On 3 February, the US Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS) released its report on The Employment Situation for January 2023. The punchline of the report was that the US labour market remained strong and seemingly unaffected by the progressive and sharp tightening in monetary policy that the Federal Reserve started in March 2022. Strikingly, the unemployment rate fell to 3.4%, the lowest rate recorded since 1969, from 3.5% in December.
Several other key measures of the state of US labour markets remained unchanged (after removing the effects of some annual adjustments to the data). These include the labour force participation rate, which remained at 62.4%, and the employment-population rate, which stayed at 60.2%. Nevertheless, these ratios are below their pre-Covid levels of 63.3% and 61.1%, respectively. The US labour market has in that sense not fully recovered from the pandemic.
There was much attention focussed on the non-farm payroll data, which showed that 517k new jobs were created in the month. These data, which stem from the Establishment survey, were revised following the annual benchmarking process. The new data shows that the US labour market generated 300k more jobs in 2022 than initially estimated.