US Economy 2026: What It Means for NRIs

US Economy 2026: What It Means for NRIs

Namaste, friends and family back home and across the diaspora.

It’s February 16, 2026, Presidents Day here in the US, and while the stock markets are closed for the holiday, the conversations among NRIs aren’t taking a break. Many of you on H-1B, L-1, or green card paths are watching the latest US jobs numbers, layoff headlines, inflation trends, and market moves very closely. Why? Because these directly affect job security, salary hikes, visa extensions, remittances to India, and even plans for that next family trip or home investment back in Hyderabad, Bengaluru, or your hometown.

The January jobs report showed 130,000 new positions added – better than the low expectations of around 70,000 – with unemployment dipping to 4.3%. Sounds positive at first glance. But revisions to last year’s data painted a tougher picture: 2025 job growth slashed to just 181,000 net additions, far below initial reports. Inflation cooled to 2.4% year-over-year, gas prices dropped noticeably, and groceries held steady – small relief for household budgets. Yet massive layoffs continue, especially in tech and related sectors where so many NRIs work. Over 108,000 job cuts announced in January alone, the highest January figure since 2009.

For NRIs, this isn’t abstract news. It hits family finances, remittance amounts (India received billions from the US last year), and the confidence to plan long-term. Let’s break it down honestly, neighbor-to-neighbor style, focusing on what matters most to us in the Indian community here.

The Jobs Report: Mixed Signals for H-1B Holders and Tech Professionals

The Bureau of Labor Statistics confirmed 130,000 nonfarm payroll jobs added in January – above forecasts and up from a weak December. Healthcare, social assistance, and construction led the gains. Unemployment at 4.3% is still historically low, and private payrolls showed some rebound.

But the revisions hurt: 2025’s full-year job growth revised down sharply to +181,000 from earlier estimates. That’s a sign the slowdown was deeper than first thought. For NRIs in tech, consulting, finance, and engineering – sectors heavy on H-1B visas – hiring remains cautious. Many companies are in “low hire, low fire” mode, making it harder for fresh H-1B approvals or extensions if roles aren’t critical.

“I was hoping for a strong report to boost confidence for my H-1B renewal this year, but with revisions showing last year was so weak, my manager is talking freeze on new hires. Feels uncertain again.” — Rajesh, 35, software engineer on H-1B, Bay Area, California

Bright side: Healthcare and home services are growing steadily – areas where some NRIs have pivoted or have family members working.

Layoffs Wave Continues: Tech Giants Hit Hard, NRIs Feel the Pinch

January’s layoff announcements totaled over 108,000 – up 118% year-over-year. February is adding more pain, with companies citing AI efficiency, restructuring, and cost controls.

Key cuts affecting NRI-heavy sectors:

  • Amazon: Another 16,000 corporate roles eliminated globally (second big round after October).
  • Dow (chemicals/manufacturing): 4,500 jobs cut, focusing on AI and automation.
  • Mastercard: Roughly 1,000-4% of workforce reductions in corporate functions.
  • Others like Pinterest, Citi, UPS (up to 30,000 operational), and smaller fintech/banks.

Many NRIs in product, engineering, and ops roles at these firms are impacted. AI is often the stated reason – companies say it’s “efficiency,” but for workers, it feels like job replacement.

“Lost my role at Amazon last week after 8 years. Now juggling interviews while sending less home this month. Family in Hyderabad is understanding, but it’s stressful.” — Priya, 32, former product manager, Seattle

For the diaspora, this means tighter budgets, delayed remittances, or dipping into savings. Some are exploring Canada or Germany for skilled migration as backups.

Wall Street on Presidents Day Eve: Mixed Close Before Holiday Shutdown

Markets were closed today for Presidents Day, but Friday’s session (Feb 13) gave clues: Dow up 0.1% to ~49,501, S&P 500 barely moved (+0.05%) to ~6,836, Nasdaq down 0.22% to ~22,547.

Tech stocks (Nvidia, others) continued pressure from AI spending worries. Defensive names like Walmart gained as investors seek safety. The jobs report eased some recession fears but reduced odds of quick Fed rate cuts.

“My 401(k) is okay this week, but with layoffs everywhere, I’m moving more to stable funds. Can’t risk it when job isn’t secure.” — Anil, 40, IT consultant, New Jersey

NRIs with US investments or planning to repatriate funds are watching closely – volatility affects everything from mutual funds to real estate back home.

Inflation Relief Helps Wallets: Gas, Groceries Ease; Rent Still High

January CPI rose just 0.2% monthly, 2.4% year-over-year – down from 2.7% prior. Core (excluding food/energy) at ~2.5-2.8%.

  • Gasoline: Down 3.2% monthly, 7.5% yearly – pump prices around $2.90 average, big win for commuters.
  • Groceries: Up only 0.2% monthly, 2.1% yearly – beef cheaper, eggs way down post-avian flu.
  • Shelter/rent: Still up 0.2% monthly – biggest persistent pressure.

Lower energy and food costs help stretch dollars for remittances or family support.

“Gas finally under $3 – saving $50-60 a month on commute. Sending a bit extra home this time.” — Suresh, 38, H-1B in Dallas, Texas

But if a job is lost, these savings vanish fast.

Real Stories from the NRI Community: Resilience Amid Uncertainty

Across states, the mood is cautious but determined.

In California, engineers are upskilling in AI to stay relevant. In Texas and New Jersey, families are cutting non-essentials to maintain remittances. Many discuss the proposed remittance tax rumors (3.5% on outward transfers by non-citizens starting 2026 in some bills) – though impact debated, it adds worry.

Yet NRIs adapt: side gigs, networking on LinkedIn, exploring internal transfers or global roles.

Bright Spots: Where Opportunities Still Exist

Healthcare added big numbers – nursing, aides in demand. Construction steady. Some NRIs pivot to these or green energy/tech support roles.

Remittances to India remain strong overall – US is top source. Even with slowdowns, skilled talent demand persists in key sectors.

Final Thoughts: Stay Strong, Plan Smart

The US economy isn’t crashing, but it’s not booming either. Jobs up slightly, inflation cooling, but layoffs real and H-1B paths trickier. For us NRIs, it’s about protecting what we’ve built – job security, family support, savings for home.

Update resumes, network, learn in-demand skills like AI basics. Send remittances wisely if tax changes loom. We’ve overcome tougher times before – together.

We’ll keep tracking this for you. Share your stories in comments. Stay connected, stay hopeful.

Jai Hind from the US.

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