Blog | Jobs and Unemployment

Without today’s jobs report, next-best data indicate a weakening labor market

In normal times, today would have been a jobs day. However, the Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS) has been forced to delay the release until December 16 due to the lingering impacts of the Trump administration radically restricting BLS operations during the government shutdown. Further, BLS has announced that we will never have data from the monthly survey of households for October. This means that valuable information for that month—like the overall unemployment rate or the unemployment rate for various demographic groups—will never be known. During the last federal shutdown in 2018–2019, BLS did not suspend its activities and released its employment situation report as normal. In fact, this is the first time in 12 years that a jobs report was delayed and the first time a month of household data will be missed completely.

Federal statistical agencies (FSAs) like BLS and the Census Bureau provide the gold standard data that are crucial for understanding the labor market. The monthly jobs report provides policymakers, businesses, and the public with the most rigorous and timely labor market data they need to make high-stakes decisions. Unfortunately, without a timely release, the Federal Reserve will meet next week without the best data on the state of the labor market. This will materially harm their ability to make a data-informed decision on interest rate policy.

This is not the first time the Trump administration has sought to weaken FSAs. In August, Trump fired the BLS commissioner for accurately reporting data that the administration found politically inconvenient. Amid these historically unprecedented threats, we assembled a new Data Accountability Dashboard that tracks next-best data from other (non-federal) data sources—including ADP employment data, job cut announcements from the Challenger report, and consumer sentiment reports.

These are clearly inferior to the datasets that have historically been collected and analyzed by the nonpartisan, expert professionals who work at FSAs, but they still provide some insights into the direction the economy is moving. This data would also—over time—provide some potential signal if official FSA data were being manipulated or suppressed to hide an economic downturn. Updates to those next-best data this week suggest some weakening in the labor market. Whether this is supported by the FSA data coming back online in coming weeks is a key question people should be watching.

On Wednesday, ADP’s monthly National Employment Report showed a loss of 32,000 jobs in the private sector in November. Our dashboard uses a three-month moving average to remove some volatility and, in making this adjustment, tracks BLS private-sector employment a bit more closely. As shown in Figure A below, ADP employment has dipped below zero for the first time since the pandemic. BLS data available only through September show a similar slowdown. It is possible that Trump administration attacks on immigrant communities have sharply reduced labor supply and driven some of the radical slowdown in job growth. However, even with reduced immigration, the U.S. economy still needs non-zero job growth to keep the labor market from deteriorating. I’ll be looking closely at the official data for October and November released on December 16 to see if they reflect the trends shown here.

Figure A

ADP employment tracks BLS private-sector payrolls: Three-month moving average of monthly changes in private-sector employment, 2010 to present

 

Date ADP employment BLS private-sector employment
Apr-2010 -285 80
May-2010 -70.66666667 139.3333333
Jun-2010 107.6666667 140.6666667
Jul-2010 127 98.33333333
Aug-2010 106.6666667 116.3333333
Sep-2010 142.3333333 108.6666667
Oct-2010 134.6666667 159.3333333
Nov-2010 145 155.3333333
Dec-2010 120.6666667 156.3333333
Jan-2011 164 85
Feb-2011 212.6666667 126.3333333
Mar-2011 265 175.3333333
Apr-2011 285.3333333 278
May-2011 248 244.6666667
Jun-2011 224.6666667 225.6666667
Jul-2011 191.3333333 177
Aug-2011 207 177.6666667
Sep-2011 236 198
Oct-2011 205 203.6666667
Nov-2011 197.3333333 203.6666667
Dec-2011 147 191
Jan-2012 210.3333333 248
Feb-2012 253 280.6666667
Mar-2012 289.3333333 290.3333333
Apr-2012 262 198.3333333
May-2012 192 153.6666667
Jun-2012 184 92.33333333
Jul-2012 111 116.6666667
Aug-2012 116.3333333 133.3333333
Sep-2012 97.33333333 170
Oct-2012 193.3333333 173.6666667
Nov-2012 252 173.3333333
Dec-2012 157 198.3333333
Jan-2013 208.6666667 207.6666667
Feb-2013 169.3333333 240.6666667
Mar-2013 268.3333333 210.6666667
Apr-2013 129.6666667 205.3333333
May-2013 132.3333333 189
Jun-2013 94.66666667 206.6666667
Jul-2013 138.6666667 190.6666667
Aug-2013 159 194.6666667
Sep-2013 199.3333333 182.3333333
Oct-2013 171 211.6666667
Nov-2013 162 219.3333333
Dec-2013 297.3333333 189
Jan-2014 291.3333333 178.6666667
Feb-2014 290.6666667 138
Mar-2014 160.3333333 199.6666667
Apr-2014 227.3333333 232.3333333
May-2014 243.6666667 264.3333333
Jun-2014 276 267.3333333
Jul-2014 267 242.6666667
Aug-2014 274.6666667 244.6666667
Sep-2014 227.6666667 237.3333333
Oct-2014 246.3333333 236
Nov-2014 226 248
Dec-2014 266.6666667 250.3333333
Jan-2015 208 242.6666667
Feb-2015 173 230.3333333
Mar-2015 130 178.6666667
Apr-2015 176 194.3333333
May-2015 237.3333333 225.6666667
Jun-2015 239.6666667 247
Jul-2015 233.3333333 250
Aug-2015 177.6666667 179.6666667
Sep-2015 231.3333333 180.3333333
Oct-2015 226 194
Nov-2015 212.3333333 220.6666667
Dec-2015 159 248.3333333
Jan-2016 155.6666667 191
Feb-2016 205 180.6666667
Mar-2016 209 168
Apr-2016 218 191.6666667
May-2016 151 144
Jun-2016 186.3333333 160.6666667
Jul-2016 174.6666667 186.6666667
Aug-2016 199.3333333 225.6666667
Sep-2016 171.3333333 226
Oct-2016 153.3333333 180
Nov-2016 184 176
Dec-2016 159.3333333 153.3333333
Jan-2017 183 180.3333333
Feb-2017 140 205.3333333
Mar-2017 140 178.6666667
Apr-2017 113 175.6666667
May-2017 164.6666667 170.3333333
Jun-2017 192.3333333 194.3333333
Jul-2017 198.3333333 186.3333333
Aug-2017 173 192
Sep-2017 192 150.3333333
Oct-2017 173.3333333 130.3333333
Nov-2017 188.3333333 128.3333333
Dec-2017 177.6666667 155
Jan-2018 222.6666667 165.6666667
Feb-2018 228 213.6666667
Mar-2018 220.3333333 238
Apr-2018 166.3333333 230.6666667
May-2018 127.6666667 218.6666667
Jun-2018 133 208
Jul-2018 162.6666667 202
Aug-2018 207.3333333 173.3333333
Sep-2018 164.3333333 135.6666667
Oct-2018 192.3333333 154.3333333
Nov-2018 176 111
Dec-2018 157.3333333 138
Jan-2019 208.6666667 168
Feb-2019 196.6666667 132
Mar-2019 177.3333333 142.6666667
Apr-2019 58.66666667 141
May-2019 43 173
Jun-2019 60 169.6666667
Jul-2019 54 130
Aug-2019 17.66666667 162.3333333
Sep-2019 -51 159
Oct-2019 -37.33333333 142
Nov-2019 -31.66666667 137.6666667
Dec-2019 181 119
Jan-2020 61 153.3333333
Feb-2020 90 158.6666667
Mar-2020 -93 -333.6666667
Apr-2020 -2029.666667 -6911.666667
May-2020 -3141 -5929.333333
Jun-2020 -3143 -3936.333333
Jul-2020 -1117.666667 3075.333333
Aug-2020 -5.333333333 2390.666667
Sep-2020 339.3333333 1194
Oct-2020 558.6666667 971.6666667
Nov-2020 711.3333333 743
Dec-2020 640.3333333 343
Jan-2021 577 159.3333333
Feb-2021 451.3333333 203.3333333
Mar-2021 348 506.6666667
Apr-2021 216 522.6666667
May-2021 193.6666667 488
Jun-2021 176.6666667 478
Jul-2021 496.6666667 667.3333333
Aug-2021 871 675
Sep-2021 1052 602.6666667
Oct-2021 979 607.3333333
Nov-2021 762.6666667 671.6666667
Dec-2021 697 691.6666667
Jan-2022 504.3333333 474.6666667
Feb-2022 482 557.3333333
Mar-2022 341.6666667 532.3333333
Apr-2022 377.3333333 540.6666667
May-2022 282 318.3333333
Jun-2022 354.6666667 308.3333333
Jul-2022 415 398.3333333
Aug-2022 441 409.3333333
Sep-2022 424 334.6666667
Oct-2022 328.3333333 279
Nov-2022 294.3333333 273
Dec-2022 187 243.3333333
Jan-2023 196.6666667 228
Feb-2023 175.3333333 234
Mar-2023 117 207.6666667
Apr-2023 78.66666667 155
May-2023 43.66666667 127
Jun-2023 110 167.6666667
Jul-2023 112 148.6666667
Aug-2023 134.3333333 129.3333333
Sep-2023 117.3333333 102.3333333
Oct-2023 114.6666667 104.6666667
Nov-2023 108.3333333 101
Dec-2023 108.3333333 142.3333333
Jan-2024 108 127.6666667
Feb-2024 105 145.6666667
Mar-2024 100.6666667 131
Apr-2024 95.33333333 149.6666667
May-2024 119.6666667 152.6666667
Jun-2024 137.6666667 118.3333333
Jul-2024 114 88.66666667
Aug-2024 119.3333333 46.33333333
Sep-2024 138.6666667 93.66666667
Oct-2024 198.3333333 80
Nov-2024 206.3333333 150.3333333
Dec-2024 200.3333333 176.6666667
Jan-2025 188.6666667 203.3333333
Feb-2025 148.6666667 157.6666667
Mar-2025 139 100
Apr-2025 97 118
May-2025 78.66666667 105.3333333
Jun-2025 22 58.33333333
Jul-2025 36.66666667 32.66666667
Aug-2025 26 15.66666667
Sep-2025 24.0 57
Oct-2025 3.3
Nov-2025 -4.333333333
ChartData Download data

The data below can be saved or copied directly into Excel.

Economic Policy Institute

Note: Data are truncated because the range in the pandemic recession and immediate aftermath makes the longer term trends difficult to discern. Updated December 3, 2025.

Source: ADP payroll data from Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis, series ADPMNUSNERSA. Private-sector employment data from the Current Employment Statistics (Establishment Survey), Bureau of Labor Statistics.

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On December 9, the BLS will release data for September and October from the Job Openings and Labor Turnover Survey (JOLTS). Currently, the latest JOLTS data are only available through August. Data from Indeed on job postings (Figure B) and data from Challenger on job cuts (Figure C) provide some insights into job openings and layoffs, given the current lack of gold standard data. Indeed data are provided on a daily basis but are aggregated into a monthly average, which we use here to compare with JOLTS job openings data. So far, the latest data suggest little change in job openings.

Job cut announcements, while volatile, appear to be slowly rising. The official layoffs rate released as part of the JOLTS data has not yet reflected this rise. But it is concerning given that the hires rate remains depressed, a rate similar to the immediate aftermath of the Great Recession. That makes the downside risk of higher layoffs all the greater if laid-off workers have less opportunity to find another job. Put simply, the only reason the unemployment rate has been able to stay relatively low in the last year even as hiring has been depressed is because layoffs have been extraordinarily low. If layoffs pick up while hiring remains weak, unemployment will quickly spike. This makes layoffs a key indicator to watch when the JOLTS data are released next week.

Figure B

Job postings from Indeed track job openings from BLS JOLTS: Indeed job postings and JOLTS job openings indexed to February 2020

 

date New job postings on Indeed JOLTS total job openings
2020-02-01 1 1
2020-03-01 0.81944 0.84611
2020-04-01 0.43034 0.661212
2020-05-01 0.579994 0.805627
2020-06-01 0.789315 0.879845
2020-07-01 0.913327 0.93741
2020-08-01 0.892561 0.922911
2020-09-01 0.972214 0.934683
2020-10-01 1.034513 0.975883
2020-11-01 1.074583 0.979041
2020-12-01 1.068636 0.972294
2021-01-01 1.156381 1.034166
2021-02-01 1.232622 1.112834
2021-03-01 1.352735 1.215906
2021-04-01 1.524812 1.343095
2021-05-01 1.568002 1.421906
2021-06-01 1.596861 1.478323
2021-07-01 1.626889 1.586133
2021-08-01 1.610412 1.572782
2021-09-01 1.606805 1.561728
2021-10-01 1.626304 1.628051
2021-11-01 1.672419 1.596181
2021-12-01 1.666277 1.638961
2022-01-01 1.663059 1.613264
2022-02-01 1.766208 1.673988
2022-03-01 1.748269 1.741889
2022-04-01 1.723798 1.70557
2022-05-01 1.770596 1.648435
2022-06-01 1.714731 1.615848
2022-07-01 1.690748 1.666667
2022-08-01 1.678853 1.45679
2022-09-01 1.663059 1.55211
2022-10-01 1.626499 1.505599
2022-11-01 1.596861 1.524404
2022-12-01 1.559618 1.561298
2023-01-01 1.555328 1.491961
2023-02-01 1.517013 1.413437
2023-03-01 1.491859 1.374103
2023-04-01 1.507361 1.434396
2023-05-01 1.52335 1.336492
2023-06-01 1.47392 1.319409
2023-07-01 1.464951 1.235429
2023-08-01 1.472945 1.33319
2023-09-01 1.48211 1.332041
2023-10-01 1.495564 1.22739
2023-11-01 1.437262 1.243612
2023-12-01 1.405577 1.232415
2024-01-01 1.403042 1.215619
2024-02-01 1.380911 1.212317
2024-03-01 1.35137 1.161786
2024-04-01 1.296968 1.093741
2024-05-01 1.240519 1.134223
2024-06-01 1.233304 1.064025
2024-07-01 1.204738 1.077232
2024-08-01 1.156966 1.098048
2024-09-01 1.18017 1.019667
2024-10-01 1.123915 1.093167
2024-11-01 1.112021 1.152885
2024-12-01 1.111729 1.077806
2025-01-01 1.122258 1.114269
2025-02-01 1.123233 1.073787
2025-03-01 1.091547 1.033592
2025-04-01 1.091645 1.061585
May-2025 1.055279321 1.107091588
Jun-2025 1.07965292 1.056129773
Jul-2025 1.112118553 1.034740167
Aug-2025 1.072828312 1.0374677
Sep-2025 1.020261992
Oct-2025 0.996041843
Nov-2025 1.067173638
ChartData Download data

The data below can be saved or copied directly into Excel.

Economic Policy Institute

Note: Indeed data are the monthly averages of weekly moving averages of daily new job postings. Updated December 4, 2025.

Source: Indeed data from Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis, series IHLIDXUS. JOLTS total job openings from Bureau of Labor Statistics.

Copy the code below to embed this chart on your website.

Figure C

Announced job cuts from Challenger, Gray & Christmas have risen sharply in last three recessions: Job cut announcements from the Challenger report and the unemployment rate, 1994–present

 

date Job cuts (thousands) Unemployment rate
Mar-1994 64.2 6.5%
Apr-1994 39.9 6.4%
May-1994 40.5 6.1%
Jun-1994 35.8 6.1%
Jul-1994 30.1 6.1%
Aug-1994 33.5 6.0%
Sep-1994 39.2 5.9%
Oct-1994 47.0 5.8%
Nov-1994 41.0 5.6%
Dec-1994 32.8 5.5%
Jan-1995 31.7 5.6%
Feb-1995 32.5 5.4%
Mar-1995 32.6 5.4%
Apr-1995 24.8 5.8%
May-1995 34.0 5.6%
Jun-1995 38.2 5.6%
Jul-1995 40.7 5.7%
Aug-1995 32.3 5.7%
Sep-1995 29.9 5.6%
Oct-1995 35.9 5.5%
Nov-1995 38.6 5.6%
Dec-1995 45.9 5.6%
Jan-1996 64.6 5.6%
Feb-1996 62.1 5.5%
Mar-1996 56.2 5.5%
Apr-1996 34.0 5.6%
May-1996 33.0 5.6%
Jun-1996 33.9 5.3%
Jul-1996 37.6 5.5%
Aug-1996 34.1 5.1%
Sep-1996 30.6 5.2%
Oct-1996 32.6 5.2%
Nov-1996 35.7 5.4%
Dec-1996 38.3 5.4%
Jan-1997 36.8 5.3%
Feb-1997 40.5 5.2%
Mar-1997 44.8 5.2%
Apr-1997 35.3 5.1%
May-1997 28.8 4.9%
Jun-1997 17.1 5.0%
Jul-1997 28.1 4.9%
Aug-1997 30.1 4.8%
Sep-1997 32.0 4.9%
Oct-1997 31.6 4.7%
Nov-1997 38.4 4.6%
Dec-1997 50.9 4.7%
Jan-1998 59.2 4.6%
Feb-1998 58.1 4.6%
Mar-1998 46.4 4.7%
Apr-1998 38.6 4.3%
May-1998 33.1 4.4%
Jun-1998 43.8 4.5%
Jul-1998 44.4 4.5%
Aug-1998 47.6 4.5%
Sep-1998 53.7 4.6%
Oct-1998 67.3 4.5%
Nov-1998 72.1 4.4%
Dec-1998 82.1 4.4%
Jan-1999 78.2 4.3%
Feb-1999 81.6 4.4%
Mar-1999 70.2 4.2%
Apr-1999 61.8 4.3%
May-1999 59.5 4.2%
Jun-1999 57.7 4.3%
Jul-1999 57.8 4.3%
Aug-1999 58.5 4.2%
Sep-1999 57.7 4.2%
Oct-1999 47.1 4.1%
Nov-1999 45.0 4.1%
Dec-1999 39.5 4.0%
Jan-2000 48.7 4.0%
Feb-2000 43.6 4.1%
Mar-2000 47.3 4.0%
Apr-2000 42.8 3.8%
May-2000 40.0 4.0%
Jun-2000 27.2 4.0%
Jul-2000 36.1 4.0%
Aug-2000 46.1 4.1%
Sep-2000 56.3 3.9%
Oct-2000 49.6 3.9%
Nov-2000 45.2 3.9%
Dec-2000 73.9 3.9%
Jan-2001 106.7 4.2%
Feb-2001 125.9 4.2%
Mar-2001 135.6 4.3%
Apr-2001 143.4 4.4%
May-2001 136.2 4.3%
Jun-2001 123.5 4.5%
Jul-2001 137.0 4.6%
Aug-2001 157.0 4.9%
Sep-2001 198.1 5.0%
Oct-2001 210.2 5.3%
Nov-2001 224.0 5.5%
Dec-2001 195.1 5.7%
Jan-2002 197.2 5.7%
Feb-2002 179.4 5.7%
Mar-2002 159.6 5.7%
Apr-2002 114.4 5.9%
May-2002 100.0 5.8%
Jun-2002 97.5 5.8%
Jul-2002 86.9 5.8%
Aug-2002 97.9 5.7%
Sep-2002 89.7 5.7%
Oct-2002 121.4 5.7%
Nov-2002 134.5 5.9%
Dec-2002 142.1 6.0%
Jan-2003 127.6 5.8%
Feb-2003 121.1 5.9%
Mar-2003 118.6 5.9%
Apr-2003 123.3 6.0%
May-2003 100.1 6.1%
Jun-2003 91.6 6.3%
Jul-2003 71.2 6.2%
Aug-2003 74.9 6.1%
Sep-2003 80.5 6.1%
Oct-2003 109.4 6.0%
Nov-2003 115.9 5.8%
Dec-2003 121.4 5.7%
Jan-2004 103.3 5.7%
Feb-2004 95.9 5.6%
Mar-2004 87.6 5.8%
Apr-2004 72.5 5.6%
May-2004 71.2 5.6%
Jun-2004 70.0 5.6%
Jul-2004 69.1 5.5%
Aug-2004 69.4 5.4%
Sep-2004 83.9 5.4%
Oct-2004 94.6 5.5%
Nov-2004 104.7 5.4%
Dec-2004 105.1 5.4%
Jan-2005 102.0 5.3%
Feb-2005 103.3 5.4%
Mar-2005 95.7 5.2%
Apr-2005 84.2 5.2%
May-2005 75.5 5.1%
Jun-2005 83.7 5.0%
Jul-2005 98.8 5.0%
Aug-2005 94.8 4.9%
Sep-2005 81.8 5.0%
Oct-2005 74.6 5.0%
Nov-2005 84.1 5.0%
Dec-2005 96.1 4.9%
Jan-2006 103.5 4.7%
Feb-2006 99.6 4.8%
Mar-2006 85.3 4.7%
Apr-2006 70.7 4.7%
May-2006 59.5 4.6%
Jun-2006 62.8 4.6%
Jul-2006 55.3 4.7%
Aug-2006 59.2 4.7%
Sep-2006 67.6 4.5%
Oct-2006 78.3 4.4%
Nov-2006 82.1 4.5%
Dec-2006 66.9 4.4%
Jan-2007 64.8 4.6%
Feb-2007 67.2 4.5%
Mar-2007 65.3 4.4%
Apr-2007 67.9 4.5%
May-2007 63.6 4.4%
Jun-2007 65.8 4.6%
Jul-2007 56.6 4.7%
Aug-2007 59.4 4.6%
Sep-2007 64.7 4.7%
Oct-2007 71.4 4.7%
Nov-2007 69.3 4.7%
Dec-2007 60.2 5.0%
Jan-2008 64.2 5.0%
Feb-2008 63.8 4.9%
Mar-2008 66.9 5.1%
Apr-2008 71.9 5.0%
May-2008 82.4 5.4%
Jun-2008 91.8 5.6%
Jul-2008 96.2 5.8%
Aug-2008 91.3 6.1%
Sep-2008 95.7 6.1%
Oct-2008 98.9 6.5%
Nov-2008 129.9 6.8%
Dec-2008 153.6 7.3%
Jan-2009 196.6 7.8%
Feb-2009 198.2 8.3%
Mar-2009 192.8 8.7%
Apr-2009 156.5 9.0%
May-2009 131.4 9.4%
Jun-2009 106.1 9.5%
Jul-2009 94.3 9.5%
Aug-2009 82.7 9.6%
Sep-2009 80.1 9.8%
Oct-2009 66.2 10.0%
Nov-2009 57.5 9.9%
Dec-2009 50.4 9.9%
Jan-2010 55.6 9.8%
Feb-2010 52.9 9.8%
Mar-2010 60.4 9.9%
Apr-2010 49.3 9.9%
May-2010 48.3 9.6%
Jun-2010 38.8 9.4%
Jul-2010 40.0 9.4%
Aug-2010 38.6 9.5%
Sep-2010 37.9 9.5%
Oct-2010 36.6 9.4%
Nov-2010 41.3 9.8%
Dec-2010 39.6 9.3%
Jan-2011 39.7 9.1%
Feb-2011 40.4 9.0%
Mar-2011 43.6 9.0%
Apr-2011 42.9 9.1%
May-2011 38.4 9.0%
Jun-2011 38.4 9.1%
Jul-2011 48.3 9.0%
Aug-2011 53.0 9.0%
Sep-2011 77.8 9.0%
Oct-2011 69.9 8.8%
Nov-2011 67.0 8.6%
Dec-2011 42.3 8.5%
Jan-2012 45.9 8.3%
Feb-2012 49.0 8.3%
Mar-2012 47.7 8.2%
Apr-2012 43.4 8.2%
May-2012 46.8 8.2%
Jun-2012 46.7 8.2%
Jul-2012 45.4 8.2%
Aug-2012 35.6 8.1%
Sep-2012 34.3 7.8%
Oct-2012 37.9 7.8%
Nov-2012 46.2 7.7%
Dec-2012 45.8 7.9%
Jan-2013 43.4 8.0%
Feb-2013 42.8 7.7%
Mar-2013 48.4 7.5%
Apr-2013 47.6 7.6%
May-2013 41.3 7.5%
Jun-2013 38.0 7.5%
Jul-2013 37.8 7.3%
Aug-2013 42.5 7.2%
Sep-2013 42.8 7.2%
Oct-2013 45.5 7.2%
Nov-2013 43.8 6.9%
Dec-2013 40.5 6.7%
Jan-2014 40.3 6.6%
Feb-2014 39.2 6.7%
Mar-2014 40.4 6.7%
Apr-2014 38.8 6.2%
May-2014 42.6 6.3%
Jun-2014 41.6 6.1%
Jul-2014 43.8 6.2%
Aug-2014 39.4 6.1%
Sep-2014 39.1 5.9%
Oct-2014 40.6 5.7%
Nov-2014 39.2 5.8%
Dec-2014 39.9 5.6%
Jan-2015 40.5 5.7%
Feb-2015 45.4 5.5%
Mar-2015 46.7 5.4%
Apr-2015 49.6 5.4%
May-2015 46.4 5.6%
Jun-2015 49.1 5.3%
Jul-2015 63.8 5.2%
Aug-2015 63.9 5.1%
Sep-2015 68.6 5.0%
Oct-2015 50.2 5.0%
Nov-2015 46.8 5.1%
Dec-2015 35.0 5.0%
Jan-2016 43.2 4.8%
Feb-2016 53.4 4.9%
Mar-2016 61.6 5.0%
Apr-2016 58.3 5.1%
May-2016 47.8 4.8%
Jun-2016 44.6 4.9%
Jul-2016 38.0 4.8%
Aug-2016 38.7 4.9%
Sep-2016 40.6 5.0%
Oct-2016 35.7 4.9%
Nov-2016 34.0 4.7%
Dec-2016 30.4 4.7%
Jan-2017 35.5 4.7%
Feb-2017 38.8 4.6%
Mar-2017 42.1 4.4%
Apr-2017 39.0 4.4%
May-2017 43.9 4.4%
Jun-2017 39.8 4.3%
Jul-2017 37.0 4.3%
Aug-2017 31.1 4.4%
Sep-2017 31.5 4.3%
Oct-2017 32.0 4.2%
Nov-2017 32.4 4.2%
Dec-2017 32.4 4.1%
Jan-2018 37.4 4.0%
Feb-2018 37.5 4.1%
Mar-2018 46.8 4.0%
Apr-2018 44.0 4.0%
May-2018 42.7 3.8%
Jun-2018 34.9 4.0%
Jul-2018 31.9 3.8%
Aug-2018 34.3 3.8%
Sep-2018 40.3 3.7%
Oct-2018 56.5 3.8%
Nov-2018 61.3 3.8%
Dec-2018 57.5 3.9%
Jan-2019 50.0 4.0%
Feb-2019 57.9 3.8%
Mar-2019 63.5 3.8%
Apr-2019 59.1 3.7%
May-2019 53.1 3.6%
Jun-2019 46.9 3.6%
Jul-2019 46.5 3.7%
Aug-2019 44.8 3.6%
Sep-2019 44.6 3.5%
Oct-2019 48.4 3.6%
Nov-2019 45.5 3.6%
Dec-2019 42.6 3.6%
Jan-2020 48.4 3.6%
Feb-2020 52.4 3.5%
Mar-2020 115.6 4.4%
Apr-2020 316.7 14.8%
May-2020 430.1 13.2%
Jun-2020 412.8 11.0%
Jul-2020 276.6 10.2%
Aug-2020 182.9 8.4%
Sep-2020 165.7 7.8%
Oct-2020 105.1 6.9%
Nov-2020 88.1 6.7%
Dec-2020 74.2 6.7%
Jan-2021 73.8 6.4%
Feb-2021 63.7 6.2%
Mar-2021 48.2 6.1%
Apr-2021 29.3 6.1%
May-2021 26.0 5.8%
Jun-2021 22.7 5.9%
Jul-2021 21.3 5.4%
Aug-2021 18.4 5.1%
Sep-2021 17.5 4.7%
Oct-2021 18.8 4.5%
Nov-2021 18.5 4.2%
Dec-2021 18.9 3.9%
Jan-2022 17.7 4.0%
Feb-2022 17.8 3.8%
Mar-2022 18.6 3.7%
Apr-2022 20.3 3.7%
May-2022 22.1 3.6%
Jun-2022 25.8 3.6%
Jul-2022 26.3 3.5%
Aug-2022 26.3 3.6%
Sep-2022 25.4 3.5%
Oct-2022 28.1 3.6%
Nov-2022 46.9 3.6%
Dec-2022 51.4 3.5%
Jan-2023 74.5 3.5%
Feb-2023 74.8 3.6%
Mar-2023 90.1 3.5%
Apr-2023 78.2 3.4%
May-2023 78.9 3.6%
Jun-2023 62.6 3.6%
Jul-2023 48.2 3.5%
Aug-2023 46.5 3.7%
Sep-2023 48.8 3.8%
Oct-2023 53.1 3.9%
Nov-2023 43.3 3.7%
Dec-2023 39.1 3.8%
Jan-2024 54.2 3.7%
Feb-2024 67.3 3.9%
Mar-2024 85.8 3.9%
Apr-2024 79.9 3.9%
May-2024 73.0 4.0%
Jun-2024 59.1 4.1%
Jul-2024 46.2 4.2%
Aug-2024 50.2 4.2%
Sep-2024 58.2 4.1%
Oct-2024 68.1 4.1%
Nov-2024 62.0 4.2%
Dec-2024 50.7 4.1%
Jan-2025 48.8 4.0%
Feb-2025 86.9 4.1%
Mar-2025 165.7 4.2%
Apr-2025 184.2 4.2%
May-2025 158.2 4.2%
Jun-2025 82.4 4.1%
Jul-2025 68.0 4.2%
Aug-2025 65.4 4.3%
Sep-2025 67.4
Oct-2025 97.7
Nov-2025 92.8
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Economic Policy Institute

Note: The unemployment rate is seasonally adjusted. Job cut data reflect three-month moving averages to smooth some of the month-to-month volatility. Updated December 4, 2025

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Once the official FSA data are released and hopefully return to a normal schedule, our Data Accountability Dashboard will still be useful to make sure those gold standard data are not being compromised either because of staffing shortages or for political gain. The first and best line of defense against data manipulation escaping public notice will be whistleblowers from FSAs who are dedicated professionals and will not want it degraded. But if data are being manipulated and whistleblowers emerge, the dashboard can provide useful data accountability checks. For more next-best data, check out the entire dashboard for all nine metrics we are tracking as new data become available.