"Federal Reserve mouthpiece": Low employment growth may become the new normal, but it is especially fragile in the context of war

ME News, April 4 (UTC+8). In an article, “Fed’s megaphone” Nick Timiraos said that March added 178,000 new jobs, reversing the sharp decline in February. The unemployment rate also fell to 4.3%. But some details are not very optimistic: wage growth for ordinary workers has slowed to the lowest year-over-year rate in the five years since the post-pandemic recovery. Averaging these two more volatile months makes the underlying trend clearer: the monthly average net job gains are only 22,500 positions. Two years ago, net monthly gains of 22,500 jobs were enough to raise concerns; today, that level may still be viewed as acceptable.

Federal Reserve officials are still working to explain this change. On Friday, San Francisco Fed President Mary Daly wrote, “Helping the public understand that an economy with zero job growth can still be consistent with full employment is not easy.” With another fresh supply shock looming, this situation is especially fragile. If the Iran war continues, high fuel costs or shortages of commodities could squeeze businesses and consumers, leaving the labor market without a buffer to absorb the shock. At the same time, because concerns about inflation may weaken the certainty of rate cuts, the Fed’s policy room is even more limited. (Source: ChainCatcher)

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