'What the inflation doctor ordered': Economists react to a cooler August jobs report

The U.S. economy added 315,000 jobs in August as the unemployment rate rose to 3.7%.

Although the labor market remained strong last month, job growth cooled from July – a sign to investors that the Federal Reserve’s efforts to rein in inflation are starting to take effect.

The labor force participation rate notably inched up in August to 62.4% from 62.1% the prior month, matching the highest level since March 2020. Meanwhile, wage gains slightly retreated, rising 0.3% and 5.2% over last month and last year, respectively.

Unusual tightness in the labor market has been closely-watched by central bank officials, with the imbalance between job openings and available workers placing upward pressure on wages and adding to inflationary pressures.

And the government’s August data suggested the labor conditions are moving in the right direction.

A flurry of reactions from Wall Street hit in our inboxes following Friday's release, and Yahoo Finance rounded up some of what we got below:

Sarah House and Michael Pugliese, Economists, Wells Fargo

“August's jobs report was weaker in the best way possible as far as the Fed is concerned, and may be just what the inflation doctor ordered. Today's data in isolation tilt the scales toward a 50 bps hike at the FOMC's September meeting, but does not on its own settle the matter. While the August jobs report keeps hope alive that the Fed may be able to pull off the elusive soft-landing, there remains significant work ahead in quelling the inflation pressures coming from the labor market.”

Ian Shepherdson, Chief Economist, Pantheon Macroeconomics

“The Fed will be relieved to see the 0.26pp increase in the participation rate - big enough to be statistically significant, unusually — reversing the declines of the previous two months. The medium-term upward trend is still in place, we think, after the Q1 overshoot and Q2 correction. This is hugely important, because a sustained slowing in wage growth from the recent unsustainable pace is hard to imagine without a further increase in participation. The labor force reportedly rose by nearly 800K in August, swamping the 442K increase in household employment — the biggest since March, so much for the 'household employment is rolling over' crowd — and pushing up the unemployment rate to 3.7%. These monthly changes are all statistically significant, but they could easily correct in September.”

Nancy Vanden Houten, Lead US Economist; Kathy Bostjancic, Chief US Economist, Oxford Economics

“We expect a marked moderation in job growth in coming months as economic activity is weighed down by higher interest rates and weakness in overseas economies. However, as the June JOLTS data highlighted, labor shortages remain acute and bringing worker demand and supply closer into better balance will be a gradual process. The modest slowdown in employment growth in August may be welcome by the Fed, but it won't prevent further sizable rate hikes in the months ahead. Fed Chair Powell made clear last week that the FOMC plans to push rates well into restrictive territory to bring down inflation and prevent an unmooring of inflation expectations.”