The July jobs report contained a major victory for
President Obama. Statistically speaking the nation’s unemployment rate
has fully recovered from the shrub’s Great Recession.
Jason Furman, Chairman of the Council of Economic Advisers, said in a statement:
With today’s report, the headline unemployment
rate (on an unrounded basis) moved below its pre-recession average for
the first time in the recovery. While this milestone is a testament to
the strength of the labor market recovery so far, several alternative
measures of labor market strength have not fully recovered, and some
level of slack remains. For example, the long-term unemployment rate is
34 percent above its pre-recession average. The slower recovery in the
long-term unemployment rate is offset by the short-term unemployment
rate, which is now below its pre-recession average. More noticeably, the
U-6 “underemployment rate”—a broader measure than headline unemployment
that includes discouraged workers and those employed part time while
preferring to work full time—remains 14 percent above its pre-recession
average. The female and Hispanic populations’ unemployment rates are not
yet fully recovered, but unemployment rates for male, black, white, and
Asian American workers are now below their pre-recession averages.
As Furman noted, the long-term unemployment rate is
still higher than pre-recession levels, and remains above the
pre-recession average for Hispanic and female workers. This means that
there is still work to be done on the jobs front. The next president
could send the economy into overdrive if he/she could address the plight
of the long-term unemployed. President Obama has made numerous attempts
over the last few years to tackle long-term unemployment with proposals
that have ranged from job retraining programs to employer incentives
for hiring the long-term unemployed, but Republicans in Congress refuse
to seriously discuss the issue.
Congressional Republicans would rather dedicate
their resources to pointless Benghazi and Hillary Clinton email
investigations than take action for the nation’s workers who still have
not recovered from the recession.
The good news is that the economic recovery is
sustaining itself, and under President Obama businesses have created
200,000 or more jobs in 15 of the last 17 months. More private sector
jobs have been created over the last two years than at any period since
1997-1999. Overall, the private sector has added 13 million jobs over 65
straight months of growth.
The
failed trickle-down policies being championed by the Republican
pretender candidates can’t touch what President Obama has
accomplished. Obama is proving once again that if voters want jobs and a
booming economy, the need a Democratic president in the White House.
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