U.S. Employers Add 115,000 Jobs in April as Oil Shock From Iran Conflict Fails to Slow Hiring

By Matthias Binder
U.S. employers added a surprising 115,000 jobs last month despite the economic shock from Iran war - Image for illustrative purposes only (Image credits: Unsplash)

U.S. employers added a surprising 115,000 jobs last month despite the economic shock from Iran war – Image for illustrative purposes only (Image credits: Unsplash)

The latest employment report from the Labor Department revealed that U.S. companies, nonprofits and government agencies added 115,000 jobs in April. That figure exceeded the 65,000 gain most forecasters had projected and came even as the Iran war triggered the largest disruption of global oil supplies on record. Average gasoline prices climbed above $4.50 a gallon, yet the unemployment rate held steady at 4.3 percent.

April Hiring Beats Forecasts

Payroll processor ADP had already signaled strength earlier in the week with its own count of 109,000 private-sector jobs. The official government tally confirmed the trend and marked the fastest pace of hiring since January 2025. Economists noted that the break-even level of monthly job growth needed to keep unemployment from rising now sits near zero because of retiring Baby Boomers and tighter immigration policies.

Still, the April gain represented a slowdown from the 185,000 jobs added in March. The mixed pattern this year includes two solid months of expansion and one contraction in February, when employers cut 133,000 positions. Overall, the labor market has shown gradual improvement after a weak 2025 that produced the fewest new jobs outside a recession since 2002.

Oil Disruption and Energy Costs

The conflict that began with U.S. and Israeli strikes on February 28 prompted Iran to close the Strait of Hormuz. Roughly one-fifth of the world’s oil and liquefied natural gas normally passes through the waterway. The resulting supply squeeze lifted energy prices sharply and prompted many analysts to lower their growth forecasts for both the global and U.S. economies.

Despite those pressures, the job market has not yet reflected the higher costs. Large tax-refund checks tied to last year’s tax legislation have supported consumer spending and given businesses reason to maintain staffing levels. The combination of fiscal support and resilient demand appears to have offset some of the immediate pain from elevated fuel prices.

Healthcare Leads While Other Sectors Lag

One industry continues to dominate hiring. Healthcare providers added 360,000 jobs over the past year as they respond to an aging population. In contrast, all other employers combined reduced payrolls by 120,000 during the same period. This concentration leaves the broader recovery vulnerable if healthcare hiring slows.

Chief economist Diane Swonk of KPMG has warned that recent policy changes could limit future gains in the sector. The expiration of Affordable Care Act subsidies, reduced Medicaid funding and a new $100,000 fee on H-1B visas have already strained rural and smaller urban hospitals that rely heavily on foreign-trained staff. Several such facilities have closed in recent months.

Outlook Remains Cautious

Oxford Economics analyst Matthew Martin observed that uncertainty from the war tends to affect hiring decisions with a lag. The stimulus from tax refunds will also fade over time, especially while gasoline prices stay elevated. Employers will therefore watch incoming data closely to determine whether the recent momentum can continue.

April’s stronger-than-expected report offers short-term reassurance, yet the underlying mix of geopolitical risk, uneven industry performance and shifting fiscal support suggests the labor market faces continued tests in the months ahead.

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