- The U.S. added 143,000 jobs in January, shy of expectations. The unemployment rate fell to 4% from 4.1% in December.
- The economy added 589,000 fewer jobs for the year ending March 2024 after revisions from the Bureau of Labor Statistics.
- More than 20% of job seekers are on the hunt for more than one year, according to data from LinkedIn.
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The U.S. economy added 143,000 jobs in January as the unemployment rate dropped down to 4%, according to data from the Bureau of Labor Statistics released Friday, Feb. 7. BLS also revised down its annual data ending in March 2024, showing 589,000 fewer jobs added than previously reported.
The downward revision is less damaging than what the Labor Department initially anticipated. In August, the department estimated the revision downward would be 818,000 jobs.
“A half million is a lot, but there are over 150 million jobs in the economy,” said Aaron Sojourner, senior researcher at W.E. Upjohn Institute for Employment Research. “So it’s a very small share that we’re talking about.”
Meanwhile, BLS increased population estimates for working-age Americans by 2.9 million. The civilian labor force rose by 2.1 million.

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January misses, but November and December were better than expected
January’s job growth of 143,000 missed expectations of adding 170,000 jobs, according to a FactSet consensus. The figure is also well below the upwardly revised 307,000 jobs added in December.
December’s numbers were revised upward by 51,000, while November was revised up by 49,000 to 261,000. Together, the two months’ revisions combine for 100,000 more jobs added than initially reported.
“The revisions really just reflect the fact that we’ve gotten better information over time than we had right away, and it doesn’t really change the story,” Sojourner added.
It’s a strange labor market right now because we’ve had four years of incredibly secure jobs for people who have them. The layoff rates have been at record lows for years now. But now it’s also harder for people to find a job if they need it.
Aaron Sojourner, senior researcher, W.E. Upjohn Institute for Employment Research
Sojourner said revisions are part of the process as the government collects data.
“The economy is an enormous, complex, fast-moving thing, and the Bureau of Labor Statistics does amazing work to measure it in real time,” he said. “Just weeks after they measure it, they’re telling us about it, and there’s always noise in that process.
“They tell us their best estimate right away, and then they get better data over time from administrative sources, and they go back and they say, ‘We’re going to update our estimates based on this slow but more accurate information,’ and that’s what the revisions are about.”
In January 2025, the economy added 44,000 jobs in health care, 34,000 jobs in retail and the government sector added an additional 32,000 jobs. While recent jobs reports have been negatively impacted by strikes and weather events, BLS said the wildfires, which ravaged southern California, “had no discernible effect” on the job market.
Despite low unemployment, it’s very hard to find a job
Long-term unemployed metrics, which measure those without a job for more than 27 weeks, stayed steady at 1.4 million for the month. That accounts for 21.1% of all unemployed people, according to BLS.
“It is hard to find a job,” Sojourner said. “Hiring rates are low, and long-term unemployment is a substantial but small share of people who unfortunately find themselves in that situation.
“Most people who want jobs have them, and have a lot of job security. It’s a strange labor market right now because we’ve had four years of incredibly secure jobs for people who have them. The layoff rates have been at record lows for years now. But now it’s also harder for people to find a job if they need it.”
More than half of Americans looking for a new job have been in the market for six months or longer, according to data from LinkedIn Market Research. That data showed 22% of job seekers were on the hunt for more than 12 months.
“There are these people who’ve been stuck and struggling to find a job, and that is really hard to be in that situation,” Sojourner said. “It’s very demoralizing.”