The hidden split
- Hassan Abbas

- Jun 8
- 2 min read

On the surface, May 2026 looked like a recovery. U.S. employers added 172,000 jobs, nearly double the economists' consensus of 85,000. The unemployment rate held at 4.3 percent.
For job seekers in leisure and hospitality or local government, it was a recovery. For those in finance, insurance, or information services, May told a different story.
Where the gains landed
Leisure and hospitality accounted for 70,000 of May's 172,000 added jobs, well above the sector's monthly average of 14,000 over the prior year. Food services and drinking places contributed 48,000 of those. Local government added 55,000. Health care added 35,000.
Some economists note that the leisure and hospitality surge may partly reflect one-time World Cup preparations across U.S. host cities (RBC Economics, June 2026). If that reading is accurate, the headline overstates the underlying trend.
Where they did not
White collar hiring tells a different story. Financial activities shed 22,000 jobs in May alone. Insurance carriers and related activities fell by 11,000. Since peaking in May 2025, financial activities have lost 107,000 positions, according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics. Professional and business services openings fell below one million for the first time since April 2020, per KPMG's analysis of January 2026 JOLTS data.
The sectors gaining are not the sectors where most white-collar job seekers are looking.
Still looking
Long-term unemployment provides the clearest signal. As of May 2026, 27.5 percent of unemployed Americans had been out of work for 27 weeks or more, up from 20.4 percent a year earlier (BLS, June 2026). Nearly one in three job seekers has been searching for seven months.
Both hires and layoffs remain depressed, which means fewer exits and fewer openings in the knowledge economy. The job seeker waiting for white collar hiring to return is waiting in a slow-moving queue.
Reading the report right
The 172,000 headline is not wrong. But it is not uniform. Understanding which sectors are growing, and which are still contracting, is the difference between a search built on current data and one built on outdated assumptions.
The market has not turned for everyone. A search strategy that reflects where demand actually is will outperform one aimed at where it used to be.




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