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See why today's solid jobs report may be misleading, with labor force participation declining and signs of economic cooling ...
A highly anticipated report on job growth from the Bureau of Labor Statistics is likely to show U.S. employers added 110,000 ...
The economy created a seemingly healthy 147,000 new jobs in June and the unemployment rate fell to a four-month low. Great ...
Over the first six months of the year, American job growth has slowed to a 15-year low. It's worth asking why.
The jobs report showed a modest increase of 147k jobs. While that was a decent showing, the Household Survey only showed a ...
The jobs report on Friday will be the first to use those new estimates. But, consistent with its past practice, the government won’t revise any of the historical household-survey data.
The Bureau of Labor Statistics is scheduled to release its monthly jobs report on Friday, and investors will be watching closely.
During the rebound from the early April lows, stocks have been highly correlated with economic data. A range of economic indicators is examined to assess recession risk.
The White House on Friday cited the May jobs report as evidence that the labor market's robust, while Congressional Democrats called it weak. While labor conditions are softening, a deep dive into ...
"When is the next jobs report?" isn't usually a burning question when the economy is expanding and the unemployment rate is sitting well below 5%. But a market desperate to discount the pace of ...
So yes, this latest jobs report has good and bad, but there’s also something ugly—and worrisome—in the statistics.
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