US jobs market surpassed expectations in March but February losses were worse than first reported
The US jobs market showed resilience in March, adding 178,000 jobs, surpassing economists' expectations. The unemployment rate fell to 4.3%.

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AI-generatedThe US jobs market showed resilience in March, adding 178,000 jobs, surpassing economists' expectations. The unemployment rate fell to 4.3%. However, February's job losses were revised to a larger contraction of 133,000 jobs, and total employment for January and February was 7,000 lower than initially reported. Despite the positive March figures, the "quits rate" fell to its lowest since 2020, indicating worker uncertainty. Overall job growth has slowed since 2025, and employers are cautious due to fluctuating consumer inflation, which is expected to rise further due to the US-Israel war with Iran and rising oil prices.
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Model · rule-basedKey claims
5 extractedThe “quits rate” fell to 1.9%, the lowest since 2020.
Employers announced 217,362 job cuts in the first quarter of 2026 – the lowest total for that period since 2022.
In February, the economy lost 133,000 jobs, according to revised figures.
The unemployment rate fell to 4.3%.
Employers added 178,000 jobs last month, ahead of economists’ expectations of about 70,000.