The labor market is deteriorating for both job seekers and employers. Job seekers face fewer openings and longer periods of unemployment the long-term unemployment rate recently hit its highest since late 2021. Employers, meanwhile, struggle to find qualified candidates, with industries like homebuilding hit by labor shortages.
The result has been a sharp slowdown in job creation. In 2025, the U.S. economy even lost jobs in two separate months, a rare occurrence since the pandemic. Economists now forecast an average of just 57,000 jobs per month in early 2026, down from 147,000 before Trump’s “Liberation Day” tariffs. Since those tariffs, job creation has plunged to just 38,600 per month, underscoring the drag on hiring.
Sluggish hiring and elevated long-term unemployment reveal that both employers and workers are struggling to adapt to a shifting economic environment. Uncertain trade policies, higher borrowing costs, and persistent skills mismatches are weighing heavily on the labor market. With job creation decelerating, the outlook points to weaker economic health for the U.S. in 2026, raising concerns about growth and stability.
Experts point to Trump’s worldwide tariffs as a turning point for job creation, with business leaders and economists citing unpredictable trade policies as a major drag on hiring. Companies, uncertain about future costs, have scaled back expansion and slowed recruitment.
At the same time, businesses are accelerating AI adoption, raising questions about its impact on the workforce. Goldman Sachs economists estimate AI could eventually replace 6 7% of existing jobs. Yet, history suggests new careers may emerge alongside technological disruption, reshaping the labor market in 2026 and beyond.
Reduced immigration is compounding labor market challenges. Trump’s crackdown has sharply cut the number of people entering the U.S. to work. Economists debate the exact shortfall, but agree the decline is significant.
The Federal Reserve Bank of San Francisco estimates just 500,000 immigrants arrived in 2025, down from 2.2 million in 2024. In one modeled scenario, if one million people were deported, the U.S. workforce would stop growing in 2025 and begin shrinking in the decades ahead intensifying labor shortages and slowing economic growth.
Economists and Federal Reserve officials remain divided on whether the U.S. job market’s weakness stems more from falling labor demand or shrinking labor supply. Preston Caldwell, chief U.S. Economist at Morningstar, noted that “it’s still unclear to what extent decelerating job growth is being driven by falling labor demand versus labor supply.”
This uncertainty carries major implications for borrowing costs. Several Fed policymakers believe labor demand is declining faster than supply, which could push unemployment higher. That outlook may prompt interest rate cuts in 2026 to stimulate hiring, though success is far from guaranteed. Either way, the trajectory of Fed policy could become the defining labor market story of the year.
The U.S. job market is caught in a paradox slowing job creation and rising unemployment on one side, labor shortages and skills mismatches on the other. Tariffs, immigration restrictions, and rapid AI adoption are reshaping both demand and supply for workers. Economists warn this imbalance could push unemployment higher, potentially prompting the Federal Reserve to cut interest rates. Whether those cuts succeed or not, the labor market’s instability is set to be one of the defining economic challenges of 2026.