News

President Trump fired the commissioner of the Bureau of Labor Statistics, claiming that last week’s jobs report “was rigged” ...
The monthly jobs report is already closely-watched on Wall Street and in Washington but has taken on a new importance after ...
Labor economist Aaron Sojourner said President Donald Trump’s decision to fire the Bureau of Labor Statistics commissioner ...
While the downward revision of May and June payroll growth by 258,000 marked the largest two-month downward revision to the ...
A so-called “sell America” trade, which led in part to the weakest 7-month stretch for the dollar in five decades, developed ...
The White House believes unusual jobs data revisions prove the recently fired Bureau of Labor chief was manipulating statistics.
Jobs growth was slower than expected in July, and the unemployment rate rose, showing signs of trouble for the labor market.
Job-market data is revised every month, but the latest changes caused a stir. They point to a challenge that has dogged the Bureau of Labor Statistics for years: a requirement to quickly produce ...