
March Payrolls Tripled the Forecast — But the Fed Is Reading Between the Lines
The U.S. economy added 178,000 jobs in March, more than triple the Wall Street consensus of 60,000 — but beneath the headline reversal from February’s steep decline, the data tells a more measured story about a labor market that is decelerating structurally, not accelerating cyclically. For investors calibrating Federal Reserve policy expectations, the composition of March’s gains matters as much as the total. Strike distortions inflated the headline. The labor force contracted sharply. Wage growth cooled to its slowest annual pace in five years. The Fed will read all three of those signals before the headline number. What the Headline Captured — and What It Missed Total nonfarm payroll employment increased by 178,000 in March, following a revised decline of 133,000 in February — itself a downward revision from the initially reported loss of 92,000. Job gains were concentrated in health care (+76,000), construction (+26,000), and transportation and warehousing (+21,000). Average hourly earnings rose 0.2% for the month to $37.38, with the year-over-year rate easing to 3.5%. Of the 178,000 total, healthcare alone contributed 76,000 — 2.6 times the sector’s trailing 12-month average of 29,000 per month. That anomaly has a direct cause: the resolution of a physicians’ strike at













































