As the federal shutdown drags on, HR leaders may be operating in the dark when it comes to market data. With the Bureau of Labor Statistics shuttered during the impasse, the agency’s latest jobs report was suspended, forcing employers to rely on alternative data sources for recruitment planning.
“Missing a key data point like the BLS jobs report really throws a wrench in recruitment planning,” says Art Zeile, CEO of Dice, an HR tech platform and career marketplace focused on connecting employers with technology professionals for IT, tech and engineering roles. “HR teams and hiring managers are left guessing about talent availability, compensation benchmarks and the timing of new hires.”

The BLS website hasn’t been updated since Oct. 1, leaving the August 2025 report as the most recent official government data available. The report showed that nonfarm payroll employment added 22,000 jobs, with unemployment remaining steady at 4.3%. The September jobs report remains postponed with no release date set.
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The data gap creates significant challenges for HR departments making critical decisions about headcount, salary offers and hiring timelines. Without current government statistics, teams must navigate recruitment strategies with incomplete information about labor market conditions.
Zeile recommends HR teams turn to alternative sources during the shutdown. “In situations like this, real-time insights—from active job postings to candidate engagement—become invaluable,” he told HR Executive. “They give a clearer picture of what’s actually happening in the market, rather than relying on numbers that are already weeks or months old.”
These alternative data sources include job board analytics, applicant tracking system metrics and private employment reports. While not official government statistics, Zeile says, they can provide more current insights into hiring trends and candidate behavior.
For now, HR leaders must rely on private sector estimates and economist forecasts to guide hiring decisions until federal operations reopen and the BLS resumes its regular reporting schedule.