Headline Report and Household Survey Show an Employment Gap of 341k Jobs in April

SchiffGold US Debt Employment

Birth death assumptions are becoming unhinged from reality

Exploring Finance https://exploringfinance.github.io/
05-10-2026

This article first appeared on SchiffGold.

The analysis below covers the Employment picture released on the first Friday of every month. While most of the attention goes to the Headline Report, it can be helpful to look at the details, revisions, and other reports to get a better gauge of what is really going on.

The jobs report showed a gain of 115k jobs for the month of April. While that beat expectations, it is really important to highlight the Household Report. This data showed a loss of 226k jobs for April which is a massive difference from the Headline Report.

Figure 1: Primary Report vs Household Survey - Monthly

To show the magnitude of this underperformance, consider the chart below. YTD, the Headline Report shows a gain of 304k jobs where the Household Survey shows a loss of 1.37M jobs.

Figure 2: Primary Report vs Household Survey - Annual

The BLS publishes the data behind their Birth/Death assumptions (formation of new business). The data showed that the BLS assumed a gain of 391k jobs for the month of April.

Figure 3: Primary Unadjusted Report With Birth Death Assumptions - Monthly

We are now in the second year of a situation where assumed births is positive while the actual jobs created are negative. This means that BLS continues to assume job growth through business birth while the rest of the economy sheds jobs.

Figure 4: Primary Unadjusted Report With Birth Death Assumptions - Monthly

Digging Into the Headline Report

Unfortunately, despite being highly unreliable, the Headline report is the best data we have for the more recent periods. Furthermore, this is the data the Fed uses to shape its policy. The 115k jobs gained is the third best month since December 2024. Even with the general weakness of a number barely over 100k, the fact that it’s only happened 3 times in 16 months is very concerning. The unemployment rate held steady at 4.3%.

Figure 5: Change by sector

Jobs by Category

When looking at the last 12-month trend, you can see that every job category was above trend except for Education/Health. As for the trend, 5 of 8 categories are actually negative over the last year.

Figure 6: Current vs TTM

The table below shows a detailed breakdown of the numbers.

Monthly Average Change

Total % Change

Category

Total Employed

Current Month

3 Months

12 Months

3 years

Current Month

3 Months

12 Months

3 years

Private Sector

Construction

8,321

9

1.3

4.2

10.2

0.1%

0.0%

0.6%

4.4%

Education Health

27,834

46

29.3

51.5

75.6

0.2%

0.3%

2.2%

9.8%

Financial

9,119

-11

-9.3

-7.2

-1.7

-0.1%

-0.3%

-0.9%

-0.7%

Information

2,773

-13

-14.0

-7.7

-7.5

-0.5%

-1.5%

-3.3%

-9.7%

Leisure Hospitality

16,978

14

4.0

11.8

13.6

0.1%

0.1%

0.8%

2.9%

Manufacturing

12,596

-2

4.7

-5.5

-8.0

0.0%

0.1%

-0.5%

-2.3%

Mining and Logging

606

3

1.3

-1.3

-0.9

0.5%

0.7%

-2.6%

-5.1%

Other Services

6,032

10

2.0

3.8

6.5

0.2%

0.1%

0.7%

3.9%

Prof Business

22,445

7

12.3

-2.1

-10.9

0.0%

0.2%

-0.1%

-1.7%

Trade Trans Utils

28,724

60

23.3

-4.9

-2.1

0.2%

0.2%

-0.2%

-0.3%

Government

Government Federal

2,665

-9

-6.7

-25.9

-6.6

-0.3%

-0.8%

-11.7%

-9.0%

Government Local

15,171

0

2.0

8.4

19.0

0.0%

0.0%

0.7%

4.5%

Government State

5,472

1

-2.3

-4.2

6.1

0.0%

-0.1%

-0.9%

4.0%

Total

All

158,736

115

48.0

20.9

93.4

0.1%

0.1%

0.2%

2.1%

Values in 1,000s of workers. Data as of: Apr 2026. Total Employed = Entire size of the labor market.

Revisions

This is the biggest story of the jobs report. After all the revisions, the job picture is significantly bleaker than the data originally showed. Ironically, 2 of the last 3 months were revised higher, but the overall trend has been massive job revisions downward.

Figure 7: Revisions

Over the last twelve months, jobs have been revised down by about 73k per month! Even with the two positive revisions in Jan and March, the negative revision in February keeps the aggregate revisions negative over the 3 month period.

3 Month Compare

12 Month Compare

3 Year Compare

Category

Current

As Of Published

Avg Month Diff

Current

As Of Published

Avg Month Diff

Current

As Of Published

Avg Month Diff

Private Sector

Construction

40

24

5.3

39

118

-6.6

386

551

-4.6

Education Health

161

103

19.3

656

738

-6.8

2,755

2,679

2.1

Financial

-56

-16

-13.3

-71

14

-7.1

-20

203

-6.2

Information

-56

-27

-9.7

-81

-45

-3.0

-263

-60

-5.6

Leisure Hospitality

3

31

-9.3

141

239

-8.2

514

1,026

-14.2

Manufacturing

18

1

5.7

-68

-52

-1.3

-290

-32

-7.2

Mining and Logging

-1

3

-1.3

-17

-20

0.2

-31

-24

-0.2

Other Services

-1

9

-3.3

35

39

-0.3

233

234

0.0

Prof Business

66

4

20.7

-19

-18

-0.1

-394

284

-18.8

Trade Trans Utils

48

91

-14.3

-128

87

-17.9

-139

519

-18.3

Government

Government Federal

-48

-37

-3.7

-314

-143

-14.2

-219

-55

-4.6

Government Local

20

13

2.3

123

124

-0.1

716

698

0.5

Government State

-5

2

-2.3

-52

41

-7.8

239

286

-1.3

Total

All

189

201

-4.0

244

1,122

-73.2

3,487

6,309

-78.4

Values in 1,000s of workers. Because this data is focused on revisions, it is as of the month prior: Mar 2026. "Current" shows the change in employment after revisions. "As Of Published" shows change in employment at time of release. "Avg Month Diff" shows the average monthly change from the revisions.

More Detail in the Household Survey

Another level of detail in the Household report shows full-time vs part-time job holders. The data shows full time jobs being lost in April.

Figure 8: Full Time vs Part Time

Historical Perspective

The chart below shows data going back to 1955.

Figure 9: Historical Labor Market

The labor force participation rate is still well below the highs before the Global Financial Crisis. This month showed it falling to 61.8%, the lowest level since 2021. As recently as November of last year, the participation rate was 62.5%.

Figure 10: Labor Market Distribution

Conclusion

Another job report and another vast set of data values that belies the Headline Report. While the Headline Report is a modestly weak number for an economy the size of the US, the rest of the data points show that the real number is far weaker. The Fed will not be able to ignore this forever.