The latest Labor Department report indicates a significant revision to U.S. job creation figures, revealing far fewer jobs than initially estimated. In an annual assessment of nonfarm payroll data leading up to March 2025, the Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS) found that the job numbers had been overstated by 911,000, a revision that surpassed Wall Street projections, which anticipated a drop ranging from 600,000 to about one million. This adjustment marks the largest on record since the data collection began in 2002 and is more than 50% greater than last year’s revisions.
These preliminary numbers highlight an average monthly job growth that is approximately 76,000 lower than previously reported statistics. This revision stems from a recalibration based on new data from the quarterly census that accounts for updates on business openings and closings, which collectively paint a concerning picture of an increasingly weakening labor market in the U.S.
Notably, the time frame for this report predominantly covers a period prior to Donald Trump’s presidency, suggesting that vulnerabilities in the labor market were emerging before his administration began implementing tariffs on international trading partners. Oren Klachkin, a market economist at Nationwide Financial, noted that these adjustments reveal a much softer employment landscape in 2024 and early 2025 than had been estimated earlier. He emphasized that the slowdown in job creation likely means that overall income growth was less robust, laying the groundwork for potential policy shifts from the Federal Reserve.
While the revised figures reflect conditions from as far back as a year and a half ago, recent data underscore a burgeoning softness in the labor market as well. Specifically, payroll growth during the summer months of June, July, and August averaged only 29,000 jobs per month—significantly below the level required to maintain a steady unemployment rate.
The sectors most impacted by the downward revision included leisure and hospitality, which saw a reduction of 176,000 jobs, as well as professional and business services (-158,000) and retail trade, which lost 126,200 jobs. Although most industries reported downward adjustments, transportation, warehousing, and utilities experienced modest increases. Notably, adjustments within the public sector amounted to a decrease of 31,000 jobs.
In response to these troubling statistics, financial markets displayed limited reaction, with stock prices remaining relatively stable, while Treasury yields reversed earlier losses to trend higher.
The revelation of these significant downward revisions has heightened scrutiny of the BLS, which has faced criticism from the current administration regarding its data accuracy and collection methodologies. Following a disappointing jobs report in July that included major downward revisions, Trump dismissed then-BLS Commissioner Erika McEntarfer and appointed E.J. Antoni from the Heritage Foundation to succeed her. However, August’s job totals were even lower than July’s, with revisions adjusting June’s figures to reflect a loss of 13,000 jobs, marking the first negative total since December 2020.
In a statement, White House Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt argued that the BLS’s findings underscored the notion that “Biden’s economy was a disaster,” asserting the need for new leadership to restore confidence in labor data, which is vital for financial markets, policymakers, and families making economic decisions.
The annual benchmark revisions represent a more comprehensive analysis than the monthly data adjustments, as they are drawn from broader employment and wage census information and tax data. Consequently, the numbers released today are subject to further adjustments when the BLS publishes its final benchmark figures in February 2026. Comparatively, the previous benchmark revision—for the year prior to March 2024—initially stated a loss of 818,000 jobs, which was later adjusted to a decrease of 598,000, marking the largest downward correction since 2009.
Though these revisions amount to 0.6% of the entire labor force of 171 million, their political and economic implications are considerable. Further indicators of labor market weakness are likely to intensify arguments for Federal Reserve interest rate cuts, an issue that Trump has been actively advocating. The White House echoed this sentiment, asserting that Fed Chair Jerome Powell “has officially run out of excuses and must cut rates now.”