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March Jobs Report – USA

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Jobs

The March 2026 employment report is being celebrated by the press as a “blowout” number, yet once again they are focusing on the headline and ignoring what is actually taking place beneath the surface. The Bureau of Labor Statistics reported that the U.S. economy added 178,000 jobs for the month, far exceeding expectations that were clustered around 60,000, while the unemployment rate ticked down to 4.3%.

The prior month was revised to a loss of 133,000 jobs, meaning what you are seeing is not acceleration but volatility. When you strip away the headline number, the first major warning sign is the collapse in labor force participation. Roughly 396,000 people exited the labor force in March alone, pushing participation below 62%, the lowest level since the pandemic era. This is precisely how governments manipulate unemployment statistics. If people stop looking for work, they are no longer counted as unemployed, so the rate declines even as the underlying economy weakens.

Then you look at wages, which rose only modestly, roughly 0.2% for the month and about 3.5% annually, marking the slowest pace in years. This is critical because it confirms what we have been warning about, this is not inflation driven by demand, this is cost-push inflation driven by war, energy, and policy. When wages stall while prices rise, that is the very definition of stagflation.

The composition of the jobs tells the same story. Healthcare accounted for roughly 76,000 of the gains, largely a rebound from strike activity, while construction and manufacturing added modest numbers. Government employment declined by about 18,000 and financial sectors also contracted, which is a red flag because those are forward-looking industries tied to capital formation.

Even more troubling is that hiring itself remains weak. The broader trend shows job growth averaging only a fraction of prior years, with some estimates suggesting as little as 15,000 to 20,000 per month over the past year. That is an economy treading water.

The Federal Reserve will likely sit on its hands, because it has no real control here. If it cuts rates, it risks fueling inflation through energy. If it raises rates, it risks accelerating the downturn. This is the trap created by sovereign debt and geopolitical mismanagement.