The Jobs Mirage: Why May’s Numbers Aren’t the Green Light You Think
Smoke, Mirrors, and the Shrinking Workforce
The May jobs report gave the illusion of strength: 139,000 new payroll jobs and an unchanged unemployment rate at 4.2%. But don’t be fooled—the so-called “good news” masks an underlying rot.
In truth, May saw 625,000 Americans vanish from the labor force. That’s not a typo. It’s the largest exodus in over three years. These aren’t vacationers—they’re people who’ve either given up looking for work or been shoved out by policy-induced stagnation.
The employment-population ratio—arguably the real unemployment gauge—fell to 59.7%. That’s recessionary territory.
Where the Jobs Are—and Aren’t
Take a guess where most new jobs were created. Tech? Manufacturing? Construction?
Nope. Healthcare—that perennial safe haven for bureaucratic expansion and government-adjacent payrolls—added 62,000 jobs, far above its monthly average. Why? Because in an economy increasingly built around subsidized care and federal fiat, this is where growth hides.
Meanwhile, cyclical industries like manufacturing and finance—the lifeblood of private sector dynamism—barely budged. Worse, the federal government shed 22,000 jobs in May, in part due to “DOGE-related layoffs” (yes, you read that right—welcome to clown world economics).
Behind the Curtain: Wage Pressure and Fed Paralysis
While hiring decelerates, wage growth is still running hot. Average hourly earnings rose 0.4% in May, fueling inflation and making it politically impossible for the Fed to cut interest rates—even as signs of labor weakness flash red across the board.
That’s the kicker: the economy is cooling just enough to hurt you, but not enough to trigger a Fed rescue.
“This isn’t a bad report, per se,” said Cory Stahle from Indeed, “but there are clear signs of erosion just below the surface.”
Translation: we’re bleeding out slowly, and no one in power wants to admit it.
No Help Coming From the Fed—At Least Not Yet
Despite pressure from President Trump—who continues calling for a full percentage point cut to unleash “Rocket Fuel”—the Fed is holding the line. They see the headlines, not the holes.
Powell’s crew won’t meet again until late June, and with only one more jobs report before the July meeting, rate cuts look like a distant dream. Unless the labor market completely collapses—which, to be fair, it might.
The two-year Treasury yield surged 0.09% on the May report—Wall Street’s way of saying: “No pivot coming.”
The real concern? The Fed has wedged itself between stubborn inflation and a deteriorating labor market. Their toolkit is empty, and the economy is stalling.
The American Worker Is Being Left Behind—Again
We’re told the economy is strong because the payroll numbers say so. But ask yourself: Are people better off today?
The middle class is being squeezed by inflation, sidelined from home ownership (see: Powell’s housing wreckage), and now quietly nudged out of the labor force. This isn’t a recovery—it’s an engineered decline.
And if you’re waiting for the Fed to come save the day with rate cuts, don’t hold your breath. They’ll ride this train into the ditch before admitting they overshot.
Protect Your Wealth Before the Engine Fails
The signs are clear. A workforce in retreat. Rate cuts on ice. A central bank too scared to act—and too arrogant to admit it’s wrong.
You cannot afford to be passive.
Bill Brocius has been warning for months that labor and housing weakness would hit before the Fed acts. That time is now. His book End of Banking As You Know It is a roadmap for what comes next—and how to shield your finances from the Fed’s fallout.
Get Bill’s free guide—7 Steps to Protect Yourself from Bank Failure—and start building your escape plan from this crumbling fiat economy.
✔️ Download it here: https://offers.dedollarizenews.com?utm_source=7steps_ebook&utm_medium=website&utm_campaign=Good_Solid_Info&utm_term=static&utm_content=Eric_Blair
✔️ Subscribe to the Inner Circle Newsletter for $19.95/month—Bill’s weekly take on jobs, rates, currency risks, and what to do next.
✔️ Read End of Banking As You Know It. The labor market may collapse slowly—but your bank account can collapse overnight.
Stay smart. Stay sovereign.
—Eric Blair




