The Government Just Quietly Admitted It Invented 911,000 Jobs. The April Report Drops This Morning.

This morning at 8:30 AM Eastern, the Bureau of Labor Statistics will release the April 2026 jobs report.

Markets will react. Anchors will comment. The headline number will trend. Everyone will form an opinion about whether the economy is strong or weak based on a single number released at a single moment.

But before you read that number — before you decide what it means — there is something you need to understand about the numbers that came before it.

Last month, buried in the technical footnotes of the March employment release, the Bureau of Labor Statistics published a sentence that deserved front-page coverage and received almost none.

The preliminary benchmark revision for March payroll employment is -911,000 (-0.6%).

Nine hundred and eleven thousand jobs. Gone. Not lost — never there. They were in the official monthly reports. They were cited by economists and politicians and financial media as evidence of labor market strength. They were the basis for Federal Reserve decisions about interest rates. They were the numbers that shaped the narrative about the American economy throughout 2025.

And they were wrong. The government overcounted employment by 911,000 people.

Today’s April report will generate enormous coverage. This context will generate almost none. That gap is the most important thing to understand about the jobs data you’re about to read.


What a Benchmark Revision Actually Is — And Why This One Matters

Every spring, the Bureau of Labor Statistics conducts what it calls a “benchmark revision” — a comprehensive reconciliation of its monthly employment estimates against complete payroll tax records from state unemployment insurance systems. This is the definitive count. It covers every employer, every payroll, every W-2 filed in the United States.

The monthly jobs reports — the ones that move markets and dominate headlines — are estimates. They are based on surveys of approximately 119,000 businesses representing about 26% of nonfarm payroll jobs. The estimates are constructed using statistical models and seasonal adjustment factors. They are the best available real-time approximation of what is happening in the labor market.

The benchmark revision is the correction that happens when the approximation meets the reality.

The -911,000 preliminary revision means that between April 2024 and March 2025, the BLS overestimated employment by 911,000 workers. On a base of approximately 158 million nonfarm payroll jobs, that is a 0.6% overcount — within the BLS’s stated margin of error, technically acceptable, but economically significant.

Here is why it matters beyond the statistical footnote.

The Federal Reserve made interest rate decisions based on this data.

Throughout 2025, as the Fed was navigating whether to cut rates and by how much, the official employment numbers showed a labor market that was stronger than it actually was. The FOMC members who voted on rate decisions were looking at employment figures that were overstated by nearly a million workers.

A million workers is not a rounding error. It is the difference between a labor market that is genuinely resilient and one that was softer than the reported numbers suggested. It is the difference between an economy that can absorb higher rates without significant damage and one that was already under more stress than the data indicated.

The Fed cut rates three times in late 2025. Would those decisions have been different — perhaps more aggressive, cutting sooner or by more — if the employment data had been accurate in real time? Nobody can say with certainty. But the question matters because the policy decisions compound. Rate decisions made in late 2025 based on data that was subsequently revised by 911,000 workers shaped the economic conditions that the Iran war then hit in early 2026.


This Is Not the First Time. It’s Getting Worse.

The -911,000 revision is large. But it is not unprecedented. It follows a pattern that has been building for several years.

In 2024, the BLS’s preliminary benchmark revision showed that the prior year’s employment had been overstated by 818,000 workers — the largest downward revision since 2009.

In 2023, the revision was smaller — approximately 300,000 — but still directionally negative.

In 2022, another negative revision of several hundred thousand.

The pattern is consistent: for four consecutive years, the monthly employment estimates have overstated actual employment, and the annual benchmark revision has corrected the overcount downward. Every year, the narrative of labor market strength that was built on the monthly estimates has been quietly revised to reflect a reality that was somewhat weaker than advertised.

Why is this happening systematically? The explanations that labor statisticians offer are technical: changes in birth/death model adjustments, difficulty capturing employment in new business formations, challenges measuring gig economy and contract work that doesn’t show up cleanly in traditional payroll survey frameworks.

But the systematic directionality — always overstating, never understating, for four consecutive years — is harder to explain purely on technical grounds. A random measurement error would produce revisions in both directions roughly equally. Four consecutive years of overstatement suggests a structural bias in the methodology that is consistently producing numbers that are too strong.

That structural bias has consequences. It creates an economy that looks stronger in real time than it is. It creates a Fed that may be acting on a more optimistic employment picture than the eventual data supports. And it creates a public narrative about economic health that is consistently revised downward months after the fact, when the corrections receive a fraction of the attention given to the original releases.


February Was Revised to -133,000. That Should Be a Bigger Story.

The benchmark revision covers a long period. But the most recent monthly revision — what the BLS does every month when it adjusts prior months as new data comes in — produced a number that deserves specific attention.

The February 2026 employment report was revised from the originally reported figure to -133,000 jobs. A loss of 133,000 jobs in a single month.

The original February report — the one that made headlines — showed a significant decline but was understood as partly war-related, partly seasonal. The revised figure of -133,000 is considerably worse than the original reading.

For context: in the entire post-COVID expansion, monthly job losses of this magnitude have occurred only during specific acute shocks — the initial COVID collapse, the post-reopening volatility of 2021-2022. A -133,000 month in February 2026 is a genuine labor market contraction, not a rounding error.

January was revised upward by 34,000 — to +160,000 — which partially offsets the February deterioration. But the combined January-February picture is 7,000 jobs lower than previously reported. And the trend embedded in those revisions — a strong January followed by a sharp February contraction — describes a labor market that hit the Iran war in a more fragile state than the original numbers suggested.


The April Consensus: A Number That Reveals the Uncertainty

Today’s April jobs report arrives with an unusually wide range of forecasts from Wall Street economists — itself a signal about how uncertain the underlying picture is.

The consensus estimate is approximately 55,000 to 165,000 jobs, depending on which economist’s forecast you weight most heavily. That is an extraordinary spread. A 110,000-job range in a monthly forecast reflects genuine disagreement about the state of the labor market — disagreement that stems directly from the noisy, frequently revised data environment described above.

Wells Fargo economists estimate total payrolls advanced 70,000. Bank of America forecasts 80,000. Fifth Third Commercial Bank forecasts 120,000. The range across major institutional forecasters spans from 50,000 to 165,000.

The wide spread has a specific explanation. The March report — at +178,000 — significantly beat expectations, which themselves were clustered around 50,000-100,000. After a beat of that magnitude, forecasters are divided between those who expect a snapback lower and those who think March represents the start of a more durable acceleration.

Wednesday’s ADP private payrolls report — a different measure that covers only private sector employment — came in at 109,000, beating the 84,000 consensus estimate. Job creation was concentrated in education and health services, which added 61,000. Small companies with fewer than 50 employees added 65,000.

ADP’s chief economist described the result as “small and large employers are hiring, but we’re seeing softness in the middle” — a characterization that describes a labor market bifurcation that mirrors the broader economic K-shape this series has documented throughout the Iran war period.

A strong beat could reignite Fed rate hike bets. Traders currently price in a 25% chance of a rate hike in 2026.

That last sentence deserves to stand alone. A 25% probability of a rate hike — not a cut, a hike — in an economy where consumer confidence just hit a 75-year low. That is the Fed’s impossible position made numerical.


The Real Wages Story Nobody Is Leading With

Beyond the headline payroll number, there is a data series in the March employment report that received almost no coverage and that is more important for understanding the financial condition of American households than any jobs count.

Real average hourly earnings for all employees decreased 0.6 percent in March, seasonally adjusted.

Nominal wages increased 0.2 percent. CPI-U increased 0.9 percent. The difference — negative 0.7 percentage points — is the real wage destruction that happened in a single month.

Real average weekly earnings decreased 0.9 percent.

These are not annualized numbers. These are single-month declines in the purchasing power of the American worker’s paycheck. In March alone — driven by the 0.9% monthly CPI surge that the Iran war’s oil shock produced — the average American worker became measurably poorer despite receiving a nominal pay increase.

This is the mechanism behind the paradox documented in the previous post in this series: the 50-year-low in jobless claims coexisting with the 75-year-low in consumer confidence. People have jobs. Their paychecks are larger in nominal terms. Their purchasing power is falling in real terms. The job market statistic says strength. The real wages statistic says deterioration. Both are true simultaneously.

The April jobs report will show nominal wage growth. Watch the real wage figure — the number that adjusts for CPI. That number, not the headline payroll count, is the one that describes what is actually happening to the financial lives of working Americans.


What A Strong Number Means. What A Weak Number Means. What Both Mean.

The April jobs report will produce one of three broad outcomes and it is worth understanding what each one means before the number drops.

If April comes in above 150,000:

A beat would be interpreted as evidence of labor market resilience despite the Iran war. Markets would likely sell off on the news — because a strong jobs number makes Fed rate cuts less likely. Specifically, it would increase the probability of the “higher for longer” scenario that has been weighing on rate-sensitive sectors (technology, real estate, consumer discretionary) throughout the first quarter.

The irony of a strong jobs number pushing markets lower is the defining feature of the current economic environment. Normally, good economic data is good for markets. In a world where the Fed cannot cut rates and may need to hike them, good economic data removes the last remaining justification for rate relief.

The 25% market probability of a rate hike would likely increase on a strong beat.

If April comes in between 50,000 and 150,000:

An in-line result — consistent with the broad consensus range — would likely produce muted market reaction. It confirms the “low hire, low fire” labor market that has characterized the past two years without providing decisive evidence for either the optimistic or pessimistic scenario. The Fed’s impossible position remains unchanged. Rate uncertainty persists.

If April comes in below 50,000 — or negative:

A significant miss would reignite recession fears that have been building but not yet confirmed by official data. It would be the first piece of hard payroll data suggesting that the Iran war’s economic damage is moving beyond energy prices and consumer sentiment into actual job destruction.

A miss of this magnitude — combined with the -133,000 February revision, the 0.5% Q4 GDP, the potentially weak Q1 private sector growth, and the 75-year consumer sentiment low — would create the most compelling argument yet for emergency Fed action. But with core PCE at 4.3% and inflation expectations at 4.8%, “emergency action” in the form of rate cuts remains deeply problematic.

A weak April number in this specific inflation environment creates the possibility of the most difficult monetary policy decision in decades: whether to cut rates in a recession while inflation is running well above target.


The Three-Month Average That Tells the Real Story

Beyond today’s single-month April print, the number that matters most for understanding labor market trajectory is the three-month average of payroll growth.

January: +160,000 (revised) February: -133,000 (revised) March: +178,000

Three-month average: approximately +68,000 per month.

68,000 per month is below the breakeven rate — the number of jobs needed to absorb new labor force entrants and keep the unemployment rate stable. Economists estimate that breakeven is approximately 100,000-120,000 per month given current labor force growth rates constrained by immigration policy changes and demographics.

If April comes in near the 55,000-80,000 range that the more cautious forecasters project, the three-month rolling average falls further below breakeven. The unemployment rate — currently at 4.3% — would begin drifting toward 4.5% and higher in subsequent months.

An unemployment rate moving consistently from 4.3% toward 4.5% and then 4.7% is not a catastrophe in isolation. But in the context of a war-driven inflation shock, a Fed that cannot cut rates, record consumer debt, and the worst consumer confidence in 75 years — it is the piece of the picture that converts all of the other warning signs from potential risk to confirmed deterioration.


What To Watch At 8:30 AM — And What The Number Won’t Tell You

When the number drops this morning, here is what to look for beyond the headline.

The headline payroll count. Yes, obvious — but note the range of estimates and where the actual print falls relative to the full range, not just the median consensus. A miss relative to the most optimistic forecast is a different signal than a miss relative to the median.

The revisions to March and February. March’s +178,000 was strong and may be revised lower, as previous months have been. February’s already-revised -133,000 may be revised further. The revision pattern over the past four years has been consistently downward — meaning today’s strong months often look weaker in subsequent reports.

Real average hourly earnings. Not the nominal number. The real number — nominal earnings growth minus CPI. This is the number that tells you whether the workers keeping their jobs are getting richer or poorer in purchasing power terms.

The government employment line. Federal employment has been declining as DOGE-related cuts flow through. Today’s number will show another month of federal employment contraction. Watch whether state and local government employment is offsetting federal declines, or whether the government sector as a whole is becoming a headwind to the headline number.

The unemployment rate. 4.3% is the current figure. Any movement above 4.3% — even to 4.4% — will receive outsized attention in a market that is already pricing a 25% probability of a rate hike and needs any evidence of economic softening to push that probability lower.

What the number won’t tell you: whether it is accurate. The benchmark revision pattern of the past four years suggests that today’s release — whatever it says — will be revised, probably downward, in subsequent months. The 911,000 job overcount in the prior year’s data is a reminder that the number printed at 8:30 AM is a best estimate, not a final count.

By the time the final count arrives, the market will have already moved on the estimate.

That is how economic data drives financial markets. And understanding that the estimate is systematically biased in a specific direction is the edge that most people reading the headline number don’t have.


The Bottom Line Before 8:30 AM

The April jobs report matters. Read it. Understand it. Form a view.

But read it knowing that the preliminary benchmark revision of -911,000 means the government overcounted jobs by nearly a million in the prior year. That February was revised to -133,000 — a genuine monthly contraction that got far less attention than the original release. That real wages fell 0.6% in March despite nominal wage gains. That the unemployment rate needs to be watched for the first sign of drift above 4.3%.

And read it knowing that the number released this morning will almost certainly be revised in subsequent months — and that the revision pattern of the past four years runs consistently in one direction.

The headline is coming. The context is what you just read.


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This is not financial advice. Always consult a qualified financial advisor before making significant financial decisions. If this gave you a clearer lens for reading this morning’s jobs number — share it before 8:30 AM. The number everyone will see is already known to be an estimate. Understanding its limitations is the difference between reacting and thinking. And subscribe below for the next one.

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