Why the US job market feels stuck even as unemployment stays low
The American job market is not breaking in loud, obvious ways. There is no single headline that captures what is going wrong, no dramatic surge in unemployment that forces an immediate reckoning. Instead, the damage is unfolding slowly and almost invisibly. Hiring has cooled, workers are staying put, and employers are hesitating. On paper, the labour market still looks healthy. In reality, it is losing its pulse.
What makes this moment unsettling is how many small pressures are quietly adding up. Companies are unsure how trade policy will shift. Borrowing has become expensive. The workforce itself is shrinking as immigration slows and the population ages. At the same time, the post-pandemic hiring binge, especially in technology, has left employers cautious about expanding again. None of these forces alone would cripple the job market. Together, they have created an economy where movement feels risky, opportunity feels scarce, and the simple act of hiring has become an exercise in restraint.
Data from the US Department of Labour show that the pace of hiring has fallen sharply. Employers added about 5.3 million workers in December, translating into a hiring rate of 3.3 percent of total employment, well below pre-pandemic norms and far lower than the surge seen in 2021 and early 2022. Historically, such a low hiring rate has been associated with much higher unemployment than the current level of roughly 4.4 percent. The gap between these two indicators reveals an unusual and fragile equilibrium: companies are not hiring aggressively, but they are also not firing en masse.
This stagnation matters because most hiring in a normal economy is not about expansion but replacement. When workers leave, firms bring in new ones. Today, that churn has slowed dramatically.
One of the clearest signals of labour market anxiety is the collapse in voluntary job switching. According to the Labor Department’s Job Openings and Labor Turnover Survey, the number of workers who quit their jobs fell to 3.2 million in December, far below the 4.5 million recorded in March 2022. The quits rate stood at 2 percent, compared with an average of 2.3 percent before the pandemic.
This reluctance to quit reflects a widespread perception that finding a new job has become harder. Surveys from the New York Federal Reserve show that consumers in December placed their chances of finding new work within three months of losing a job at just 43 percent, the lowest reading since the survey began more than a decade ago. Parallel findings from the University of Michigan and the Conference Board indicate rising expectations of unemployment and growing pessimism about job availability.
The result is a self-reinforcing cycle. Workers hold onto jobs because hiring is weak. Hiring remains weak because few workers are leaving.
For employers, especially smaller firms, uncertainty has become a powerful deterrent to hiring. Ongoing unpredictability around tariff policy has made long-term planning difficult. For many businesses, tariffs have raised input costs, squeezing margins and reducing the appetite to expand payrolls.
At the same time, high short-term interest rates have increased borrowing costs. Smaller companies, which often rely on credit cards or short-term credit to manage cash flow, are particularly exposed. Faced with higher financing costs and unclear trade conditions, many firms are choosing caution over growth.
In parts of the economy, most notably technology, the slowdown reflects a correction rather than a collapse. Tech firms hired aggressively during and after the pandemic, anticipating demand that ultimately did not materialise at the expected scale. Employment in the sector began stalling in late 2022 as companies adjusted to that reality. While artificial intelligence has entered the conversation, the initial pullback in tech hiring was driven more by overexpansion than automation.
According to research from Stanford University, exposure to AI also started to influence the employment prospects of young individuals who work with highly AI-sensitive job roles such as software development. However, taking into consideration the total workforce in the US economy, which stands at 160 million-strong, these employment-related influences are too minor to change overall workforce patterns.
The employment market force probably least appreciated is the dramatic slowdown in its own growth rate. The more selective immigration policies pursued by the Trump administration have reduced the rate at which newcomers are added to the force, and the aging population has also decreased this figure.
Research by economists at the Brookings Institution and the American Enterprise Institute indicates that the number of jobs the economy needs to add each month to keep unemployment stable has fallen dramatically. Estimates suggest potential monthly employment growth dropped to around 35,000 in the second half of 2025, down from roughly 140,000 in 2024, with projections for this year centring on as few as 15,000 jobs per month.
This shift cuts both ways. Fewer workers mean fewer people to hire, but also fewer consumers to drive demand. In effect, reduced immigration dampens both the supply of labour and the need for labour.
The defining feature of today’s job market is not mass job loss, but hesitation. Employers are unsure how tariffs, interest rates, immigration policy, and emerging technologies will shape their future needs. Workers, sensing fragility, are choosing security over mobility. Hiring slows, not because opportunity has vanished, but because confidence has.
That hesitation explains why employment growth has been so weak. Outside of recessionary periods, the US added fewer jobs last year than in any year since 2003, according to Labor Department data. Economists expect upcoming revisions to payroll figures to show even softer gains.
America’s job market is devastated not by collapse, but by paralysis. It is a labour market stuck between resilience and retreat, one that continues to function, but without the dynamism that once defined it. Until uncertainty eases, workforce growth stabilises, and both employers and workers regain confidence, the recovery in hiring is likely to remain slow, cautious, and uneven.
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What makes this moment unsettling is how many small pressures are quietly adding up. Companies are unsure how trade policy will shift. Borrowing has become expensive. The workforce itself is shrinking as immigration slows and the population ages. At the same time, the post-pandemic hiring binge, especially in technology, has left employers cautious about expanding again. None of these forces alone would cripple the job market. Together, they have created an economy where movement feels risky, opportunity feels scarce, and the simple act of hiring has become an exercise in restraint.
A hiring engine that has lost power
Data from the US Department of Labour show that the pace of hiring has fallen sharply. Employers added about 5.3 million workers in December, translating into a hiring rate of 3.3 percent of total employment, well below pre-pandemic norms and far lower than the surge seen in 2021 and early 2022. Historically, such a low hiring rate has been associated with much higher unemployment than the current level of roughly 4.4 percent. The gap between these two indicators reveals an unusual and fragile equilibrium: companies are not hiring aggressively, but they are also not firing en masse.
This stagnation matters because most hiring in a normal economy is not about expansion but replacement. When workers leave, firms bring in new ones. Today, that churn has slowed dramatically.
Workers are staying put
One of the clearest signals of labour market anxiety is the collapse in voluntary job switching. According to the Labor Department’s Job Openings and Labor Turnover Survey, the number of workers who quit their jobs fell to 3.2 million in December, far below the 4.5 million recorded in March 2022. The quits rate stood at 2 percent, compared with an average of 2.3 percent before the pandemic.
The result is a self-reinforcing cycle. Workers hold onto jobs because hiring is weak. Hiring remains weak because few workers are leaving.
Policy uncertainty and financial pressure
For employers, especially smaller firms, uncertainty has become a powerful deterrent to hiring. Ongoing unpredictability around tariff policy has made long-term planning difficult. For many businesses, tariffs have raised input costs, squeezing margins and reducing the appetite to expand payrolls.
At the same time, high short-term interest rates have increased borrowing costs. Smaller companies, which often rely on credit cards or short-term credit to manage cash flow, are particularly exposed. Faced with higher financing costs and unclear trade conditions, many firms are choosing caution over growth.
The long shadow of pandemic-era hiring
In parts of the economy, most notably technology, the slowdown reflects a correction rather than a collapse. Tech firms hired aggressively during and after the pandemic, anticipating demand that ultimately did not materialise at the expected scale. Employment in the sector began stalling in late 2022 as companies adjusted to that reality. While artificial intelligence has entered the conversation, the initial pullback in tech hiring was driven more by overexpansion than automation.
According to research from Stanford University, exposure to AI also started to influence the employment prospects of young individuals who work with highly AI-sensitive job roles such as software development. However, taking into consideration the total workforce in the US economy, which stands at 160 million-strong, these employment-related influences are too minor to change overall workforce patterns.
Immigration, Ageing, and a Shrinking Pipeline
The employment market force probably least appreciated is the dramatic slowdown in its own growth rate. The more selective immigration policies pursued by the Trump administration have reduced the rate at which newcomers are added to the force, and the aging population has also decreased this figure.
Research by economists at the Brookings Institution and the American Enterprise Institute indicates that the number of jobs the economy needs to add each month to keep unemployment stable has fallen dramatically. Estimates suggest potential monthly employment growth dropped to around 35,000 in the second half of 2025, down from roughly 140,000 in 2024, with projections for this year centring on as few as 15,000 jobs per month.
This shift cuts both ways. Fewer workers mean fewer people to hire, but also fewer consumers to drive demand. In effect, reduced immigration dampens both the supply of labour and the need for labour.
A market defined by hesitation
The defining feature of today’s job market is not mass job loss, but hesitation. Employers are unsure how tariffs, interest rates, immigration policy, and emerging technologies will shape their future needs. Workers, sensing fragility, are choosing security over mobility. Hiring slows, not because opportunity has vanished, but because confidence has.
That hesitation explains why employment growth has been so weak. Outside of recessionary periods, the US added fewer jobs last year than in any year since 2003, according to Labor Department data. Economists expect upcoming revisions to payroll figures to show even softer gains.
An uneasy balance
America’s job market is devastated not by collapse, but by paralysis. It is a labour market stuck between resilience and retreat, one that continues to function, but without the dynamism that once defined it. Until uncertainty eases, workforce growth stabilises, and both employers and workers regain confidence, the recovery in hiring is likely to remain slow, cautious, and uneven.
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