Americans are turning more bearish on jobs even with unemployment still low, a split that suggests labor-market anxiety is being driven by more than just headline layoffs. One survey trend has now sat at recession-era highs for a year, while companies are still cutting staff and even workers with stable jobs are feeling exposed, according to the reporting.
That unease is colliding with a slower-moving force: an aging population that is steadily reshaping who gets hired. ADP’s Nela Richardson said the U.S. is becoming "not just a service economy, but a healthcare-driven economy," and the Bureau of Labor Statistics expects home health and personal care aides to add 739,800 jobs between 2024 and 2034, more than any other occupation.
For employers, that means the pressure points are widening. Healthcare systems already face shortages, high turnover and high labor costs, while construction is losing older tradespeople faster than younger workers are replacing them, a gap that has been weighing on productivity, quality and speed.
What happens next will hinge on whether the weakness in sentiment starts showing up in hiring and spending data, and whether demographic demand keeps pulling labor toward care work. For now, the tension is clear: even as Americans grow gloomier about the job market, the broader economy is still sending mixed signals, leaving employers to navigate both fear and a tighter supply of workers.