The Las Vegas Valley has recovered all of the jobs — and more — it lost during the pandemic. The valley saw some of the sharpest employment declines in the country during the start of the COVID-19 ...
Hiring has softened in sectors with large concentrations of office workers, and artificial intelligence adds another layer of uncertainty.
Job-openings report underscores how hard it is to find work for the unemployed There's still plenty of 'now hiring' signs in business displays, but the number of people actually being hired has slowed ...
U.S. employers are still adding jobs in 2025, but the pace has cooled to its weakest level in a decade and a half outside the shock of 2020. Headline payroll gains remain positive, yet a mix of ...
Employment growth in the United States hasn’t extended to everyone, as lower-income workers continue to lag behind others in terms of overall job gains since the beginning of the COVID-19 pandemic, ...
Forbes contributors publish independent expert analyses and insights. Kara Dennison writes about careers, leadership, and the job market. In the 2025 job market, hiring slowed as employers became more ...
Diccon Hyatt is an experienced financial and economics reporter. He's written hundreds of articles breaking down complex financial topics in plain language, emphasizing the impact that economic ...
One of the most hotly anticipated economic reports is finally set to be released Thursday: the long-delayed jobs report for September, originally due on October 3. It lands as the floodgates open for ...
A sharp drop in hiring and mounting pressures from AI and tariffs may signal a difficult road ahead in 2026, says reporter Harriet Torry. A: While companies didn’t resort to full-scale layoffs this ...
A new Vanguard study reveals that the 100 professions rubbing shoulders with AI the most are thriving, but admits there will ...
Quarantine is experienced differently for different people. What might be experienced as a prolonged pajama party staycation for a family who is financially secure might be a nail-biting sentence of ...