US businesses are adding workers at the weakest pace in 15 years, excluding the onset of the pandemic, new data showed Tuesday, a sign that there was an even deeper chill cutting through the labor market before the Middle East conflict threatened to shake the US economy.
Hires as percentage of total employment dropped to 3.1% at the end of February, the lowest rate since April 2020 and, before that, 2011, according to the latest Job Openings and Labor Turnover Survey from the Bureau of Labor Statistics.
The hires rate dropped off from 3.4% in January, marking the steepest one-month decline outside of the pandemic since 2016, noted Laura Ullrich, director of economic research in North America at the Indeed Hiring Lab.
“Which is concerning given the ongoing impacts of the conflict in Iran,” she wrote in a note Tuesday.
The steepest pullbacks in hiring were seen in the construction and professional and business services sectors.
The lowest hires rate on record was 2.9% in 2009, during the Great Recession.
Tuesday’s report also showed a dip in the number of job openings – a closely watched measurement of labor demand. They fell to an estimated 6.88 million from 7.24 million in January.
Layoffs increased to 1.72 million from 1.66 million, but the rate of layoffs of overall employment remains in line with averages seen in recent years. Voluntary quits, which serve as a gauge of worker confidence, fell in February to 2.97 million, marking the lowest level since 2020.
Listless hiring and labor hoarding mean the all-important “churn” needed for a healthy labor market and healthy economy has ground to a near-halt.
The February jobs report, which showed the US economy shed an estimated 92,000 jobs that month, further raised concerns that the labor market was not just stuck, but breaking.
The weekslong deadly and escalating conflict in the Middle East has amplified those fears.
In addition to rising uncertainty, the energy shock and other material shortages are forcing companies to grapple with immediate tangible effects, such as the higher cost of living for workers and customers, noted Elizabeth Renter, NerdWallet’s senior economist.
“If their input costs rise, they may be forced to reckon with tough decisions such as raising prices or reducing hours and workforce,” she wrote Tuesday.
KimJongFunk on April 3rd, 2026 at 00:05 UTC »
I have so many friends who have lost their jobs this year with no hope of finding another anytime soon. People 10+ years into their careers in diverse industries. I’ve never experienced anything like it.
At least when I was 18 and this happened, I could get a job in fast food and figure things out. That isn’t possible anymore as an adult in my 30s. It’s so scary.
PIZZA564738 on April 2nd, 2026 at 23:16 UTC »
Guys dont worry it will trickle down eventually
heekma on April 2nd, 2026 at 23:14 UTC »
We are officially in stagflation territory, the worst place to be.
The main tool the Fed uses, interest rates, are now damned if you use it, damned if you don't.
They can't lower interest rates to drive job creation without pouring gasoline on inflation rates.
And just remember, by the end of 2024 the Fed seemed to have pulled off the impossible, a soft landing after Covid, moderate inflation with solid job creation for four straight quarters. Our economy recovered faster than most and was poised for faster growth than others.
Now here we are, self-inflicted sabotage and war in Iran.
Just fucking once in my life I'd like to experience 10 years without some kind of "Once-In-a-Lifetime" economic event.