The U.S. labor market is still adding jobs, but the bigger story is the shrinking pool of people available to work, and the mood around it has gone sour fast. The labor-force participation rate slipped to 61.9 percent in March, its lowest since 1977 outside the pandemic, as an aging population and the Trump administration’s immigration crackdown pulled more people out of the work force.
That drop helps explain why the March jobs report looked stronger than many economists expected, even as underlying hiring remains patchy. The same labor-market math is feeding a more pessimistic public mood: a Federal Reserve Bank of New York survey found Americans now think they have only about a 45 percent chance of finding a new job within three months, below the reading in December 2020, when the pandemic freeze was still doing its worst.
That disconnect is making forecasters look shaky. Wall Street economists have already missed the headline payroll number three times in 2026, according to the latest forecast misses, with January, February and March each delivering a different surprise. Weather, strikes, immigration changes and technical quirks in the data have all made the monthly tape harder to read, and that leaves investors and policymakers trying to judge a labor market that can swing from weak to hot in a matter of weeks.
For workers, the consequence is a grindier search and more hesitation to move. For employers, especially in lower-hiring industries, the labor supply squeeze can keep openings hard to fill even when overall unemployment looks tame. And for the Federal Reserve, it means the job market’s surface calm may hide more volatility underneath than the headline unemployment rate suggests.