The labor market is slowing, but it’s all good news in the White House.

The U.S. added 139,000 jobs in May, a slight decline from April, according to a jobs report released Friday. The unemployment rate remained at 4.2 percent, still within the ballpark of historic lows reached in 2023, when the unemployment rate reached 3.4 percent—the lowest it had been in more than five decades. But within the folds of the report hid a major red flag for Donald Trump’s agenda: The U.S. is still bleeding manufacturing jobs.

But even the president’s favorite conservative network couldn’t hide its dismay at the slight manufacturing downturn.

“Now, 8,000 manufacturing jobs were lost in May. That’s not what you wanted to see,” said Fox Business host Stuart Varney.

  • ikidd@lemmy.world
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    2 days ago

    Industrial capital spending has never, ever been as low as it is right now, even during Covid. It’s pretty much zero, because nobody has any intention of investing in any sort of industrial infrastructure in a complete clusterfuck of economic and trade policy. The chicken hasn’t come close to roosting yet, give it another few months and watch the bloodbath.

    • Furbag@lemmy.world
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      1 hour ago

      I’m waiting for the beginning of July for the end of the tariff pause. Dow Jones will probably shed a few thousand points before Trump reacts by pausing them again or repealing them since he always chickens out. \

      If Trump is going to wreck the fucking economy with his idiocy I might as well take a shot at profiting from it like all of the grifters in his administration.

    • captainlezbian@lemmy.world
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      20 hours ago

      And industrial capital takes a long time to realize. Speaking as an industrial engineer who’s been involved in the process, it’s a pain in the ass amount of time between us getting called in and floor workers getting called in. Once factories shutter it’ll be years before theyre back online. And I don’t see it happening under Trump.

      • ikidd@lemmy.world
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        16 hours ago

        How are you finding it for supply line on equipment for the floor, or do you see any of that side of the process? Because as far as I know, most of the machinery is not making it’s way into the country from China and Europe because of tariffs, so even if you put up a building, you wouldn’t be able to outfit it. If it is getting in, it’s going to be prohibitively expensive to outfit a line.

    • Bakkoda@sh.itjust.works
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      1 day ago

      They also gorged themselves on basically zero percent lending, used it for things along the lines of stock buybacks and now their equipment/supply chain is failing. Low corporate taxes mean there’s no incentive to reinvest, certainly not upping wages.

      Capitalism is a cancer that’s running out of healthy cells.