The job market has indeed been under pressure recently, especially on the hiring side. But there's a detail worth noting—according to NFIB data, the number of job openings has stabilized, with recent declines mainly concentrated in the public sector.
There is also a related issue to pay attention to: the impact of birth/death rate assumptions in the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS) JOLTS data. These model assumptions may obscure the true state of labor market flows. From the overall trend, private sector hiring has shown more resilience than expected, but signals of contraction in the public sector are quite clear.
For the market, this divergent employment pattern may indicate a shift in the economic cycle. When the public sector begins to shrink, it often means fiscal policy adjustments are already underway. Such macro signals should not be ignored in on-chain asset allocation.
View Original
This page may contain third-party content, which is provided for information purposes only (not representations/warranties) and should not be considered as an endorsement of its views by Gate, nor as financial or professional advice. See Disclaimer for details.
15 Likes
Reward
15
5
Repost
Share
Comment
0/400
DataBartender
· 9h ago
The signal of public sector downsizing is indeed interesting; fiscal adjustments are coming.
View OriginalReply0
NullWhisperer
· 01-07 20:54
honestly the birth/death rate assumptions in JOLTS are basically a potential vector for misreading the whole picture... BLS models doing heavy lifting that nobody really audits
Reply0
NotFinancialAdviser
· 01-07 20:52
The resilience of the private sector is doing pretty well, but the public sector is about to downsize. This signal is a bit interesting... Is a fiscal policy adjustment coming? It might be time to start planning on-chain.
View OriginalReply0
MoonRocketman
· 01-07 20:51
Public sector downsizing is a signal of fiscal policy adjustments; we need to keep a close eye on this trajectory change.
View OriginalReply0
BearMarketBard
· 01-07 20:34
Public sector downsizing, private companies are still growing wildly—this signal is something worth paying attention to.
The job market has indeed been under pressure recently, especially on the hiring side. But there's a detail worth noting—according to NFIB data, the number of job openings has stabilized, with recent declines mainly concentrated in the public sector.
There is also a related issue to pay attention to: the impact of birth/death rate assumptions in the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS) JOLTS data. These model assumptions may obscure the true state of labor market flows. From the overall trend, private sector hiring has shown more resilience than expected, but signals of contraction in the public sector are quite clear.
For the market, this divergent employment pattern may indicate a shift in the economic cycle. When the public sector begins to shrink, it often means fiscal policy adjustments are already underway. Such macro signals should not be ignored in on-chain asset allocation.