The Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS), the US federal agency that publishes the monthly Employment Situation report, recorded +172,000 nonfarm payrolls for May 2026 on Friday 5 June, double the 85,000 forecast, with unemployment steady at 4.3% 1. The print beat on breadth: leisure and hospitality added 70,000, local government 55,000, healthcare 35,200. The April figure was revised up to +179,000 from the +115,000 first reported, walking back the spring scare .
One detail cuts against the reassuring read. Information and technology stayed absent from the gains list for a second consecutive month, while broad consumer and public-sector hiring carried the total. The aggregate looks healthy precisely where AI is not deployed, and flat-to-falling exactly where it is.
The optimistic frame holds that the spring AI-displacement panic was a counting error the revision has now corrected. The sectoral composition complicates that. Hospitality and government jobs are not substitutes for the white-collar tech roles that have stopped appearing in the data, and the establishment survey nets employment across all sectors, so it cannot isolate where the losses sit. A reader watching only the headline would conclude the labour market had shrugged off AI. The line beneath it says the displacement has simply moved somewhere the top number does not measure.
