Economy added robust 275,000 jobs in February, report shows. But a slowdown looms.

Corrections & Clarifications: An earlier version of this story misstated the month in which job gains were revised from 353,000 to 229,000. The January numbers were restated.

U.S. employers added a robust 275,000 jobs in February as hiring stayed strong despite high interest rates, persistent inflation and uncertainty about the economic outlook in a presidential election year.

But payroll gains for December and January were revised down by an outsized 167,000, portraying a much weaker picture of the recent labor market. January's booming 353,000 employment gains were downgraded significantly to 229,000, though that's still a sturdy total.

And the unemployment rate rose from 3.7% to 3.9%, the highest since January 2022, the Labor Department said Friday.

Economists had estimated that 200,000 jobs were added in February, according to a Bloomberg survey.

For some forecasters, steady downward revisions to the payroll totals since early last year add to evidence that 2024 will bring a sharp slowdown in job growth.

"The current trend in payrolls is steady, but a clear downturn is coming," says Ian Shepherdson, chief economist of Pantheon Macroeconomics.

Are wages catching up to inflation?

Average hourly pay rose 5 cents to $34.57, pushing down the yearly increase from 4.4% to 4.3%.

In January, cold and snowy weather in the Northeast and Midwest reduced the number of hours many employees worked and so artificially bumped up their hourly pay, economists say. Those effects largely reversed last month.

Since hitting a recent peak of 5.9% in March 2022, average annual wage growth has slowed as labor shortages have eased, but it’s still above the 3.5% pace Federal Reserve officials say would align with their 2% inflation goal.

The good news: Since spring last year, pay increases have outpaced inflation, giving consumers more purchasing power.

Will the Fed lower interest rates in 2024?

Economists said the report doesn’t change expectations that the Fed will probably start cutting interest rates in June, with the booming February job gains offset by the downgrades for previous months.

More significantly, yearly pay increases, which feed into inflation, dipped, giving the Fed some assurance that price increases should continue to slow. Fed Chair Jerome Powell told Congress this week that the central bank won’t begin trimming rates until it’s confident that inflation is moving sustainably toward the Fed’s 2% goal.

“The employment report does not change the view that the (Fed) will be patient in (cutting) rates,” says Nationwide economist Kathy Bostjancic. She said a rate cut will likely be on the table for May, but officials will probably wait at least until June before acting.