…today the Burea of Labor Statistics did a rebenchmarking and found 386,000 new jobs.
As you’d expect, that doesn’t utterly transform our understanding of the economy. The job market is still weak, all things considered. But it’s not as weak as the data we’ve been seeing imply. And that can help us explain things like “why has the unemployment rate been falling despite weak payroll growth?” or even “how can Mitt Romney be losing with the economy doing so poorly?” The payroll growth maybe wasn’t quite as weak as we thought, and the economy overall was perhaps doing a bit better.
And these are just revisions through March. We won’t have the real data story of what was going on this fall and summer until long after the election is done, and by then probably it’ll just get ignored.
Note that the benchmarking added a net of 386,000 jobs. In gross terms it actuallysubtracted 67,000 government jobs so the rebalancing of the American economy away from government employment and toward the private sector has actually gone somewhat further than we realized. Note that this also means that the Obama Era has crossed the symbolically important zero line. More Americans are employed today than were when he took office.
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good
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Convenient.
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Yes convenient. Because we all know the BLS is partisan for Obama
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Last month was inconvenient.
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Yes convenient. Because we all know the BLS is partisan for Obama