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The Labor Division’s inner watchdog stated Wednesday it has opened an investigation into how jobs and inflation information is collected by the Bureau of Labor Statistics.
The probe by the division’s Workplace of Inspector Common comes because the BLS is beneath stress from the Trump administration, which has pointed to current downward revisions to employment information to contend that the company’s information can’t be trusted.
President Donald Trump fired BLS Commissioner Erika McEntarfer in August, accusing her of being motivated by politics hours after her company launched a weak month-to-month jobs report.
The inspector common is a nonpolitical appointee whose workplace is independently staffed and legally insulated from interference by the Labor secretary or different political appointees. The workplace is at present being led by appearing Deputy Inspector Common Michael Mikulka, in accordance the Labor Division’s web site.
In a letter despatched Wednesday morning, the watchdog stated it “is initiating a assessment of the challenges” that BLS “encounters accumulating and reporting intently watched financial information.”
Learn the total letter right here.
The OIG stated it was initiating that probe after the BLS introduced a discount in its information assortment for 2 key inflation metrics, the buyer value index and the producer value index.
The assessment additionally is available in mild of the BLS lately issuing a “massive downward revision of its estimate of recent jobs within the month-to-month Employment Scenario Report,” Laura Nicolosi, assistant inspector common for audit, wrote.
The Labor Division in a preliminary report Tuesday revised jobs information sharply downward for the yr resulted in March 2025, posting a drop of 911,000 from preliminary estimates. The revisions had been the biggest on file in additional than twenty years.
Nicolosi wrote Wednesday that the OIG’s “focus might be on the challenges and associated mitigating methods for (1) accumulating PPI and CPI information, and (2) accumulating and reporting, together with revising, month-to-month employment information.”
The letter was addressed to William Wiatrowski, who has served because the BLS’ appearing commissioner since Trump fired McEntarfer on Aug. 1, hours after the BLS issued a weaker-than-expected month-to-month jobs report for July.
The transfer surprised some consultants, who warned that it undermined confidence within the integrity of the monetary statistics which can be closely relied upon by buyers and policymakers alike.
However Trump and his supporters defended McEntarfer’s removing, arguing that the BLS’ information had change into more and more unreliable and claiming its actions had been politicized.
They’ve pointed to earlier massive revisions by the company, although Trump has mischaracterized these figures and once they had been launched.
Labor Secretary Lori Chavez-DeRemer stated Tuesday that the BLS’ newest downward revision “provides the American individuals much more cause to doubt the integrity of information being printed.”
“It is crucial for the info to stay correct, neutral, and by no means altered for political achieve,” DeRemer stated.
— CNBC’s Greg Iacurci contributed to this report.

