Nonfarm Payrolls (Monthly Change) vs U.S. Trade Balance (Goods & Services)
Nonfarm Payrolls (Monthly Change) is currently 228K (up +111.0K). U.S. Trade Balance (Goods & Services) is currently -122.7B (up +8.0B).
| Metric | Nonfarm Payrolls (Monthly Change) | U.S. Trade Balance (Goods & Services) |
|---|---|---|
| Current value | 228K | -122.7B |
| Previous reading | 117K | -130.7B |
| Change | +111.0K | +8.0B |
| Trend | up | up |
| Frequency | Monthly | Monthly |
| Source | Bureau of Labor Statistics | Bureau of Economic Analysis |
| Last updated | 2026-04-04 | 2026-03-06 |
| Category | employment | trade |
What Nonfarm Payrolls (Monthly Change) measures
Nonfarm payrolls measure the net change in employment across all sectors except farming. It is the most closely watched indicator of labor market momentum and is released on the first Friday of each month.
The economy added 228,000 jobs in March, a strong rebound from February's 117,000. Economists generally consider 150,000+ jobs per month as healthy growth. For executives, strong payroll numbers confirm consumer spending capacity and may signal the Fed will maintain or raise interest rates. Sector breakdowns reveal which industries are expanding — critical for workforce planning and market sizing.
What U.S. Trade Balance (Goods & Services) measures
The trade balance measures the difference between U.S. exports and imports of goods and services. A deficit means the U.S. imports more than it exports. The trade balance is a component of GDP and reflects the competitiveness of U.S. producers in global markets.
The trade deficit narrowed slightly to $122.7 billion from January's $130.7 billion. The historically large deficit has been inflated by front-loading of imports ahead of tariff increases. For executives in import-dependent industries, trade policy remains the dominant risk factor. Companies are accelerating supply chain diversification away from China toward Mexico, Vietnam, and India.
Frequently asked
Nonfarm Payrolls (Monthly Change) is currently 228K, up +111.0K from the previous reading. Source: Bureau of Labor Statistics, updated monthly.
U.S. Trade Balance (Goods & Services) is currently -122.7B, up +8.0B from the previous reading. Source: Bureau of Economic Analysis, updated monthly.
The economy added 228,000 jobs in March, a strong rebound from February's 117,000. Economists generally consider 150,000+ jobs per month as healthy growth. For executives, strong payroll numbers confi The trade deficit narrowed slightly to $122.7 billion from January's $130.7 billion. The historically large deficit has been inflated by front-loading of imports ahead of tariff increases. For executi