Everyday Economics: Jobs report to test how long consumers can keep carrying economy

Everyday Economics: Jobs report to test how long consumers can keep carrying economy

Spread the love

The jobs report is the main event this week. But the real question is bigger than payrolls.

Can household spending keep holding up when the finances behind it are deteriorating?

That is the tension in the economy right now. Consumers are still spending – and on the surface, that looks fine. Consumer spending is the largest part of the U.S. economy. As long as households keep buying goods and services, businesses earn revenue, workers keep their paychecks, and the expansion continues.

But spending alone does not tell us whether the consumer is healthy. What matters is how that spending is being financed.

A household spending because income is rising and job prospects are improving is in a very different position than one spending because prices are higher, essential costs are harder to avoid, and savings are being drained to maintain the same standard of living.

The first version is sustainable. The second is fragile.

Right now, the data look more like the second.

Prices are still rising. Interest rates are still high. Real disposable income has softened. The personal saving rate has plummeted to 2.6%, down from over 4% at the start of the year. And consumer confidence remains deeply pessimistic. Households are still spending – but they are working harder to do it.

That combination matters.

A low saving rate is not always a warning sign. When people expect stronger income growth or better job prospects, they may rationally spend more today and save less. But that is not what the current data show.

In my recent analysis of savings and consumer expectations, the striking feature was not just that the saving rate is low – it was that saving and confidence are falling together. Households are not saving less because they feel better about the future. They are saving less while feeling worse about it.

That points to a different story: pressure-driven dissaving. Families are drawing down their financial buffers to keep spending before they pull back entirely.

That is the bridge between household finances and the next jobs report. Household pressure eventually becomes business pressure.

Consumer spending is revenue for businesses. If households keep spending, firms can keep operating even when growth is modest. But if that spending is funded by draining savings rather than by rising real incomes, that revenue support is fragile.

Businesses can absorb slower growth if profit margins are protected. They can absorb higher costs if demand is strong enough to pass them along to consumers. But when consumers grow more price-sensitive while costs remain elevated, the math gets harder.

That is where the labor market enters the story.

Many businesses are already facing higher financing costs, higher wages, higher insurance and energy costs, and less room to raise prices. If consumers start resisting price increases or trading down to cheaper alternatives, revenue growth slows while costs stay sticky. Profit margins narrow.

When that happens, firms usually do not start with mass layoffs. They start with cheaper adjustments: slowing hiring, leaving open positions unfilled, cutting hours, delaying backfills, and leaning harder on existing workers.

That is why the unemployment rate can look calm even as the labor market quietly softens.

The first sign of weakness is not always a wave of firings. Sometimes it is the job that never gets posted. The shift that gets cut. The worker who wants full-time hours but can only find part-time work. The replacement hire pushed to next quarter.

April’s jobs report already showed pieces of that pattern. The headline numbers were quiet but telling: nonfarm payrolls rose by just 115,000, and the unemployment rate held steady at 4.3%. On the surface, that looked like a labor market still expanding – but it was a clear step down.

The details were softer still. Private payroll growth has slowed. The three-month trend was running at roughly 55,000 jobs per month – a meaningful deceleration. And the number of people working part time for economic reasons – those who want full-time work but cannot get it, or whose hours have been cut – jumped by 445,000 to 4.9 million.

That is not a collapsing labor market. But it is not an accelerating one either. It has stopped getting worse without clearly starting to get better.

The sector mix reinforces that picture. Health care and a handful of defensive service industries are still hiring. But more cyclical parts of the economy – construction, manufacturing, professional services, financial activities, leisure and hospitality – have been notably softer.

That is exactly where the household-finance story should show up first.

When businesses are confident about future demand, they hire ahead of it. When they are uncertain, they wait. That waiting defines the current moment: a low-hire, low-fire labor market. Employers are not rushing to lay people off – but they are not aggressively adding workers either. Hiring slows before layoffs rise. Hours weaken before unemployment jumps.

This is why Friday’s report matters.

The headline payroll number will dominate the coverage. But the more important question is whether the labor market is still absorbing the consumer squeeze – or beginning to transmit it into business hiring decisions.

A strong report would suggest firms still see enough demand to keep hiring despite the pressure on households. A weak report would suggest the consumer slowdown is starting to show up in the decisions employers make about staffing.

Beyond the headline, here is what to watch:

Private payrolls – a cleaner read on business demand than total payrolls, which include government hiring.

Hours worked – cutting hours is often the first adjustment employers make, before any layoffs.

Labor-force participation – the unemployment rate can hold steady while the labor market weakens, if discouraged workers stop looking for jobs altogether.

Involuntary part-time work – captures workers who are employed but not getting the hours they need.

Revisions – labor markets often look stronger in real time than they do once the data are revised.

Sector mix – if hiring remains concentrated in a few defensive industries while cyclical sectors stay flat, the expansion is continuing but narrowing.

The broader story is straightforward.

Consumers are still carrying the economy. But they are carrying more weight with less cushion.

That is sustainable for a while – not indefinitely. Households can smooth spending by drawing down savings, using credit, or trading down before cutting back entirely. But eventually, weaker finances show up somewhere: in slower discretionary spending, in weaker business pricing power, in narrower profit margins, and then in hiring.

The economy does not need to collapse for the labor market to weaken. It only needs consumer demand to become less reliable at the same time business costs stay elevated.

That is where we are.

The labor market is not breaking. But it has decelerated. Spending has not collapsed. But the financial foundation beneath it has weakened.

This week’s report will help answer the question that matters most for the second half of the year: Are consumers still strong enough to keep businesses hiring, or are deteriorating household finances pushing companies into a more defensive posture?

The most likely answer is not dramatic. Probably more of the same: a low-hire, low-fire economy where employers avoid layoffs but remain reluctant to expand.

That can look stable for a while. But stable is not the same as strong.

⚠️ Tornado Watch issued June 11 at 2:02PM CDT until June 11 at 9:00PM CDT by NWS Chicago IL
⚠️ Flood Watch issued June 11 at 12:39PM CDT until June 11 at 11:00PM CDT by NWS Chicago IL
Today Jun 10
Chance Showers And Thunderstorms
82° 58°

Chance Showers And Thunderstorms

💨 15 to 20 mph 💧 42%

Leave a Comment





Latest News Stories

Jan. 1 law lets Illinois veterinarians skip rabies shots for at-risk pets

Jan. 1 law lets Illinois veterinarians skip rabies shots for at-risk pets

By Catrina Barker | The Center Square contributorThe Center Square (The Center Square) – A new Illinois law taking effect Jan. 1 will let veterinarians renew yearly medical exemptions for...
NL Library Graphic.2

New Lenox Library Board Approves Tax Levy and 2025 Financial Audit

New Lenox Public Library District Board Meeting | Nov. 2025 Article Summary: The New Lenox Public Library District Board of Trustees unanimously approved its annual tax levy ordinance and accepted...
Meeting Briefs

Meeting Summary and Briefs: Lincoln-Way Community High School District 210 for December 18, 2025

Lincoln-Way Community High School District 210 Meeting | December 18, 2025 The Lincoln-Way Community High School District 210 Board of Education met on Thursday, Dec. 18, 2025, to finalize several...
Will County Board Graphic.03

Homer Glen Landscape Business Granted Extension Due to Utility Delays

Will County Board Meeting | December 18, 2025 Article Summary: The Will County Board approved a second extension for a special use permit for a landscaping business in Homer Glen....
New Lenox Park District Graphic

New Lenox Park District Approves 2025-2026 Tax Levy Ordinance

New Lenox Community Park District Board Meeting | Nov. 2025 Article Summary: The New Lenox Community Park District Board of Commissioners formally adopted its annual tax levy ordinance following a...
new-lenox-fire-district-stations.2

New Lenox Fire District Adopts 2026 Budget and 2025 Tax Levy

New Lenox Fire Protection District Meeting | Nov. 17, 2025 Article Summary: The New Lenox Fire Protection District Board of Trustees unanimously approved its budget for the 2026 calendar year...
Chicago school board raises tax levy on families 'at a breaking point'

Chicago school board raises tax levy on families ‘at a breaking point’

By Jim Talamonti | The Center SquareThe Center Square (The Center Square) – The Chicago Board of Education has raised its property tax levy to fund Chicago Public Schools, but...
Lake Co. Circuit Clerk can’t undo $2.5M verdict for workers fired over politics

Lake Co. Circuit Clerk can’t undo $2.5M verdict for workers fired over politics

By Scott Holland | Legal NewslineThe Center Square A federal judge has agreed to preserve a jury’s verdict ordering the Lake County Circuit Clerk’s Office to pay more than $2.5...
Illinois quick hits: McClain reports to prison

Illinois quick hits: McClain reports to prison

By Jim Talamonti | The Center SquareThe Center Square McClain reports to prison Former Illinois House Speaker Michael Madigan’s longtime associate has begun serving a two-year prison sentence at a...
Will County Board Graphic.01

New Lenox Used Car Dealership Approved with Conditions

Will County Board Meeting | December 18, 2025 Article Summary: The Will County Board approved a special use permit allowing a used car dealership to operate in an industrial park...
Meeting Briefs

Meeting Summary and Briefs: New Lenox Township Board for Nov. 13, 2025

New Lenox Township Board Meeting | Nov. 13, 2025 The New Lenox Township Board of Trustees met on Thursday, November 13, 2025, to set tax levies and review departmental reports....
Op-Ed: How one puppy mill-teliant retailer is preempting local laws

Op-Ed: How one puppy mill-teliant retailer is preempting local laws

By Madison Gesiotto GilbertThe Center Square One of the most overlooked threats to community-based control in America isn’t coming from Washington politicians or even state government officials, but from a...
Illinois quick hits: Chicago school board raises property tax levy

Illinois quick hits: Chicago school board raises property tax levy

By Jim Talamonti | The Center SquareThe Center Square Chicago school board raises property tax levy By a vote of 15 to 5, the Chicago Board of Education raised its...
Illinois lawmaker welcomes possible Marine deployment after Supreme Court ruling

Illinois lawmaker welcomes possible Marine deployment after Supreme Court ruling

By Catrina Barker | The Center Square contributorThe Center Square (The Center Square) – Illinois Gov. J.B. Pritzker praised as a “win” a U.S. Supreme Court ruling temporarily preventing President...
Screenshot 2025-12-20 at 12.27.21 PM

Lincoln-Way Officials Warn of $400,000 State Funding Shortfall

Lincoln-Way Community High School District 210 Meeting | December 18, 2025 Article Summary: Assistant Superintendent Michael Duback informed the Board of Education of a significant reduction in state funding due...