Ahead of today’s jobs report, most projections pointed to growth in July of 165,000 jobs. Those expectations were just about perfect.
The Bureau of Labor Statistics reported this morning that the economy added 164,000 jobs last month, while the unemployment rate remained unchanged at 3.7%. And while that’s a decent monthly total, the revisions from the previous two months were a little disappointing: job totals from May and June were both revised down, subtracting 41,000 from previous reporting.
As for the political implications, Donald Trump has now been in office for 30 full months — February 2017 through July 2019 — and in that time, the economy has created 5.74 million jobs. In the 30 months preceding Trump’s presidency — August 2014 to January 2017 — the economy created 6.61 million jobs.
I recently heard from a couple of readers who asked what would happen if we looked at the same numbers, but assigned the job totals from January 2017 to Trump, even though Obama was president for most of the month. On balance, I think that paints a misleading picture, but it doesn’t change the underlying dynamic: if we applied jobs from January 2017 to Trump and compared the last 31 months to the previous 31 months, job totals still slowed from 6.91 million to 5.99 million.








