KEY POINTS
  • Friday's jobs report literally is one of the most important in a very long time, since economists believe it will not only send an important signal about whether a recession is coming but also what the Fed should do about it.
  • Economists expect 175,000 nonfarm payrolls were added in March, after a shockingly low 20,000 in February.
  • March's report is expected to show that February's data was an anomaly and that job growth remains strong, there is no recession coming and the Fed may not need to cut interest rates.
General Motors workers on the engine line at the General Motors Spring Hill Manufacturing plant in Spring Hill, TN. (Photo by Sanford Myers for General Motors)

Companies seem to have done a lot of hiring in March, and if Friday's jobs report is as strong as expected, it could go a long way towards reducing speculation that a recession is coming and that the Fed will have to cut interest rates to stop it.

Like every jobs report, this one is important, but economists say even more so, after the stunningly weak February report, with just 20,000 jobs created. That data added to growing concerns this winter that the economy could tip into a recession sometime in the next year. But economists believe that report was an anomaly, and the real pace of job growth is closer to the consensus forecast for March of 175,000 payrolls, according to Dow Jones.