Employment, Hours, and Earnings from the Current Employment Statistics survey (National)
Series Id: CES0000000001
Seasonally Adjusted
Super Sector: Total nonfarm
Industry: Total nonfarm
NAICS Code: N/A
Data Type: ALL EMPLOYEES, THOUSANDSYear
Dec2000
1324842007
138495(p)p : preliminary
At the end December 2000 the Bureau of Labor Statistics, BLS is indicating total, seasonally adjusted nonfarm employment, of 132,484,000. At the end of December 2007, the total has increased to a preliminary figure of 138,495,000. The difference is 6,011,000 or 6.0 million new jobs have been produced during the seven year period from January 2001 through December 2007, the length of time President Bush has been in office.
If the White House is stating 8.3 million jobs were created and I'm saying 6.0 million jobs have been created, who is correct? Both figures are correct - they just represent different periods of time. The White House is simply ignoring job losses incurred during the first 32 months of the Bush presidency.
There have been 8.3 million jobs created since August 2003, but there were 2.3 million jobs lost during the period from January 2001 through July 2003, bringing the job creation total down to 6.0 million from January 2001 through December 2007.
This is a very important subject and you really shouldn't believe either what the White House is stating, or what I'm indicating regarding these numbers. To confirm the validity of the numbers, you should extract the data yourself from the Bureau of Labor Statistics.
What these numbers prove is the economic policies put forth by the Bush administration, mainly The Jobs & Growth Tax Relief Reconciliation Act of 2003 have backfired.
The tax cuts in this plan were intended to "encourage consumer spending that will continue to boost the economic recovery and create jobs" and "promote investment by individuals and businesses that will lead to economic growth and job creation."
Our country cannot move forward with policies that create little more than 71,000 jobs per month.
Most Americans are worried about the economy and think this country needs change. The major change needed is to go back to the policies that were in effect under the Clinton administration, where all of us prospered, not just the rich and big business.
(Note: You can view every article as one long page if you sign up as an Advocate Member, or higher).