Jobs Report - U.S. Employment Summary

January Jobs Report: AI Skills Surge Amid Slowdown

4 min · 17 de feb de 2026
Portada del episodio January Jobs Report: AI Skills Surge Amid Slowdown

Descripción

# Podcast Episode Summary **U.S. Jobs Report Reveals Slowest Growth in Two Decades—But AI Skills Surge** The January 2026 jobs report shows modest gains of 130,000 positions with unemployment steady at 4.3%, but dramatic downward revisions reveal 2025 posted the weakest job growth outside a recession since 2003. Health care led gains with 82,000 new positions, while federal government and financial sectors shed thousands. Host Morgan Riley breaks down what economists are calling a "low-hire, low-fire" phase reminiscent of the cautious 2010s recovery. The bright spot? AI-related job postings have exploded 130% since pre-pandemic levels, now appearing in nearly half of all data analytics roles. With J.P. Morgan forecasting unemployment could peak at 4.5% before rebounding from tax cuts and AI productivity gains This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI.

Comentarios

0

Sé la primera persona en comentar

¡Regístrate ahora y únete a la comunidad de Jobs Report - U.S. Employment Summary!

Prueba gratis

Empieza 7 días de prueba

$99 / mes después de la prueba. · Cancela cuando quieras.

  • Podcasts solo en Podimo
  • 20 horas de audiolibros al mes
  • Podcast gratuitos

Todos los episodios

16 episodios

episode Jobs Cooling: America's Shifting Labor Market Reality artwork

Jobs Cooling: America's Shifting Labor Market Reality

# Podcast Episode Summary **America's Job Market: The Great Cooling** The latest employment data reveals a labor market in transition. January added just 130,000 jobs while unemployment held at 4.3%—but dramatic downward revisions show 2025 only created 181,000 jobs total, far below initial reports. The power dynamic has flipped: job seekers now outnumber openings for the first time since 2017, with searches up 31% while postings stagnate. Healthcare leads hiring, but federal job cuts are accelerating. Long-term unemployment is surging, wage growth is slowing to 3.7%, and employers are taking their time filling positions. If you're working, you're relatively secure. If you're searching, the road just got harder. Morgan Riley breaks down what these shifting tides mean for your career and wallet. **Ready to dive deeper into the data This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI.

3 de mar de 20264 min
episode Jobs Up but Market Cools in January artwork

Jobs Up but Market Cools in January

# Podcast Episode Summary **U.S. Job Market Shows Mixed Signals in Early 2026** The latest employment data reveals a cooling American labor market with complex undercurrents. While January saw 130,000 jobs added—nearly triple December's revised figures—the numbers mask a more challenging reality. Healthcare led gains with 82,000 new positions, but federal government and financial sectors contracted. Most striking: 2025's job growth was dramatically revised downward from 584,000 to just 181,000, revealing the market had been weaker than previously thought. With unemployment holding at 4.3% and long-term joblessness climbing to 1.8 million, we're entering what economists call a "low-hire, low-fire environment." Job seekers are searching 31% more actively, yet postings remain flat—shifting leverage firmly to employers. Wage growth continues at 3.7 This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI.

24 de feb de 20263 min
episode January Jobs Report: AI Skills Surge Amid Slowdown artwork

January Jobs Report: AI Skills Surge Amid Slowdown

# Podcast Episode Summary **U.S. Jobs Report Reveals Slowest Growth in Two Decades—But AI Skills Surge** The January 2026 jobs report shows modest gains of 130,000 positions with unemployment steady at 4.3%, but dramatic downward revisions reveal 2025 posted the weakest job growth outside a recession since 2003. Health care led gains with 82,000 new positions, while federal government and financial sectors shed thousands. Host Morgan Riley breaks down what economists are calling a "low-hire, low-fire" phase reminiscent of the cautious 2010s recovery. The bright spot? AI-related job postings have exploded 130% since pre-pandemic levels, now appearing in nearly half of all data analytics roles. With J.P. Morgan forecasting unemployment could peak at 4.5% before rebounding from tax cuts and AI productivity gains This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI.

17 de feb de 20264 min
episode January Jobs Stall at 22K, AI Postings Surge artwork

January Jobs Stall at 22K, AI Postings Surge

# Podcast Episode Summary **Jobs Market Hits the Brakes: What January's Stunning Slowdown Means for You** The U.S. labor market pumped the brakes hard in January, with private employers adding just 22,000 jobs—a dramatic cool-down from recent months. Host Morgan Riley breaks down the ADP report revealing a tale of two economies: education and healthcare are hiring, while manufacturing bleeds jobs for the 10th straight month. Geography matters too, as the South and West shed positions while the Northeast and Midwest hold steady. But here's the kicker: AI-related job postings have exploded over 130% since 2020, now comprising 4.2% of all openings. As the official government jobs report looms with potentially downward revisions, this episode explores what Riley calls a "low-hire, low-fire market"—where AI skills might be your secret This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI.

10 de feb de 20262 min
episode January Jobs Report Delayed by Government Shutdown Explained artwork

January Jobs Report Delayed by Government Shutdown Explained

# Podcast Episode Summary **Jobs Report on Hold: What the Government Shutdown Means for America's Labor Market** The January 2026 jobs report is MIA thanks to the partial government shutdown, leaving economists and workers in the dark at a critical moment. Host Morgan Riley breaks down what we're missing: sluggish December numbers (just 50,000 jobs added), major layoffs from Amazon and UPS, and a federal workforce that's already shrunk by 97,000. With unemployment expected to drift toward 4.5% and job openings stalling, we're in what experts call a "low-hire, low-fire" standoff—employers frozen by uncertainty over immigration, tariffs, and policy shifts. Healthcare continues to shine with postings 22.6% above pre-pandemic levels, while tech and retail struggle to recover. Will the Fed adjust its stance when the data finally drops? It's an economic This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI.

3 de feb de 20262 min