Trump’s immigration crackdown could make it harder to interpret the jobs numbers.

Trump’s immigration crackdown could make it harder to interpret the jobs numbers.

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Live Updates: U.S. Hiring Expected to Cool

How resilient is the labor market? Amid signs of softer economic growth, the latest report on jobs will be watched closely.

A job fair this week in Sunrise, Fla. Economists anticipate that employers added 110,000 jobs in June, which would be a slight drop from the 139,000 added in May.Scott McIntyre for The New York Times
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Sydney Ember

What to know about the jobs report.

The U.S. job market has remained surprisingly solid for months despite rising concerns about how President Trump’s policies, including tariffs and sweeping government layoffs, may affect the economy. In May, employers added jobs at a healthy clip.

But there have also been signs that the labor market is softening. Hiring has been primarily powered by two industries — health care along with leisure and hospitality — rather than being more broad-based. The unemployment rate has been slowly trending up and stands at 4.2 percent. Workers are taking longer to find new jobs.

So how resilient is the job market, really?

The latest indication will come on Thursday when the Labor Department releases its monthly snapshot of the labor market — and it is expected to show more of the same. Economists polled by Bloomberg anticipate that employers added 110,000 jobs in June, which would be a slight drop from the 139,000 added in May and align with a gradual cool-down. The unemployment rate is expected to tick up to 4.3 percent.

“One of the things we’ve learned hopefully in the last couple years is to not necessarily bet against the labor market,” said Cory Stahle, an economist at the Indeed Hiring Lab. “And also, you never know what the labor market is going to do.”

Still, the headline numbers in Thursday’s report are not likely to tell the whole story. Economists and Federal Reserve officials will also look below the report’s surface for evidence of weakness in the labor market, including any revisions that show hiring was shakier in previous months than initially reported.

Those numbers will matter greatly for the Fed, which has shown no urgency to cut interest rates given the labor market’s continued strength but has also said it is watching for signs of slowing.

Lydia DePillis

For 21 of the past 24 months, the sector that generated the most jobs has been health care, which is now the biggest employer in America. To understand what has driven that steady growth — and the factors that might finally slow it down — read my story today with Christine Zhang.

Colby Smith

The latest data on jobs comes amid a litany of attacks from President Trump directed at Jerome Powell, the chair of the Federal Reserve, for resisting his demands to immediately cut interest rates.

Just in the last week, Trump has called Mr. Powell a “stubborn mule” and encouraged him to resign and penned him a handwritten note blaming him for costing the country a “fortune.” The Fed chair, so far, has remained undeterred.

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Kailyn Rhone

For teens, summer jobs are getting harder to find.

Ugenie Labranche, 16, has applied for more than a dozen jobs but still hasn’t landed an offer. Sometimes she has not even gotten a call back.Michelle Gustafson for The New York Times

Teenagers across the country are entering one of the toughest summer job markets in recent years, as traditional jobs at restaurants, amusement parks, pools and stores either pause new hiring or choose adults for those roles.

In May, the unemployment rate for teenagers rose to 13.4 percent, from 13 percent in April and 12.4 percent a year earlier, according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics. Data for June is set to be released on Thursday.

A tighter labor market suggests that teen unemployment could reach its highest level in over a decade, said Andy Challenger, senior vice president of the outplacement firm Challenger, Gray & Christmas.

This year, the firm estimates there will be about one million new summer jobs for 16- to 19-year-olds. It could be the lowest number since 2010, Mr. Challenger said, adding that companies that traditionally hire summer workers may hold off this year.

Uncertainty about the economy is a major reason, said Alicia Sasser Modestino, an economist at Northeastern University in Boston. Some businesses are freezing roles or cutting seasonal positions over concerns about lower consumer confidence and fears that consumer spending will weaken under President Trump’s tariff policies. That hesitation hits teenagers hardest, Ms. Modestino said.

“Now when we’re starting to see the labor market cool off a bit in general, we’re seeing it hit teenagers harder, and teenagers first,” she said. “That’s because they’re really the canary in the coal mine. They are the last to be hired, the first to be fired.”

Ben Casselman

Can we trust the numbers? Yes, with caveats.

Major economic reports on inflation, spending, trade and jobs have continued to come out as normal, even when the news has been potentially damaging to President Trump.Doug Mills/The New York Times

Can we still trust the data coming out of the Trump administration?

It’s a question I get all the time — on social media, in comments on my stories, in conversations with friends and colleagues. That skepticism has only intensified recently, since the Bureau of Labor Statistics disclosed that it was cutting back collection of price data that feeds into the Consumer Price Index.

Here’s my answer: Yes, I still trust the data. But with some important caveats.

Many of the people asking this question are worried about the possibility of political interference in the data-collection or analysis process. There is no evidence that is happening.

People inside government agencies consistently say they are confident that the numbers being released by the Bureau of Labor Statistics, Census Bureau and other agencies remain reliable. They also say that the longtime employees who oversee these statistics will blow the whistle if that changes.

But while there is no evidence of political interference, many economists and other experts have a different concern: the gradual erosion in the quality of government statistics.

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Trump’s immigration crackdown could make it harder to interpret the jobs numbers.

An Immigration and Customs Enforcement raid in Denver in February. The Trump administration has threatened to deport as many as a million people a year.Chet Strange for The New York Times

Officials at the Federal Reserve, under pressure from President Trump to restart interest rate cuts after an extended pause, say they are prepared to lower borrowing costs if the labor market weakens.

But Mr. Trump’s own immigration policies risk making it much harder for those policymakers to know whether that is happening, putting a divided central bank in an even more fraught position as it debates when and by what magnitude to lower borrowing costs.

The Trump administration in recent months has moved to revoke the legal status of hundreds of thousands of immigrants and has conducted high-profile immigration raids at work sites in Los Angeles and other cities. It has stepped up security at the U.S.-Mexican border and has publicly threatened to deport as many as a million workers a year.

The full effect of those policies is not yet clear. But virtually all analysts expect the immigrant population to grow much more slowly this year, and perhaps even to fall. That could leave employers who rely on immigrant labor scrambling to fill positions, potentially pushing up wages and causing shortages of certain goods or services.

A shrinking immigrant labor force could pose a big problem for the Fed, making it harder to tell whether a slowdown in job growth is the result of falling demand for workers, fewer available employees or both. The shrinking pool of workers could also present another source of inflationary pressures beyond tariffs that officials would have to navigate.

“The Fed is in a challenging position,” said Betsey Stevenson, a former chief economist at the Labor Department who is now a professor at the University of Michigan. “They need to be really careful that what they’re seeing is actually weak labor demand and not contracting labor supply caused by Trump’s policies, and that’s tricky.”

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