News

President Donald Trump fired the commissioner of the BLS after a disappointing jobs report. It likely won't help the data get ...
President Donald Trump continues to claim without evidence that the jobs report was "totally rigged." ...
While the downward revision of May and June payroll growth by 258,000 marked the largest two-month downward revision to the ...
President Trump’s pick to run the federal agency that produces the critical U.S. jobs report might not be able to make it ...
The stock market did a nosedive on Friday on worries that the U.S. economy may be weaker than previously thought and that ...
The Bureau of Labor Statistics regularly revises its estimates based on survey responses from thousands of US employers. Here ...
The bad news in last Friday’s jobs report may have been overshadowed when President Donald Trump fired the commissioner in ...
The jobs report for July revealed that some 258,000 fewer jobs were added in May and June than previously reported.
The monthly jobs report is already closely-watched on Wall Street and in Washington but has taken on a new importance after ...
Economists say firing a top official for revisions to a jobs report sends a bad message and could destroy trust in data ...
Trump responded by doing what Trump does: goes ballistic, acts impulsively, attacks the messenger, and spews falsehoods.
Labor economist Aaron Sojourner said President Donald Trump’s decision to fire the Bureau of Labor Statistics commissioner ...