Employment is on the rise in the US, with the latest report by the US Bureau of Labor Statistics indicating this morning that nonfarm payroll employment rose by 253,000 jobs in the month of April.
The unemployment rate currently is said to sit at 3.4%, while the number of unemployed persons is numbered at 5.7 million. The biggest gains over the course of the month came from the professional and business services sector, which saw 45,000 jobs added, versus the average of 25,000.
In a positive move for labor, the average hourly earnings for all employees also rose, jumping 16 cents to $33.36, with average hourly earnings increasing by 4.4% over the last 12 months – which is in stark contrast to current levels of inflation.

Downward revisions for February and March
The big story on social media this morning however is the downward revisions for prior employment figures. The month of February saw its figure revised down to +248,000 jobs, a decline of 78,000 from the prior stated +326,000. The month of March meanwhile saw a downward revision of 71,000 jobs, dropping from +236,000 to +165,000. On a cumulative basis, the figures mean there were 149,000 less jobs than previously reported.
The changes are said to be a result of additional reports received from industry and government agencies since the initial figures were published, and from the “recalculation of seasonal factors.”
Given the size of the revisions, Zerohedge created a simple chart on the matter.
Downward revisions pic.twitter.com/6zsa7pMh7O
— zerohedge (@zerohedge) May 5, 2023
Others meanwhile question the motive behind the strategy.
It has always been bad but this is breathtaking. TOTAL LIES. Vastly overstate Feb and March in order to keep the narrative going and then revise those numbers dramatically lower when no one cares anymore. And then you run out and trumpet "253,000 new jobs" in April when the…
— TF Metals Report (@TFMetals) May 5, 2023
Same routine every month: Media report headline jobs numbers are strong. More careful reporters dig into the numbers & see full-time jobs are being lost to part time, real wages are down, & earlier "strong" months are revised down. Yet the media fall for it every time. https://t.co/dixCkCFYl9
— Tom Elliott (@tomselliott) May 5, 2023
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