According to Jin10, Stephen Brown from Capital Economics commented on the unexpected rise in non-farm employment in March, attributing it primarily to the end of strikes in the healthcare sector and weather-related hiring disruptions in February, rather than a rapid recovery in the labor market. He noted that while rising oil prices might eventually support employment in the mining sector, the more immediate risk is that reduced consumer purchasing power could dampen demand, thereby affecting hiring in the short term. On the other hand, the information sector saw another decline, and employment in financial services also decreased. This further supports the trend of AI suppressing hiring in certain industries, particularly as the professional services sector added only 2,000 jobs, while computer systems design positions fell by 13,200.