The Bureau of Labor Statistics on Tuesday issued its annual benchmark revision, slashing job growth estimates by 911,000 between April 2024 and March 2025. It’s the biggest downward revision since at least 2000.
That’s not a rounding error — it’s a major reset.
As NBC News reports:
That would roughly amount to 76,000 fewer jobs created each month of the year up until March.
The revision draws fresh attention to the weakening U.S. labor market, which added an average of only 29,000 jobs in each of the three most recent months.
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In a statement, the White House told NBC News that “this is exactly why we need new leadership to restore trust and confidence in the BLS’s data on behalf of the financial markets, businesses, policymakers, and families that rely on this data to make major decisions.”
Labor Secretary Lori Chavez-DeRemer said on X, “today’s massive downward revision gives the American people even more reason to doubt the integrity of data being published by BLS.”
For the past year, the data painted a picture of steady hiring and economic resilience. But the revision now shows a much weaker labor market, even before accounting for the recent slowdown in job gains.
Sectors like leisure and hospitality, professional and business services, and retail were hit hardest. These industries saw some of the sharpest downward corrections, suggesting earlier job growth figures were significantly overstated.
The updated numbers come at a key moment.
With only 22,000 jobs added in August — one of the weakest monthly gains in years — the revised data piles onto growing evidence that the labor market is cooling fast.
This gives the Federal Reserve more reason to consider rate cuts at its meeting next week.
For months, the narrative of a “hot” economy has clashed with on-the-ground indicators. Now, the official numbers are starting to reflect that mismatch.
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