US Prelim Benchmark Payrolls Revision
Employment levels are closely watched because they influence how policymakers gauge the strength of the economy;
This is a reconciliation of survey-based employment with administrative records, highlighting discrepancies in reported job growth. The impact tends to be significant when the difference is large, as it can shift how traders assess labor-market conditions. There’s a revised version released about 170 days later, but it’s not included for lack of significance;
- US Prelim Benchmark Payrolls Revision Graph
- History
| Expected Impact / Date | Actual | Forecast | Previous |
|---|---|---|---|
| Sep 9, 2025 | -911K | -818K | |
| Aug 21, 2024 | -818K | -306K | |
| Aug 23, 2023 | -306K | 462K | |
| Aug 24, 2022 | 462K | -166K | |
| Aug 18, 2021 | -166K | -173K | |
| Aug 19, 2020 | -173K | -501K | |
| Aug 22, 2019 | -501K | 43K | |
| Aug 22, 2018 | 43K | 95K |
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- US Prelim Benchmark Payrolls Revision News
From @zerohedge|Sep 9, 2025|253 commentsBOOM: Payrolls revision -911K, biggest on record!
Current Employment Statistics Preliminary Benchmark (National) - March 2025 The preliminary estimate of the Current Employment Statistics (CES) national benchmark revision to total nonfarm employment for March 2025 is -911,000 (-0.6 percent), the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics reported today. The annual benchmark revisions over the last 10 years have an absolute average of 0.2 percent of total nonfarm employment. In accordance with usual practice, the final benchmark revision will be issued in February 2026 with the publication of the January 2026 Employment Situation news release. Each year, CES employment estimates are benchmarked to comprehensive counts of employment from the Quarterly Census of Employment and Wages (QCEW). These counts are derived primarily from state unemployment insurance (UI) tax records that nearly all employers are required to file with state workforce agencies. The preliminary benchmark revision reflects the difference between two independently derived employment counts, each subject to their own sources of error. It serves as a preliminary measure of the total error in CES employment estimates from March 2024 to March 2025. Preliminary research, which is not comprehensive and is subject to updates in QCEW data, indicates that the primary contributors to the overestimation of employment growth are likely the result of two sources—response error and nonresponse error. First, businesses reported less employment to the QCEW than they reported to the CES survey (response error). Second, businesses who were selected for the CES survey but did not respond reported less employment to the QCEW than those businesses who did respond to the CES survey (nonresponse error). Estimates of other errors, such as the forecast error from the net birth-death model, are not available at this time. Information on how the net birth-death forecasts have reduced benchmark revisions historically are available on the CES Birth-Death Model Frequently Asked Questions page in question 10, www.bls.gov/web/empsit/cesbdqa.htm. The preliminary benchmark revisions in table 1 are calculated only for March 2025 for the major industry sectors. As is typically the case, many of the individual industry series show larger percentage revisions than the total nonfarm series, primarily because statistical sampling error is greater at more detailed levels than at an aggregated level. US BLS: PRELIMINARY BENCHMARK REVISION FOR MARCH 2025 PRIVATE PAYROLLS -880,000; GOVERNMENT PAYROLLS -31,000 #BLS #payrolls #benchmark #economy
| Released on Sep 9, 2025 |
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