Research Briefing | Feb 1, 2022

Five crucial questions on the US labor market

Five crucial questions on the labor market

Following a swift recovery, the US labor market is entering a crucial phase and the answers to five key questions will have a major bearing on wage growth, inflation, and the health of the recovery.

After steep job losses early in the pandemic, the rebound has been unusually rapid – nearly 19 million jobs, or 84% of the 22 million jobs lost, have been recouped and the unemployment rate is now back below 4%. But labor force participation has been slow to recover, leading to a severe labor shortage that is extending into 2022.

This year, a labor supply rebound should act as a relief valve for excessively high wage pressures. It should also ensure the ‘income baton’ is passed from fiscal stimulus to labor market-driven income growth – a keystone of our consumer and broader economic outlook.

The recovery of the labor market will continue in fits and starts. We expect robust business activity and higher labor force participation will help close the 3.6 million jobs shortfall in H2 2022. We also anticipate the unemployment rate falling toward 3.5% by year-end and the participation rate rebounding to 62.5%.

Given the murky path of the pandemic and the fact that some labor force decisions made during the pandemic could take longer to unwind, a slower rebound in labor force participation is a key risk. Not only could this affect the labor market; it would also impact inflation and the broader economic outlook.

Read the report for full answers to the five crucial questions on the US labor market:

  • What impact will Omicron have on the labor market?
  • How tight is the labor market?
  • Will labor force participation rebound?
  • Will wage growth stay hot?
  • How close are we to ‘full employment’?
Tags: Labour marketsOmicronOutlookPandemicRecoveryUnited StatesWages
Back to Resource Hub

Related Research

Takaichi’s big win doesn’t affect the fiscal outlook for Japan

Takaichi’s big win doesn’t affect the fiscal outlook for Japan

The ruling Liberal Democratic Party's (LDP) landslide election victory on Sunday doesn't change our expectation of a primary fiscal deficit of 2%-3% of GDP in FY2026-FY2028 – we still see the deficit only starting to decline from FY2029. We also keep our view that the 10-year Japanese government bond (JGB) yield will be at 2.3% at end-2026 and 2.5% at end-2027 and beyond.
US and Chinese strength won’t boost all other economies

US and Chinese strength won’t boost all other economies

Upward revisions to US and Chinese GDP growth in Q4 meant that the previously anticipated soft end to 2025 failed to materialise.
Meta’s Impact on Travel and Tourism

Meta’s Impact on Travel and Tourism

Advertising on Meta Platforms Supports Billions in Travel Business Revenue Across the US, EU27, and UK