The Federal Reserve’s next policy move isn’t being driven by headline inflation alone. It’s being shaped, quietly and persistently, by labor market data that refuses to break in either direction.
A real-time model from the Chicago Fed estimates that U.S. unemployment held steady at roughly 4.6% in December, unchanged from November. That figure is modestly higher than the economist consensus, but still historically low. More importantly, it reinforces a pattern policymakers are watching closely. Slowing hiring without a surge in layoffs.
This is the labor market version of a balancing act. And it’s why markets are holding off on near-term rate cut expectations while increasingly pricing easing later in the spring.
Why A 4.6% Unemployment Rate Matters More Than It Looks
At first glance, a 4.6% unemployment rate doesn’t look alarming. It’s well below levels typically associated with recession and far from the job market stress seen in past downturns.
But it no longer signals a tight labor market either.
At this level, labor demand has cooled enough to reduce wage pressure, one of the stickiest contributors to inflation. That’s critical for the Fed, which remains focused on preventing inflation from reaccelerating after years of aggressive tightening.
Historically, unemployment rates below the Fed’s long-run neutral range tend to coincide with rising wages and price pressure. As unemployment drifts higher, that pressure eases. The current reading suggests the economy is slowing in a controlled way rather than overheating or collapsing.
The “Low Hire, Low Fire” Economy Takes Hold
Economists increasingly describe the current labor environment as low hire, low fire.
Companies aren’t expanding their payrolls aggressively. Job openings have cooled. Hiring plans are more cautious. At the same time, layoffs remain contained, reflecting employer reluctance to shed workers after years of labor scarcity.
This behavior sends a clear signal to policymakers. Businesses expect slower growth, not a sharp downturn.
That distinction matters. A slowing labor market reduces inflation risk without triggering the kind of job losses that would force emergency action from the Fed.
Jobless Claims Are Doing Quite Heavy Lifting
Weekly jobless claims remain historically low, reinforcing the idea that layoffs haven’t meaningfully increased.
For the Fed, claims data often matters more than the unemployment rate itself. Claims tend to move first when labor conditions deteriorate. So far, that warning hasn’t appeared.
Low claims suggest employers still have the balance sheet strength to absorb slower growth. They also give the Fed room to wait without risking a sudden spike in unemployment.
As long as claims stay contained, policymakers can afford patience.
Why Markets Aren’t Betting On A January Cut
Despite growing expectations for eventual easing, markets assign only low odds to a rate cut at the Fed’s next meeting.
The reason is simple. The data doesn’t yet show that policy is too restrictive.
Employment is cooling, not cracking. Inflation remains above target. Financial conditions have already eased as markets anticipate future cuts. Acting too soon risks reigniting price pressure and undermining credibility.
From the Fed’s perspective, waiting is safer than moving prematurely.
Why April Has Become The Inflection Point
Spring looks different.
By April, policymakers will have multiple labor reports confirming whether the slowdown is sustained. Wage growth trends will be clearer. First-quarter economic data will be in hand. Seasonal inflation distortions will fade.
If unemployment remains around 4.6% to 4.8%, hiring stays cautious, wage growth continues to cool, and jobless claims remain stable, the case for easing strengthens rapidly.
That’s why markets are now pricing better than 50% odds of a rate cut by April. Not because the economy looks weak, but because stability combined with cooling is enough.
The Fed’s Real Risk Isn’t Action. It’s Timing.
The Federal Reserve isn’t choosing between growth and inflation. It’s choosing between timing risks.
Cut too early, and inflation expectations could rebound. Wait too long, and a controlled slowdown could turn unnecessarily painful.
Labor market data sits at the center of that decision because it reflects real behavior, not forecasts.
Right now, that data points to an economy bending, not breaking.
And for policymakers, that’s the most difficult signal of all.










