US shed 92,000 jobs, unemployment ticked up to 4.4% in February

Monday, March 16, 2026

The U.S. economy shed 92,000 jobs in February, the Bureau of Labor Statistics estimated March 6, far below forecasters' expectations, and a signal the labor market is still in low-hire mode as employers navigate tariff-related inflation pressures, AI adoption, and geopolitical uncertainty. 

The February estimate comes in much lower than the BLS’ now-revised gain of 126,000 jobs added in January, which was much higher than the agency’s revised figures for 2025, when U.S. employers added only 181,000 jobs throughout the entire year, or about 15,000 a month.

“The weak jobs report challenges the recent stabilization narrative and puts the Fed in a difficult position, especially as the spike in oil prices adds near‑term inflation pressure,” Angelo Kourkafas, Senior Global Strategist at Edward Jones, said in a note to USA TODAY, adding that economists should avoid over-extrapolating the trend given weather and labor disruptions' potential impact on hiring in February. 

He added, “however, with global geopolitical uncertainty elevated, it is reasonable to expect that job growth may remain subdued in the months ahead.”

The unemployment rate rose to 4.4% in February, up from 4.3% in January, and up from 4.1% a year ago. Bankrate Senior Economic Analyst Mark Hamrick noted ahead of the report that less immigration and an aging workforce mean fewer new jobs are needed to keep the rate steady.

In a note following the report's release, Hamrick said, "Well that was ugly. February’s employment data misses the mark across the board."

Which industries lost, and which sectors added, jobs?

Health care, typically a steady engine of job growth, lost 28,000 jobs in February. That’s down from a revised gain of 77,000 in January, though the dip can partially be explained by a major strike of Kaiser Permanente workers during the BLS’ survey period. 

Employment in the information sector also trended down in February, shedding 11,000 jobs. The federal government cut another 10,000 jobs.  

The social assistance sector was one of the few bright spots, adding 9,000 jobs in February. 

Employment in other industries, including construction, manufacturing, and trade, was little changed over the month, the BLS said.

Hourly earnings tick up, but wage gains are uneven

Average hourly earnings for all employees on private, nonfarm payrolls rose by 0.4%, to $37.32 in February, the BLS said, adding that over the last year, average hourly earnings have increased 3.8%. 

But, the K-shaped economy is showing up in wage gains, too.  

While higher-income wage growth rose to 4.2% over the year in February, middle-income wage growth slowed to 1.2%, and lower-income wage growth slowed to 0.6%, over the same period, according to a Bank of America Institute report.  

One reason wage gains are cooling for those workers may be that switching jobs now doesn’t come with the same salary bump it used to during “the Great Resignation.” People who changed jobs in January saw raises that were less than half of what job switchers were getting in 2019, according to Bank of America internal data. 

How is the job market overall?

The number of long-term unemployed workers, or those without a job for 27 weeks or more, stood at 1.9 million in February, up from 1.5 million a year earlier, the BLS said, adding that group accounted for about a quarter of all unemployed people in February.

Over the past year, economic output has continued to grow as job gains have slowed, implying higher productivity per worker. Thrivent Chief Financial and Investment Officer David Royal said AI may be contributing to productivity gains, but it’s still too early to attribute the entire divergence between GDP and employment to AI.

“I don’t think companies really know the impact of AI on employment either,” Royal told USA TODAY. “They’re not ready to let people go, but they don’t want to hire a bunch of people because they’re not sure they’re going to need them, and I think that’s what’s driving the low-hire, low-fire environment.”

Where is the job market headed in 2026?

A March 5 Challenger, Gray & Christmas report revealed employers announced 48,307 job cuts in February, down 55% from January, and down 72% from February 2025. 

Still, job seekers are struggling to find work, recent college grads are competing with AI, and workers are clinging to their jobs fearing they won’t be able to land a new one. 

A third of workers surveyed by MyPerfectResume, a resume-building platform, said they were worried about losing their job in 2026, and nearly half predicted the labor market will get worse. 

Private employers announced plans to hire 12,755 workers in February, a 140% increase from 5,306 in January, according to the Challenger report. So far this year, it found, hiring plans are down 56% compared to the first two months of 2025.

Full article @ https://eu.usatoday.com/story/money/2026/03/06/us-shed-92000-jobs-unemployment-ticked-up-to-4-4-in-february/88883807007/