From This Week at Mercatus <[email protected]>
Subject The Jobs Report That Wasn’t
Date October 16, 2025 2:31 PM
  Links have been removed from this email. Learn more in the FAQ.
  Links have been removed from this email. Learn more in the FAQ.
Web Version: [link removed]
----------------------------------------










[link removed]


[link removed]

Jack Salmon and Revana Sharfuddin dug into employment data in their post on &ldquo;The September Jobs Report That Never Was.&rdquo; They showed that while headline job growth appeared strong, the underlying data tell a more complicated story: declining full-time employment, weakening wage growth, and a labor market increasingly held up by part-time and government jobs.


Their takeaway is both simple and urgent: Without robust private-sector growth, no amount of statistical gloss can sustain the story of a healthy economy.


But beyond that, Jack and Revana also seized the chance created by the government shutdown, which delayed the release of the September jobs report from the Bureau of Labor Statistics. Jack and Revana took the opportunity to examine how labor statistics are produced and to identify ways measurement could be improved. Any statistic can be co-opted by political actors, and labor statistics often are. As Jack and Revana put it, &ldquo;The real problem isn&rsquo;t bias; it&rsquo;s something deeper about how we measure employment in the first place and why our measurement system keeps missing by such large margins.&rdquo;


Large revisions, such as the ones the BLS released in September showing the economy added hundreds of thousands of fewer jobs than initially estimated, can undermine trust, but the answer isn&rsquo;t throwing out the entirety of the current approach. We should make incremental, but important, improvements. Things like quarterly benchmarking, refined imputations, and great transparency could substantially improve accuracy.

[link removed]
Read the entirety of their analysis and proposed solutions here .

mailto:[email protected]?subject=
Ben Brophy
Vice President, Strategic Engagement

Mercatus Center at George Mason University

Topics & Issues



Revana Sharfuddin is
[link removed]
cited in Anthropic&rsquo;s blog for her argument that the US tax code creates a bias favoring physical capital investment over human capital investment.


Henry Oliver reflects on Peter Pan and the
[link removed]
adventure of growing up .


Scott Hodge
[link removed]
reveals how nonprofit commercial income is leaking $51 billion from the federal tax base each year, and calls on the Joint Committee on Taxation to rethink what counts as a tax expenditure.

[link removed]
Tariffs are a fiscal illusion . It might seem as if they tax foreigners, but they hit Americans harder, according to Jack Salmon.









You&rsquo;re receiving this email because you signed up for This Week at Mercatus newsletter. If you&rsquo;d prefer not to receive emails, you can
[link removed]
update your preferences .

[link removed]
Manage Preferences |
[link removed]
Privacy Policy


[link removed]

[link removed]

[link removed]

[link removed]

[link removed]






----------------------------------------
This email was sent by: Mercatus Center
3434 Washington Blvd., 4th Floor,
Arlington, VA, 22201 USA

Privacy Policy: [link removed]
Update Profile: [link removed]
Manage Subscriptions: [link removed]
Unsubscribe: [link removed]
Screenshot of the email generated on import

Message Analysis

  • Sender: n/a
  • Political Party: n/a
  • Country: n/a
  • State/Locality: n/a
  • Office: n/a
  • Email Providers:
    • Salesforce Email Studio (ExactTarget)