Survey: Economists predict jump in unemployment and job losses over next 12 months
Now hiring sign in a shop window
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The job market has been a powerhouse in the years since the coronavirus pandemic, but a new Bankrate poll suggests that might not last for much longer.

The unemployment rate is predicted to surge to 4.6 percent a year from now, one percentage point higher than its current 3.6 percent level. Employers could also start cutting jobs, the first such call in any previous Bankrate survey of economists. Those could amount to the U.S. economy having 252,000 fewer positions by this time next year, according to the average forecast among economists. The median forecast among economists, however, still called for a modest gain of 60,000 jobs.

A 4.6 percent unemployment rate eclipses the Fed’s 4.5 percent estimate, according to officials’ projections from their March rate-setting meeting. Unemployment hasn’t ever climbed by half a percentage point or more without the U.S. economy being in a recession, though not since the late 1960s has unemployment remained that low during a downturn.

[sc code="block_quote" quote_text="The job market has remained remarkably robust and resilient — so far. With increased caution on the part of many businesses, with credit tightening and with inflation and interest rates still high, the job market faces no shortage of headwinds." source="Mark Hamrick, senior economic analyst at Bankrate" image="https://www.bankrate.com/2023/03/17104056/mark-hamrick.jpeg"]

Key takeaways:

Higher rates, bank failures could bring an end to the booming post-pandemic job market

Jobseekers have been reaping the benefits of the most robust labor market in more than half a century. A record number of job openings coupled with an estimated 3.5 million workers gave workers the power to negotiate for higher pay and hunt for better positions. Employers lifted wages by the fastest pace in records dating back two decades, according to the Department of Labor.

Even against the Fed’s fastest rate hikes in 40 years and growing recession odds, workers were still hungry to job hunt. More than half (or 56 percent) of Americans in the labor force said in a separate Bankrate survey from April they were planning to hunt for a new position in the next year, up from 51 percent in 2022.

But the booming labor market brought inflation along with it, calling into question whether workers were truly getting ahead. Wages in 2022 jumped 5.3 percent from a year ago, while consumer prices soared at a faster 8 percent pace, according to data from the Department of Labor.