Thousands of government jobs have been lost since President Donald Trump took the White House. So what does the market look like?
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Thousands of government jobs have been lost since President Donald Trump took the Oath of Office a little over a month ago thanks to the Department of Government Efficiency, or DOGE.
Nearly every day, there is news about Elon Musk and DOGE — and which federal agency will be next to have layoffs and firings.
As of Feb. 12, around 75,000 federal employees have accepted a “deferred resignation” proposal in exchange for financial incentives, like months of paid leave, to almost all federal employees who opted to leave their jobs by Feb. 6., according to the Office of Personnel Management.
Obviously, since 20% of the nearly 2.5 million government workers live in the Washington area, it’s affected a lot of people in the DMV.
An economist from the employment website Indeed spoke to WTOP about their data as of Feb. 14, 2025, said about the job market for these “knowledge workers” and their “white collar” jobs.
“We’re seeing federal workers starting to look for work outside of the departments they’re in,” Corey Staley said. “We’ve definitely seen kind of a surge in that in the last month.”
Staley went on to say that even though the labor market in general is pretty solid right now in the United States, there is really a divergence between the types of jobs that are available and the types of jobs that many of these federal workers are doing are much less abundant than they were before the pandemic.
“That’s going to, I think, really create some challenges in the labor market and really stress test the labor market in the coming months,” said Staley.
According to Pew Research, 92% of government employees are white collar workers.
Answers to some common questions about the federal workforce.
Indeed shared the data with WTOP.
Knowledge worker job openings have been down, but things have begun to bounce back.
However, 92% of federal workers are knowledge workers — and the labor market is not currently hiring enough to absorb the workers who are being laid off.
The rate of employment of federal government workers compared to the population has been generally flat for the last few decades. These layoffs may throw the labor market into an unprecedented situation, with thousands of very specialized workers without a job or potentially many options.
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