Golden Finance reported that Nick Timiraos, a mouthpiece of the Federal Reserve, published an article as the August non-farm data is about to be released, saying that tonight's employment report will affect the extent of the Fed's interest rate cut. If the August non-farm is another bad employment report, it may lead the Federal Reserve to cut interest rates by 50 basis points, but if the employment situation is good, it will keep the Federal Reserve on track to cut interest rates by 25 basis points. At the Federal Reserve's September 17-18 meeting, the focus of the debate was whether to start with a more traditional 25 basis point rate cut or a larger 50 basis point rate cut to prevent an undesirable weakness in the job market. The August recruitment and employment report, which will be released tonight, will be key to making a decision to cut interest rates. A decent employment report may prompt officials to start a possible series of rate cuts with a 25 basis point rate cut. Friday also happens to be the last day that Federal Reserve officials can communicate publicly before the start of the self-imposed pre-meeting blackout period. New York Fed President John Williams and Fed Governor Michael Waller are scheduled to speak after the jobs report, the last chance to set expectations for the upcoming meeting. KPMG Chief Economist Diane Swonk said there is a very strong case for a 50 basis point rate cut. The labor market is not in recession, but it is on thin ice. Even with good data on Friday, labor market weakness is increasing.