Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent has taken a firm stance on continuing the release of
monthly employment data, despite growing concerns about the accuracy of these reports. Bessent emphasized that improving data collection methods should be the focus rather than suspending the regular economic updates that markets and policymakers rely on.
The defense comes at a time when economists and market analysts have questioned the reliability of employment figures that sometimes undergo significant revisions months after their initial release. These revisions can substantially alter the economic narrative that shaped policy and market decisions.
Data Collection Challenges
The monthly jobs report, produced by the
Bureau of Labor Statistics, is one of the most closely watched economic indicators in the United States. It provides critical information about employment trends, wage growth, and labor force participation that guide Federal Reserve policy decisions and influence financial markets.
Bessent acknowledged existing problems with data collection but maintained that pausing the reports would create more problems than it would solve. The accuracy issues stem from several factors:
- Lower response rates to government surveys
- Difficulties tracking employment in the gig economy
- Challenges measuring remote work arrangements
- Seasonal adjustment complications following the pandemic
Reform Rather Than Removal
Instead of halting the publication of monthly employment data, Bessent advocated for methodological improvements to enhance accuracy. “We need better data collection, not less information,” Bessent stated, highlighting the Treasury Department’s commitment to transparency even when the numbers aren’t perfect.
The Treasury Secretary’s position reflects the administration’s broader
approach to economic data: acknowledging limitations while working to improve methodologies rather than reducing public access to information that markets have come to expect.
Market and Policy Implications
Financial
markets react strongly to jobs reports, with stock, bond, and currency values often shifting dramatically based on whether employment figures exceed or fall short of expectations. Critics argue that if the data is unreliable, these market movements may be based on flawed information.
Policymakers at the Federal Reserve also use employment data as a key input for interest rate decisions. Fed officials have previously noted the challenges of making monetary policy with data that may be revised significantly later.
Despite these concerns, Bessent maintained that even imperfect data provides value.
“Markets and policymakers understand that initial reports may be revised. Having timely, if imperfect, information is better than operating in the dark,” he explained.
Path Forward
The Treasury Department is reportedly working with the Bureau of Labor Statistics to modernize data collection methods. Potential improvements include:
Expanding digital survey options, increasing sample sizes to improve statistical reliability, and developing new methodologies to better capture changing work arrangements in the modern economy.
Economic experts have generally supported Bessent’s position. “Monthly economic data, even with its flaws, provides crucial real-time insights into the economy’s direction,” noted one economist familiar with government statistics. “The focus should be on improving these reports rather than eliminating them.”
As debates about data quality continue, Bessent’s defense of monthly reporting signals that the administration plans to maintain the regular cadence of economic updates while working behind the scenes to address accuracy concerns. For now, markets will continue to receive monthly employment updates, with the understanding that
initial figures represent the best available estimate at that time.