The jobs report for September released Friday showed that employment rose for native-born and fell for foreign-born workers.
U.S. job gains increased by the most in six months in September and the unemployment rate fell to 4.1%, pointing to a ...
September's 254,000 new jobs topped consensus forecasts by about 100,000. This means the Fed can probably slow the pace of ...
The September jobs report was stronger than expected and is likely to assuage recession fears, driving up hopes for soft ...
Wall Street is watching the labor market for signs of slower hiring, which could influence the Federal Reserve's next rate ...
The number of foreign-born workers declined slightly in September after reaching the highest level since at least 2007 in ...
The September jobs report will be pivotal for markets because it holds implications for future Fed interest rate policies.
September’s jobs report, due out Friday morning, is expected to show that the US labor market has slowed somewhat but remains ...
The September jobs report showed surprising signs of strength in the labor market that have economists questioning how much ...
The Labor Department said on Friday that the economy created 254,000 jobs in September, smashing Wall Street expectations and ...
The Bureau of Labor Statistics employment data shows that the American job market picked up in September with the ...
Follow live coverage and analysis of the September jobs report, including the latest hiring figures and unemployment rate, released by the Labor Department earlier today.