--- title: "Middle East Conflict Continues: How Long Can US Non-Farm Employment Hold Up?" type: "News" locale: "en" url: "https://longbridge.com/en/news/281683895.md" description: "U.S. Non-Farm Employment increased by 178,000 in March, appearing strong on the surface, but the average for the two months is only 22,500 per month, and wage growth has fallen to its lowest level since the pandemic reopening. The truth behind the falling unemployment rate is that nearly 400,000 Americans completely exited the labor market due to difficulty finding jobs. A larger variable comes from the Middle East: the closure of the Strait of Hormuz has triggered energy shocks, where high oil prices could offset 10% to 50% of the impact of Trump's tax cuts each quarter" datetime: "2026-04-04T11:37:37.000Z" locales: - [zh-CN](https://longbridge.com/zh-CN/news/281683895.md) - [en](https://longbridge.com/en/news/281683895.md) - [zh-HK](https://longbridge.com/zh-HK/news/281683895.md) --- > Supported Languages: [简体中文](https://longbridge.com/zh-CN/news/281683895.md) | [繁體中文](https://longbridge.com/zh-HK/news/281683895.md) # Middle East Conflict Continues: How Long Can US Non-Farm Employment Hold Up? Behind a glowing employment report lies a more unsettling question. The U.S. Department of Labor's March Non-Farm Employment data, released on April 4, seemingly gave the market a reassurance—but the shadow of war and structural employment decline are making this comfort fragile. Non-Farm Employment increased by 178,000 in March, the highest gain in nearly 15 months, reversing a revised 133,000 decrease in February. The unemployment rate also fell back to 4.3% from February's high. Upon the release of the data, the market breathed a brief sigh of relief. **However, the drop in the unemployment rate was not due to a surge in job opportunities. The reality is: nearly 400,000 Americans exited the labor market last month.** When jobs become increasingly difficult to find, people simply choose to give up. Labor economist Guy Berger directly threw cold water on the news: "No one is talking about the labor market re-accelerating anymore." ## Average Numbers Reveal the True Temperature Significant fluctuations in single-month data mask the true operating rhythm of the employment market. When February and March are averaged together, **the monthly average increase in employment is only about 22,500—this is the baseline closer to reality.** **A deeper crisis lies in the fact that the U.S. labor force participation rate fell to 61.9% in March, the lowest in nearly five years.** If pandemic interference is excluded, this figure even marks the lowest point since 1976 (when women began entering the workforce in large numbers). Gus Faucher, chief economist at PNC Financial Services, points out that an aging population and recent restrictions on immigration are causing a continuous contraction in labor supply. Another detail worth noting: year-over-year wage growth for ordinary workers (non-supervisory) has slowed to 3.5%, the lowest level in the five years since the pandemic reopening. Slowing wage growth means the support for consumer purchasing power is weakening. ## An Unhealthy Balance of "Low Hiring, Low Layoffs" The current U.S. labor market exhibits an extremely contradictory quality: a lack of hiring momentum, yet companies are also reluctant to lay off staff. Data shows that over the past year, the healthcare industry has been almost the sole hiring engine. Excluding healthcare, other economic sectors have been losing jobs. In the past 12 months, the U.S. economy has generated only 327,000 jobs, a far cry from the usual norm of 1 million to 2 million in previous years. "Hiring is low, but layoffs are also low," explained Bill Adams, chief economist at Fifth Third Bank. The four-week moving average of initial jobless claims fell to 207,000, remaining at historical lows. This state of "no hiring and no firing" is referred to by economists as a "low hiring-low layoff" mode, maintaining a delicate and fragile balance. ## Hormuz Shock: This Time It's Different In recent years, the U.S. employment market has weathered aggressive interest rate hike cycles, regional banking crises, and tariff shocks, "bending but not breaking" each time. However, according to The Wall Street Journal, the impact of the Iranian war and the resulting closure of the Strait of Hormuz on the global energy supply chain is different in nature. **Economists at the Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis estimate that if oil prices remain at current levels, the extra consumer spending on fuel each quarter will be equivalent to offsetting 10% to 50% of the effect of Trump's tax cuts from last year.** The logic is straightforward: every dollar that flows to the gas tank is one less dollar flowing to restaurants, retailers, and service industries—the very sectors that constitute the bulk of U.S. employment. Meanwhile, rising bond yields have pushed the 30-year mortgage rate back from 6% to about 6.5%. The prospects for the long-awaited real estate recovery and the boost to construction employment have consequently dimmed. ## Consumer Buffers Are Running Out The energy shock caused by the Russia-Ukraine conflict in 2022 was weathered by consumers using excess savings accumulated during the pandemic. This time, the situation is different. Nathan Sheets, chief global economist at Citigroup, points out that consumer savings buffers have largely been depleted. Coupled with slowing wage growth, households' ability to absorb price increases has significantly decreased. He said: "What could knock them down is a significant deterioration in the labor market." Sheets likens the current employment market to "an athlete in peak training state"—years of absorbing shocks have made businesses leaner and more adaptable. However, Skanda Amarnath, executive director of the economic policy think tank Employ America, offers a more cautious characterization, defining the current employment market as "robustly soggy"—"sluggish for a long time, but not yet collapsed." Guy Berger bluntly stated: "2022, 2023, 2024, and 2025 have taught me that it is not impossible for things to continue deteriorating at a very slow pace." ## The Fed is in a Dilemma The resilience of the employment market has not made the Federal Reserve's situation any easier. Before the war broke out, several Fed officials still expected to resume interest rate cuts this year. Now, more officials have indicated that rates might remain unchanged indefinitely. Mary Daly, President of the Federal Reserve Bank of San Francisco, wrote in a blog post on April 4: "It is not easy to communicate to the public that zero job growth is consistent with maximum employment." She also warned that the upper limit of economic growth has moved downward, and the risks of misjudging interest rates as too high or too low are increasing. The core contradiction facing the Fed is: it has spent five years explaining to the public that "high inflation is temporary," and each new supply shock makes this narrative harder to maintain. If interest rates are kept high to suppress inflation, the employment market may come under pressure; if interest rates are cut to protect jobs, inflation expectations could spiral out of control. Daleep Singh, chief global economist at PGIM, presented two scenarios: if the two sides reach a decent ceasefire, oil prices are expected to fall back to $80 to $100 per barrel; if the conflict escalates, supply chain disruptions will drag down growth far exceeding the duration of the conflict itself, making it harder for the Fed to cushion the economic downturn through interest rate cuts. The outcome depends largely on how long the war lasts. ### Related Stocks - [BP p.l.c. 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