May job growth was stronger than expected, but slowing wage growth exacerbates affordability concerns

Below, EPI senior economist Elise Gould offers her insights on the jobs report released this morning, which showed 172,000 jobs added in May. Read the full thread here.

 

The latest jobs report came in stronger than expected this morning. The economy added 172,000 jobs in May and the unemployment rate held steady at 4.3%. Nominal wage growth continued to decelerate, further exacerbating affordability as prices rise.
#EconSky #NumbersDay @epi.org

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— Elise Gould (@elisegould.bsky.social) 7:46 AM · Jun 5, 2026

Job growth was strongest in leisure and hospitality, state and local governments, and health care. Losses continued in financial activities in May.

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— Elise Gould (@elisegould.bsky.social) 7:58 AM · Jun 5, 2026

Manufacturing employment rose by 7,000 in May, slowly clawing back the large losses last year.

Since January 2025 when Trump took office, the manufacturing sector has lost 68,000 jobs.

#EconSky

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— Elise Gould (@elisegould.bsky.social) 8:00 AM · Jun 5, 2026

While there’s been little change this year, federal employment has shrunk an alarming 333k jobs since Jan 2025. The vital services federal employees provide cannot be done without these essential workers.
#NumbersDay #EconSky

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— Elise Gould (@elisegould.bsky.social) 8:08 AM · Jun 5, 2026

Nominal wage growth continued to slow in May, now 3.4% over the year. While we don’t get the May inflation data until next week, it’s very likely, given recent trends, that real wages will continue to fall and workers and their families will find it increasingly difficult to make ends meet.
#EconSky

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— Elise Gould (@elisegould.bsky.social) 8:14 AM · Jun 5, 2026