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Jobs report: Unemployment rise may mean recession, rule says, but likely not this time

The economy seems to be on solid footing, with the nation’s gross domestic product and employment both notching healthy gains recently.

Yet Friday’s jobs report revealed that the unemployment rate last month jumped from 4.1% to 4.3% - still a historically low figure -  but a sign that the U.S. could be in the early stages of a recession based on one measure.

Stay calm. Most economists say the measure - called the Sahm rule – probably doesn’t apply this time because of the unprecedented ways the pandemic upended the economy and labor market.

Still, a 4.4% jobless rate is roiling stocks and may signal further weakening ahead in an already slowing labor market. In Mid-morning trading, the Dow Jones Industrial Average was down 363 points and the S&P 500 index was off 1.4%.

“I think it would raise some concerns about whether we can indeed pull off a soft landing,” says Sarah House, senior economist at Wells Fargo. A soft landing refers to a Federal Reserve interest-rate hiking cycle, such as in 2022 and 2023, that lowers inflation without tipping the nation into recession.

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A layoff notice is pictured in this stock photo.
A layoff notice is pictured in this stock photo.

Economists expect Friday’s report to show unemployment held at 4.1% last month while the nation added a sturdy 178,000 jobs, according to a Bloomberg survey, though such estimates often miss their mark.

How does the Sahm rule work?

According to the Sahm rule, if the unemployment rate, based on a three-month average, is a half percentage point above its lowest point over the past 12 months, the economy has entered a downturn. If unemployment reached 4.2% in July, the three-month average would be 4.1%, a half point above the 3.6% average a year ago.

The rule, the brainchild of noted economist Claudia Sahm, has correctly predicted each U.S. recession since the 1970s. The reasoning is simple: Rising unemployment generally reflects a surge in layoffs. And laid-off workers tend to pull back spending, hurting businesses, which then cut more workers, perpetuating a negative cycle.

Yet there are several reasons the Sahm rule likely doesn’t apply this time, top forecasters say.

Layoffs recently have climbed to the highest levels in more than a year, based on unemployment insurance claims, but they’re still historically low. That’s largely because employers have been reluctant to lay off workers following severe COVID-related labor shortages, says Ryan Sweet, chief U.S. economist at Oxford Economics.

Why did the unemployment rate go up?

The jobless rate has risen mostly because of a stream of workers into the labor force, or the pool of people both working and looking for jobs. Those include Americans who left during the pandemic for health reasons, to care for children, or to go back to school, along with others who have been drawn into the job market by robust wage growth the past few years, Sweet says.