Take a closer look at 2025 job growth numbers—strip out healthcare, social assistance, and leisure hospitality sectors, and the picture gets pretty ugly. Those two industries? They account for literally 100% of net job gains. Everything else is basically treading water or moving backward. This kind of concentrated growth raises real questions about labor market health and what it means for broader economic resilience.
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FOMOmonster
· 01-11 08:18
Buddy, I can spot the problem with this data at a glance. Other industries are all starving.
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NFTRegretter
· 01-10 20:29
Wait, just these three industries support the entire employment growth? Are all the others dead? That’s so absurd.
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LongTermDreamer
· 01-09 21:01
Hmm... no matter how I look at this data, it doesn't seem right. If we exclude these two industries, there's no growth?
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WhaleStalker
· 01-09 21:00
Is that all? Remove the healthcare and service industries, and there's no way out. The economy is definitely in trouble.
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VitalikFanboy42
· 01-09 20:59
Nonsense, just three industries support it, how can it last?
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AirdropChaser
· 01-09 20:58
Looking at the employment data, it's obvious something's wrong... Besides healthcare and hospitality, there's no real growth? How abnormal is that?
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tokenomics_truther
· 01-09 20:36
Employment data... Removing healthcare and service industries, all other sectors are dead? How can this be a healthy market?
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MetaverseVagabond
· 01-09 20:35
Honestly, this data is just hard to look at... Besides healthcare and the service industry, there's nothing else. What are other industries even doing?
Take a closer look at 2025 job growth numbers—strip out healthcare, social assistance, and leisure hospitality sectors, and the picture gets pretty ugly. Those two industries? They account for literally 100% of net job gains. Everything else is basically treading water or moving backward. This kind of concentrated growth raises real questions about labor market health and what it means for broader economic resilience.