-
The US Economy “Adds” 178,000 Jobs in March | What It Means for Business
Published: 6 April 2026
Coverage: Sunday 29 March 2026, 12:01 AM to Sunday 5 April 2026, 12:00 PM London time
[INTRO: AMINE LAOUEDJ, MANAGING DIRECTOR]
Welcome. Each week from London, we break down the key global economic event that shaped the past seven days, and we analyze what it means for business.
[LAST WEEK'S KEY ECONOMIC EVENT]
On Friday, the US published its monthly employment report. It is the single most watched indicator of the world's largest economy. Because the US accounts for a quarter of global output, American hiring data shapes borrowing costs, currency values, and investment decisions in every major market worldwide.
The headline reported 178,000 new jobs in March, alongside an unemployment rate that dropped to 4.3 percent. This creates the immediate impression of a booming US economy. But when you peel back the layers of this data, you see a very different reality.
First, we have to look inside that 178,000 number. 35,000 of those jobs belong to nurses and health professionals who were simply returning to work after a strike. Because the US system drops striking workers from the payroll count, their return registers as new jobs. So, this is not genuine hiring. It is just a temporary statistical distortion.
Second, the government quietly lowered its job creation numbers for January and February. If you average the corrected data for the last three months, the US is actually creating just 68,000 jobs a month. Three months is a short window, and this average could shift with the next revision. But the direction is clear: that pace is less than half what we saw in 2023, and it points to an economy that is decelerating underneath the noisy headlines.
Third, the drop in the unemployment rate is equally misleading. In the US, you are only counted as unemployed if you are actively looking for work. During March, 400,000 people left the labor force altogether. Some retired, some returned to education, but the scale of the exit strongly suggests that a significant portion simply stopped looking. The government removed all of them from the statistics, which artificially forced the unemployment rate down.
Ultimately, we are looking at a US labor market that appears strong on the surface, but is rapidly cooling underneath.
[WHAT IT MEANS FOR BUSINESS]
So, what does this mean for business?
The overall impact is negative, because this data makes it significantly harder for the Federal Reserve to cut interest rates for the rest of the year.
Here is the step-by-step mechanism:
For the past year, businesses expected the Fed to begin cutting rates in 2026 to support a slowing US economy. However, the Fed is currently fighting inflation driven in large part by oil prices above 110 dollars a barrel. Oil above that level feeds directly into transportation, manufacturing, and food costs, keeping consumer prices elevated.
To justify cutting rates in that environment, they needed clear evidence of a failing labor market.
Friday's headline provided the exact opposite. By creating the appearance of a healthy labor market, this report removes any justification the Fed had to lower rates. It forces them to maintain high borrowing costs to fight inflation, regardless of the underlying economic reality.
The bond markets understood this mathematical reality. Treasury yields, which act as the baseline for global borrowing costs, rose by three to four basis points across all maturities. At the same time, futures markets adjusted to price in a 77 percent probability that rates will not drop at all this year.
This matters globally because the Federal Reserve sets the cost of borrowing in dollars. When US rates stay high, the dollar remains exceptionally strong.
If you are operating outside the US, this makes your imports priced in dollars more expensive. It also makes servicing any dollar-denominated debt significantly heavier.
If your company borrowed in dollars expecting the currency to weaken against your local revenue, that financial gap just widened.
[WHAT BUSINESS LEADERS SHOULD DO NOW]
So, what to do now?
This policy reality creates a clear divide between winners and losers.
If your business carries variable-rate debt, you must treat today's high rates as the baseline for the rest of the year. The same applies if you plan to borrow money for growth. The prudent response is to move from variable to fixed rates wherever possible. You should renegotiate your credit facilities immediately. If you have an expansion plan for 2026 that relies on cheaper borrowing, you need to rebuild that budget today.
On the flip side, if you have a strong balance sheet and low leverage, you are looking at a landscape of opportunity. Cash earns more in this environment. As the US labor market cools, top-tier talent becomes available. At the same time, competitors who over-leveraged will come under severe financial pressure. The advantage belongs to those who can act without relying on credit.
[OUTRO: AMINE LAOUEDJ, MANAGING DIRECTOR]
Thank you for joining us for this episode of What It Means for Business. Have a great week.
Satisfying headlines are making the US economy look strong on paper. But underneath, the real numbers tell a different story, and the consequences for companies globally are immediate.
In this episode of the What It Means for Business podcast, Glenshore's Managing Director Amine Laouedj explains what changed, why it matters, and what business leaders should do now.
Date of recording: 6 April 2026
The views expressed in this episode are those of Glenshore and are provided for informational and educational purposes only. They do not constitute investment advice, financial advice, or a recommendation to take any particular action. This material may contain forward-looking statements. Past performance is not indicative of future results. Glenshore makes no representations or warranties, express or implied, as to the accuracy or completeness of the information provided and disclaims any liability for reliance on such information for any purpose. Each name of a third-party organization mentioned is the property of the company to which it relates and is used strictly for informational and identification purposes only. This material should not be copied, distributed, published, or reproduced in whole or in part without the express written consent of Glenshore.
© 2026 Glenshore Limited. All Rights Reserved.

