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January Job Numbers Come In Higher Than Expected - But There's A Catch

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Briefs Finance
Published Feb 11, 2026
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A person removes a "Now Hiring" sign taped over a "Help Wanted" sign on a glass door at sunset, reflecting the higher than expected January job numbers.
Summary:
    • January looked strong. Job growth beat expectations and unemployment ticked down.
    • Last year was much weaker than reported. Revisions cut 2025's job gains to barely anything - the worst year since 2020.
    • 2024 wasn't great either. Those numbers got revised significantly lower too.

January brought good news on jobs. But the real story is what we learned about last year.

The January Numbers

The economy added 130,000 jobs last month, crushing expectations of just 55,000. Unemployment dropped to 4.3% from 4.4%.

That's a solid start to 2026.

The Revision Reality

Buried in the report: annual revisions slashed 2025's job gains down to just 181,000.

Originally? The government said 584,000.

That's less than a third of what was initially reported. It's the weakest year for job growth since 2020.

On average, employers added only 15,000 jobs per month in 2025.

It Gets Worse

The revisions didn't stop there. The Bureau of Labor Statistics cut 898,000 jobs from the period between April 2024 and March 2025.

And 2024? Initial estimates of 2 million jobs created got revised down to 1.46 million.

Another 500,000+ jobs that didn't actually exist.

What's Happening Here

Every year, the Labor Department goes back and corrects its estimates using more accurate state unemployment data.

This year's downward revision of 862,000 is the second-largest on record, behind only 2009.

Translation: the surveys businesses fill out monthly aren't capturing reality.

Response rates are down. The formulas that estimate new business creation and closure aren't keeping up.

So the numbers look decent in real-time, then get quietly erased months later.

The Takeaway

January's 130,000 jobs is encouraging.

However, The labor market spent most of 2025 essentially frozen, and we didn't know it until now.

If you're wondering why it feels harder to find a job than the headlines suggested - this is why.

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