Olu Omodunbi, chief economist at Huntington Private Bank, told Craman Countdown that the jobs report points to a slowdown in the labor market.
of Federal Reserve The U.S. labor market has returned to the “tight but not overheated” conditions it was in before the coronavirus pandemic threw the economy into turmoil, the Treasury Secretary said in a report to Congress on Friday.
The report said the labor market “continued to rebalance through the first half of the year,” adding that “labor demand eased as job vacancies fell in many sectors of the economy, but labor supply continued to increase, supported by a surge in immigration.”
“The balance between labor demand and supply appears similar to the period immediately prior to the pandemic, when the labor market was relatively tight but not overheated. Nominal wage growth continued to slow,” the Fed report said.
The semi-annual report was released ahead of two days of testimony. Federal Reserve Chairman Jerome PowellPowell is scheduled to testify before Congress on Tuesday and Wednesday, as lawmakers are expected to press him on how the Fed will handle monetary policy in the run-up to the election as inflation shows signs of gradually easing and the labor market moves toward pre-pandemic demand levels.
Fed Chairman Powell: Prices are ‘back on disinflationary track,’ but more confidence needed
Federal Reserve Chairman Jerome Powell and other central bank policymakers have signaled that interest rate cuts are possible this year if inflation data continues to improve. (Kevin Dietsch/Getty Images)
Job growth has slowed in recent months. Unemployment rate It has risen steadily from 3.5% in July of last year to 4.1% as of June, up slightly from 4% a month earlier but still “still at historically low levels,” the Fed’s report noted.
The latest jobs report, released on Friday, revised down the April and May employment reports by a combined 111,000 jobs as the unemployment rate rose slightly.
Inflation, based on the Fed’s recommended personal consumption expenditures price index, has been hovering around 2.6%, which policymakers view as “high,” but is approaching the point where that may no longer be the case.
U.S. economy adds 206,000 jobs, April and May figures revised down

At its most recent meeting, the Federal Reserve left interest rates unchanged at their highest levels since 2001. (Photo by Jonathan Ernst/Reuters)
The consumer price index (CPI) rose 3.3% year-on-year in May, down from a peak of 9.1% in June 2022 but still above the Fed’s target rate of 2%.
Central banks take a fresh look Inflation Data On Thursday the Bureau of Labor Statistics will release its latest CPI report.
Policy makers are considering the possibility of cutting interest rates as soon as September if economic data continues to point to moderating inflation, but Powell and members of the Federal Open Market Committee, which oversees monetary policy, have said any decision to cut rates would be based on data, not on political considerations ahead of the policy decision. November Elections.
Fed-watched inflation gauge rose 2.6% in May

Federal Reserve policymakers expect one rate cut this year. (Nathan Howard/Bloomberg/Getty Images)
of Report to Parliament It also included an essay on “Monetary Policy Independence, Transparency and Accountability”, which reiterated the “operational independence” of central banks to determine interest rates based on long-term economic considerations rather than short-term political influences.
“It is widely understood that monetary policy actions that maximize employment and price stability over the long run may include disincentive measures that have short-run economic costs, while measures that raise output and employment to unsustainable levels may not provide real benefits in the long run and may lead to higher inflation,” the Fed wrote.
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The Fed Interest rates remain unchanged At its most recent policy meeting, the Fed set the benchmark federal funds rate at 5.25% to 5.50%, the highest range since 2001.
In forecasts issued after the meeting, policymakers predicted just one rate cut this year.
Reuters contributed to this report.
