The unemployment rate fell. That usually means good news. But this time, the drop happened because 720,000 people stopped looking for work entirely. The labor force is shrinking, not growing.
A Massive Exodus
Over the past twelve months, more than one million workers have exited the labor force. The number of employed people fell by 1.06 million during that period. Meanwhile, the number of unemployed people actually rose by 40,000.
The household survey showed a drop of 507,000 in employment for the month.
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What Economists Are Saying
RBC's head of U.S. economics, Mike Reid, commented that the falling unemployment rate "may well be a story of retirements but could also be a story of prior job seekers dropping out of the labor force." Dan North, senior economist at Allianz, called the participation rate "a big leg down" over the past year and said "this is a more important number" than the unemployment rate.
Heather Long, the lead economist for Navy Federal Credit Union, described the situation as "shocking to see 720,000 people stop looking for work entirely and the hospitality sector shed jobs. It's a better job market than a year ago, but opportunities are limited."
Prime-Age Workers Leaving
The decline is not just retirees. The participation rate for prime-age workers (ages 25 to 54) fell to 83.3% in June, the lowest since December 2023. That group dropped 0.6 percentage points in one month.
The employment-to-population ratio hit 59%, the lowest since October 2021. Dan North questioned the retirement-and-immigration explanation often used to explain the drop. "Looking at the statistics now, that argument doesn't hold up so well," he said.
Historical context underscores that labor force participation had been trending downward since the early 2000s due to demographic shifts, but the recent acceleration is notable. The COVID-19 pandemic caused a sharp plunge in 2020, followed by a partial recovery. The current data suggests that recovery has stalled, with the rate now lower than at any point outside of the pandemic in half a century.
What to Watch
Economists are watching whether this trend continues. The June data may be noisy because of a sharp drop in leisure and hospitality jobs. But the decline over the past year is significant and concerning. As Dan North said, "I hate to use the word 'alarming,'" but the numbers are cause for concern.
This sustained decline in labor force participation raises questions about the long-term health of the U.S. labor market. If workers are leaving due to discouragement or lack of suitable jobs, the economy may be facing a structural problem rather than a temporary dip. Policymakers and investors will need to monitor whether this trend reverses or becomes entrenched.
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