Recruitment signs will appear on the Domino’s Pizza window in Austin, Texas on June 25th, 2025.
Brandon Bell | Getty Images
For federal workers who worked at agencies related to job cuts this year, the apparent slowdown in the labour market is happening at the worst possible time.
Gradually pulling back jobs and recruitment, hundreds of thousands of federal workers are searching for employment, while being a victim of the layoffs recommended by Elon Musk’s government efficiency.
Although economists have almost universally downplayed it, one straw could have come on Wednesday. Payroll Processor ADP said the private sector was unexpectedly employed in June with 33,000 jobs, much lower than the economist’s estimated 100,000 estimates.
And while the impact from Doge’s layoffs has been significantly reduced up to now in relation to previous employment growth, recent trends show that actual employment lab data is about to change.
Weak white-collar demand
“There are still many questions about how it all drips into the labour market. A lot of people are looking for jobs from the federal government,” said senior economist Cory Stahl. “The big question is whether we can find them given the weak demand for higher education.
According to data from the Bureau of Labor Statistics, the number of employment openings fell by 5% from January to April this year.
At the same time, he actually said that applications from workers at federal agencies rose 150%. This is a particularly serious trend for knowledge work such as data analysis, marketing and software development. May offered some hopes, but the application is immersed by 4%, but there are still indications that Doge’s efforts are affecting the broader workforce.
“The demand from employers has brought back much more than many other face-to-face skilled labor roles because of these white-collar jobs,” Stahl said. “It’s a really big challenge for anyone entering the labour market right now.”
Salary slowdown
The Doge factor is an important consideration as policymakers are looking for a crack in what has been a strong, virtually uninterrupted expansion in the labour market since the pandemic of the community.
The latest information on terms will be on Thursday when BLS releases its June non-farm pay count. The economists surveyed by Dow Jones are hoping to grow by just 115,000. This means that, if accurate, it created fewer than 150,000 new jobs per month in the first half. Outside of the 2020 pandemic year, it is the slowest start to the year since the financial crisis.
The unemployment rate is expected to rise to 4.3%.
More than 280,000 positions have been cut by Doge’s efforts to cut its federal workforce, according to Challenger, Gray and Christmas.
Certainly, given that many displaced people have discovered other jobs and some of the initial layoffs have been reversed, it is difficult to measure what the exact impact on the number of jobs in the headline. And while job openings at the federal level have not changed effectively this year, that doesn’t necessarily mean that vacancy will be filled.
But Stahle said the Trump administration’s efforts to reduce head numbers aren’t the only obstacles job seekers face.
He also said high-tech jobs are difficult to get in to ease monetary policy, as the Federal Reserve continues to raise interest rate benchmarks, even in the face of ongoing calls from President Donald Trump.
Higher fees discourage debt-dependent tech companies from expanding from borrowing and continuing to hold jobs down, Stahle said.
“Many tech startups and other companies rely on borrowing for growth and employment. When the cost of borrowing increases, things can naturally be restricted,” Stahle says. “They hired (after the community pandemic). They brought in a lot of people and didn’t necessarily have to hire them as a result.”