The US economy added 172,000 jobs in May while the unemployment rate remained unchanged at 4.3%, beating expectations at a time when businesses are facing higher borrowing costs, rising energy prices and uncertainty linked to the conflict involving Iran.
Yet the most interesting part of the latest jobs report is not the number of jobs created. It is the fact that employers continue to hold on to workers even as hiring slows. Millions of Americans are experiencing a labor market that feels very different from the headline figures.
Finding a new job often takes longer, career moves can be more difficult, and hiring has become more selective. At the same time, companies are still avoiding the large-scale layoffs that often accompany periods of economic uncertainty.
That raises an important question. If economic risks are increasing, why are employers still reluctant to cut jobs?
Part of the explanation can be traced back to the pandemic. When labor shortages hit the economy, companies spent months struggling to recruit and retain workers. Some industries found themselves unable to fill critical positions, while others were forced to increase wages simply to attract staff.
Those experiences left a lasting impression on many employers. Rather than viewing employees as a cost that can be reduced when conditions become more challenging, businesses increasingly see experienced workers as assets that could be difficult and expensive to replace.
The result is what economists often describe as a “slow-hire, slow-fire” economy. Companies are no longer expanding payrolls at the pace seen during the post-pandemic recovery, but neither are they rushing to cut jobs. Businesses remain cautious about future growth, yet many appear willing to accept slower sales and weaker demand rather than risk losing workers they may need later.
This helps explain why unemployment has remained relatively stable even as hiring activity has cooled. In previous economic slowdownsjob losses often arrived quickly as businesses moved to protect profits. Today, many employers are taking a different approach. Recruitment plans may be delayed, vacancies may remain unfilled and expansion projects may be postponed, but existing staff are often being retained.
Many companies have also had the financial breathing room to keep workers on payroll. Recent economic data showed corporate profits continuing to rise during the first quarter of the year, giving businesses greater flexibility as they navigate uncertainty. Some economists have also pointed to tax measures and tariff-related refunds as factors that have strengthened company finances. With profitability holding up better than expected, many employers have been able to avoid widespread layoffs.
The workforce itself has changed as well. Slower labor force growth, influenced in part by demographic trends and tighter immigration policies, means the economy needs to create fewer jobs each month to keep unemployment stable. A smaller pool of available workers reduces the likelihood of unemployment rising sharply and gives employers another reason to hold on to experienced staff.
Yet many workers would argue the headlines tell only part of the story. Low unemployment does not necessarily mean finding a job is easy. Companies may be keeping current employees while quietly reducing recruitment budgets and slowing new hiring. That leaves fewer opportunities for people seeking a new role, changing careers or returning to the workforce. It also helps explain why many job seekers feel the labor market is weaker than the official figures suggest.
The effects reach well beyond employment figures. Households with secure incomes are more likely to keep spending, whether on holidays, home improvements or everyday essentials. That spending helps support growth across the economy, but it can also make inflation harder to bring under control. For policymakers trying to cool prices without triggering a recession, a strong jobs market is both good news and a complication.
Employment trends are also shaping expectations for interest rates. A resilient labor market gives the Federal Reserve less reason to cut rates aggressively. If inflation remains elevated while unemployment stays low, borrowing costs could remain higher for longer than many households and businesses expected. That affects everything from mortgages and credit cards to business investment and consumer confidence.
Whether this balance can survive the rest of the year is another matter. Rising oil prices linked to disruptions in the Strait of Hormuz, geopolitical tensions, inflation pressures and slowing global growth all have the potential to test employer confidence. If those pressures intensify, businesses may eventually decide that retaining workers is no longer sustainable.
For now, however, the jobs market is sending a different signal. Companies spent years worrying about finding workers. Now they are worried about losing them. That helps explain why unemployment has remained stubbornly low even as hiring cools, and why the labor market feels far more complicated than the monthly headline numbers suggest.










