U.S. Layoffs Slip as Hiring Plans Hit 16-Year Lows

Layoff announcements declined in September, yet year-to-date hiring intentions languish at their weakest level since 2009.

U.S. Layoffs Slip as Hiring Plans Hit 16-Year Lows

Key points:

  • September layoff announcements fell about 37% to ~ 54,064.
  • Year-to-date planned hires total ~ 204,939 - the lowest since 2009.
  • The federal government shutdown is suspending BLS releases, increasing reliance on private labor indexes.

With the Bureau of Labor Statistics unable to publish its monthly employment report - a hiatus not seen since 2013 - analysts and institutions are turning to private data sources to fill the gap.

Outplacement firm Challenger, Gray & Christmas' September data revealed a noticeable drop in layoff announcements and historically weak hiring plans. 

In September, announced job cuts fell roughly 37% month-over-month, landing at 54,064. Over the year to date, firms have disclosed 946,426 layoffs - approaching levels last seen in 2020. 

Conversely, planned hiring stands at ~ 204,939 roles, the lowest such total since 2009, underscoring anemic labor demand despite broader macro efforts to stimulate growth.

Another stress point: employment in the federal sector. The administration has floated the possibility of converting furloughs into permanent cuts. Since many federal workers were already suspended under the shutdown, this could further augment the headcount contraction in the public sphere.

The dynamics behind the cooling labor market are multifaceted:

  • Structural shifts - including artificial intelligence, automation, and remote work adoption - are compressing demand for certain roles, particularly at entry levels in tech.
  • Meanwhile, policy uncertainty around tariffs, immigration, and enforcement regimes is undermining investment in new headcount.
  • At the same time, labor supply constraints in some segments are tightening, as immigration enforcement and regulatory shifts deter workforce fluidity.

In short: while firms may be holding onto existing workforces, they are largely uncommitted to expansion. In a typical cyclical downturn, hiring often rebounds ahead of layoffs - but that pattern appears muted in the current environment. 

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