Goldman Sachs economists have quantified the labor-market consequences of recent rises in oil prices, concluding that higher crude costs will subtract about 10,000 jobs from monthly payroll gains through the end of 2026.
The bank's team applied measures of oil supply shocks to assess effects on employment and unemployment in the United States. Their work indicates that while elevated oil prices still act to reduce job creation and push the unemployment rate higher, the magnitude of those effects is substantially lower than in past decades.
Specifically, Goldman Sachs reports the labor-market sensitivity to oil price shocks is roughly one-third smaller than it was during the 1975-1999 period. The analysts link this reduced sensitivity to two factors highlighted in their assessment: a lower oil intensity of U.S. gross domestic product and the expansion of domestic shale production.
Goldman Sachs notes that its estimates are consistent with projections from the Federal Reserve's FRB/US model and with academic studies on the topic. Under the firm's baseline oil price trajectory, the oil shock is expected to increase the unemployment rate by 0.1 percentage point. That increment contributes to Goldman Sachs' wider forecast that unemployment will rise by 0.2 percentage point in total, reaching 4.6% by the third quarter of 2026.
The projected employment shortfall arises mainly from slower hiring combined with a modest uptick in layoffs concentrated in industries that are particularly exposed to discretionary consumer spending. These sectors, according to the analysis, are more vulnerable to the drag from higher energy costs.
On the supply side, higher oil prices have tended to support hiring in oil extraction and related support services since the advent of the shale boom. However, Goldman Sachs anticipates that any such gains will be more limited in this episode. The bank points to significant improvements in extraction productivity in recent years, which imply that even if production rises, employment growth within the energy sector will probably be constrained.
The net effect combining potential energy-sector hiring and losses elsewhere yields the estimated reduction in payroll growth of about 10,000 jobs per month. That figure accounts for both the modest offset from energy-industry employment and the broader employment declines tied to higher oil prices across other sectors.
Context and scope
- The analysis uses oil supply shock measures to trace impacts on U.S. employment and unemployment.
- Findings are aligned with the Federal Reserve's FRB/US model and academic work referenced by the bank.
- The time horizon for the payroll impact spans through the end of 2026, with unemployment projected at 4.6% by Q3 2026.