January hiring was narrow. Healthcare (44,000 new jobs), retail (34,000) and government (32,000) together accounted for 77% ...
U.S. job growth in January was weaker than expected according to the latest Bureau of Labor Statistics data. CBS News MoneyWatch correspondent Kelly O'Grady explains what this means.
New report finds shrinking but still solid jobs numbers and lower unemployment as U.S. central bank monitors economy amid ...
Annual revisions to jobs data and disruptions related to the catastrophic Los Angeles fires and severe winter storms are ...
Economists had been expecting an overall healthy reading, with 169,000 net new jobs created in the month and the unemployment ...
The gain in jobs was lower than expected, but the job counts for November and December were revised upward by a combined 100,000.
Instead, the most recent labor data shows unemployment low and steady, clocking in at 4%. Plus, job growth is still ...
The Bureau of Labor Statistics will release the January jobs report at 8:30 a.m. ET Friday; and, by and large, economists expect that job gains continued to slow to pre-pandemic norms but remained ...
U.S. job openings fell by the most in 14 months in December, but steady hiring and low layoffs suggested the labor market was not abruptly slowing down and that the Federal Reserve probably can hold ...