Labor Department Cancels Full October Jobs Report

BLS Couldn't Collect Some Data Because of Shutdown; It Will Release Some Numbers From October With Full November Report

Job fair
A job seeker holds a "We Are Hiring" pamphlet at an internship and job fair in Boone, N.C., on Oct. 24. (Allison Joyce/Bloomberg)

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The Labor Department said Nov. 19 that it will not release a full jobs report for October because the 43-day federal government shutdown meant it couldn't calculate the unemployment rate and some other key numbers.

Instead, it will release some of the October jobs data — most importantly the number of jobs that employers created last month — along with the full November jobs report, now due a couple of weeks late on Dec. 16.

The department's "employment situation'' report usually comes out the first Friday of the month. But the government shutdown disrupted data collection and delayed the release of the reports. For example, the September jobs report, now coming out Nov. 20, was originally due Oct. 3.



The monthly jobs report consists of two parts: a survey of households that is used to determine the unemployment rate, among other things; and the "establishment'' survey of companies, nonprofits and government agencies that is used to track job creation, wages and other measurements of labor market health.

The Labor Department said Nov. 19 that the household survey for October could not be conducted because of the shutdown and could not be done retroactively. But it was able to collect the hiring numbers from employers, and those will come out with the full November report.

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Department of Labor

The September jobs report, now coming out Nov. 20, was originally due Oct. 3. (Al Drago/Bloomberg)

The announcement means the September jobs numbers will likely get extra scrutiny. They are the last full measurement of hiring and unemployment that Federal Reserve policymakers will see before they meet Dec. 9-10 and decide whether to cut their benchmark interest rate for the third time this year.

The jobs numbers have lately been contentious. After the July jobs report proved disappointing, President Donald Trump abruptly fired the official responsible for collecting the data, Bureau of Labor Statistics commissioner Erika McEntarfer.

McEntarfer herself was quick to say there was nothing suspicious about the Nov. 19 announcement. “No conspiracy here, folks,” she posted on the social media site Bluesky. "BLS was entirely shutdown for six weeks. Payroll data from firms can be retroactively collected for October. The household survey cannot be conducted retrospectively. This is just a straightforward consequence of having all field staff furloughed for over a month.''

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