specialized staff training and outlined necessary equipment repairs ahead of the 2026...
Litchfield Logo Graphic.4

Council Adopts Updated Parks Master Plan, Scrubs Reference to Corvette Drive Sports Complex

Litchfield City Council Meeting | Dec. 4, 2025 Article Summary: The City Council adopted an updated Parks and Recreation Master Plan required for state grant funding but first amended the...
Litchfield Park-Schalk Park Graphic Logo

Park Board Denies Request for Schalk Park Field Renovations

Litchfield Park District Board Meeting | Dec. 3, 2025 Article Summary: Citing concerns over historical preservation and limited future usability, the Park District Board rejected a request from LBI to...
Litchfield Park Logo Graphic.1

Litchfield Park Board Updates Master Plan, Approves Tax Ordinances

Litchfield Park District Board Meeting | Dec. 3, 2025 Article Summary: The Litchfield Park District Board updated its long-term strategy to maintain eligibility for state grants and passed three ordinances to...
Litchfield Logo Graphic.3

Litchfield Council Approves $230k in Emergency Water Plant Repairs Following System Failure

Litchfield City Council Meeting | Dec. 4, 2025 Article Summary: The Litchfield City Council authorized over $230,000 in emergency expenditures to repair the city’s water treatment plant following a "catastrophic...
montgomery county Graphic Logo.2

Roads & Bridges Committee: Wind Farm Proposed for Raymond-Nokomis Area; Engineer Salary Set

Montgomery County Roads & Bridges Committee | October 2025 Article Summary: Pattern Energy has initiated discussions with the county regarding a potential wind farm near Raymond and Nokomis. The Roads...
Montgomery County Bldg Grounds Committee

Buildings & Grounds Committee: Moves to Restore Courthouse Porch; EV Stations Proposed

Montgomery County Buildings & Grounds Committee | October 2025 Article Summary: The Buildings & Grounds Committee has advanced a proposal to restore the south porch of the Historic Courthouse. Hillsboro...
Meeting Briefs

Meeting Summary and Briefs: Litchfield City Council for Nov. 20, 2025

Litchfield City Council Meeting | Nov. 20, 2025 The Litchfield City Council met on Thursday, Nov. 20, 2025, for its final meeting before the Thanksgiving holiday. The session was dominated...
Montgomery County Personnel Committee

Development & Personnel Committee: County Awarded $1.1 Million DCEO Grant; Monitors State Control of Energy Zoning

Montgomery County Development & Personnel Committee | October 2025 Article Summary: Montgomery County has secured nearly $1.1 million in energy transition grants to support local projects. However, the committee is...
Meeting Briefs

Meeting Summary and Briefs: Litchfield CUSD 12 for November 18, 2025

Litchfield CUSD 12 Meeting | November 18, 2025 The Litchfield Community Unit School District No. 12 Board of Education met on Tuesday, November 18, 2025, to address a tentative tax...
Litchfield Logo.1

Council Approves Partnership with ‘Embrace the Lake’ Non-Profit

Litchfield City Council Meeting | Nov. 20, 2025 Article Summary: The City Council passed an ordinance authorizing the acceptance of funds from "Embrace the Lake Inc.," a newly formed 501(c)(3)...
montgomery county Graphic Logo.2

Coordinating Committee: Reviews Cemetery Laws and 2026 Schedule

Montgomery County Coordinating Committee | October 2025 Article Summary: The Coordinating Committee reviewed legal opinions regarding cemetery maintenance and moved forward with the appointment of a new State’s Attorney. The...
OLYMPUS DIGITAL CAMERA

Board Approves Future Administrator and Expels Student in Personnel Actions

Litchfield CUSD 12 Meeting | November 18, 2025 Article Summary: The Litchfield School Board approved several personnel changes, including the hiring of a new assistant principal and athletic director for...