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US Hiring Continues at a Steady Pace
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By The New York Times
Published 33 minutes ago on
July 2, 2026

Information available at a job fair in Sunrise, Fla., June 26, 2025. Employers added 57,000 jobs in June 2026, and the unemployment rate fell to 4.2 percent from 4.3 percent the previous month, the Bureau of Labor Statistics reported on July 2, 2026. (Scott McIntyre/The New York Times)

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Employment figures for June showed the U.S. economy continues to stride past obstacles including the inflationary pressures of the war with Iran.

Employers added 57,000 jobs last month and the unemployment rate fell to 4.2% from 4.3% the previous month. In recent years, economists have remarked with surprise at the resilience of the U.S. economy. At the midpoint of 2026, with the volatility caused by President Donald Trump’s tariff hikes mostly baked in and the war with Iran potentially winding down, economic durability may be the emerging norm.

Average hourly earnings growth for workers registered 3.5% on an annual basis, a marked slowdown from the peak a few years ago. And pay raises are not keeping up with prices, a major reason consumer sentiment remains so low. Inflation is now hovering around 4% after dropping to near 2% in 2024.

In positive news, employment in professional and business services, which fell overall from 2024 to 2025, has trended up since the start of 2026, and the sector added 36,000 jobs in June. Jobs in social assistance and healthcare have continued their steady gains. Despite a bump in activity from the World Cup, leisure and hospitality employment declined by 61,000 in June. Labor economists have mentioned, though, that this summer’s numbers may be a noisy reflection of seasonal adjustments in the data.

This was the fourth consecutive monthly increase in jobs, an impressive turnaround from the jobs slowdown that occurred throughout 2025. The Bureau of Labor Statistics found that U.S. employers added only 181,000 jobs last year, far fewer than the 1.5 million jobs that were added in 2024.

Jason Draho, an economist and the head of asset allocation for the Americas at UBS, called the report “not bad.”

He noted that the addition of 57,000 jobs “is right around what most economists assume is the trend level of job growth.”

Gregory Daco, the chief economist at EY, a consulting firm, said he anticipates job growth will stabilize at approximately 70,000 per month for the rest of the year, and the unemployment rate may edge up, but only slightly.

The unemployment rate has been at or below 4.5% since October 2021, the longest streak of low unemployment since the long expansion in the late 1960s. Still, an unusually low number of people are quitting their jobs; surveys show workers are staying put because they lack confidence in finding better opportunities.

This article originally appeared in The New York Times.

By Talmon Joseph Smith/Scott McIntyre
c. 2026 The New York Times Company

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