Another Scorcher: 303,000 Jobs Added To U.S. Economy in March

Attractive man in work clothes, holding tools and a US flag in his hands and looking into
Getty Images/Sviatlana Barchan

Employers in the United States added 303,000 workers to their payrolls in March, the Department of Labor said Friday.

The unemployment rate ticked down to 3.8 percent from 3.9 percent in the prior month.

Economists had forecast payrolls would grow by 200,000 and the unemployment rate would hold steady at the prior month’s 3.9 percent.

Last month, the government reported that the economy added 275,000 jobs in February, beating expectations by around 75,000, and 229,000 in January.

The January figure was revised up by 27,000 to 256,000, and the February estimate was revised down by 5,000 to 270,000. After those revisions, employment was 22,000 higher than previously reported.

After the revisions and the March numbers, the three month moving average moved up from 265,000 to 276,000.

At the start of this year, the consensus among economists and investors was that the Fed would cut rates by as many as six times beginning with the March meeting. After the Fed surprised many investors by indicating in January that it would not be ready to cut at its March meeting, many investors believed cuts would begin in at the next meeting in May.

Data suggesting that the economy has continued to grow and add jobs has now pushed off the expected date of the first cut until June and pressed down the expected number of cuts to three. A survey by the Wall Street Journal of economists at major banks found that almost all expect a June cut. The only exceptions are economists at Nomura, who expect a July cut, and Mizuho, who are forecasting no cut this year.

The Fed typically cuts rates when the economy appears to be weakening. Although growth was very strong last year, especially in the second half of the year, economists believed that the rate hikes the Fed had implemented from March of 2022 through July of 2023 would become a significant drag on growth and the labor market this year.

Some Democrat politicians, progressive economists, and Wall Street analysts have said that the Fed is risking an unnecessary recession by holding back on rate cuts. Fed officials, including chairman Jerome Powell, have insisted that the strength of the labor market and the overall economy gives them room to be patient.

Recently, some analysts have concluded that the Fed may not cut interest rates at all this year. James Bianco of Bianco Research is predicting no cuts this year. Breitbart Business Digest, a free daily newsletter offered by Breitbart News, forecasts that the Fed will not cut rates this year and has said that the risk of a rate hike is much higher than Wall Street thinks.

Minneapolis Fed president Neel Kashkari said on Thursday that he expects two cuts from the Fed this year but warned that it is possible the Fed might not cut at all.

In total, the economy added over 2.4 million jobs in 2023, the lowest since the pandemic ended and Joe Biden became president. Compared with the pre-pandemic years, however, this was a high level of job growth, much of it driven by sectors still rebuilding from mass layoffs due to lockdowns and the pandemic. The last time the economy added this many jobs in a year was 1999.

 

Authored by John Carney via Breitbart April 4th 2024