US Nonfarm Payrolls Revised Down by 911K
2025-09-09 14:09
By
Joana Taborda
1 min. read
The US economy added 911K fewer jobs in the 12 months through March 2025 than initially reported - the largest downward revision since at least 2000 - according to the BLS’s preliminary benchmark revision.
This represents a -0.6% adjustment, compared with an absolute average change of 0.2% in total nonfarm employment over the past decade.
Nearly all sectors added fewer jobs than initially estimated, with the steepest downward revisions in leisure and hospitality (-176K), professional and business services (-158K), retail trade (-126.2K), and wholesale trade (-110.3K).
In contrast, payrolls were revised higher in transportation and warehousing (+6.6K) and utilities (+3.7K).
The revision captures the gap between two independently compiled employment measures, each subject to distinct sources of error.
A year earlier, the preliminary data showed a downward revision of 818K jobs, later adjusted to -598K.
The latest figures suggest the labor market has weakened more than previously thought.