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US hiring recession ends, but job search remains difficult

Created at 5 Jun · 9:16 PM2 sources↑ Market-relevant2 events
IN SHORT

The May jobs report surpassed forecasts, indicating an end to the hiring recession. However, job seekers face an average search time of six months, highlighting ongoing labor market complexities.

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Key Numbers

6 monthsaverage job search duration

Who's Involved

US Department of Labor
released the May jobs report
US hiring recession ends, but job search remains difficult

↳ Why This Matters

While headline employment figures suggest a recovering labor market, the extended job search duration for individuals indicates that the recovery is not evenly distributed and may mask underlying structural issues affecting job seekers.

Key facts

  • The May jobs report indicated an end to the hiring recession.
  • Finding a new job is taking an average of six months.
  • The jobs report surpassed previous forecasts.

The U.S. labor market has shown signs of recovery, with the May jobs report significantly exceeding forecasts and suggesting an end to a period of hiring difficulties. Despite these positive headline numbers, the reality for job seekers remains challenging. The average time it takes to find a new role has extended to six months, indicating a disconnect between overall hiring trends and the individual experience of securing employment. This prolonged job search period highlights underlying complexities in the labor market that are not fully captured by headline employment figures.

Frequently asked questions

The May jobs report surpassed forecasts, suggesting that the hiring recession has ended.

On average, it is taking individuals six months to land a new role.

While headline numbers suggest an end to the hiring recession, the extended job search time indicates ongoing challenges for job seekers.

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How It Developed

5 Jun · 8:53 PM
The article reiterates that the May jobs report ended the hiring recession but questions why job searches now take six months.
MarketWatch via PiQSuite
5 Jun · 8:53 PM
Despite a strong May jobs report, the hiring recession may be over, but finding a new job is taking longer than expected.
MarketWatch via PiQSuite

Sources

T1
The hiring recession is over — but landing a new role is much harder than it looksm.piqsuite.com
T1
The hiring recession is over — but landing a new job is much harder than it looksm.piqsuite.com

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