In the State of the Union address President Trump asserted, “Since the election, we have created 2.4 million new jobs….” This is incorrect, and by a wide margin.
In Q2 2017 alone there were 7.6 million new jobs. For a full year, it is more like 30 million.
The President (or his speechwriters) made the error through a common shortcut – discussing net job gains, a rather small part of the overall picture. Many media sources sloppily do the same. The table below shows the data for Q2 2017, the most recent available.
The Business Dynamics data is the most authoritative. It is drawn from actual state employment filings. No “fake jobs” there, unless businesses voluntarily pay taxes on phantom employees! The gross job gains are mostly offset by the 7.1 million in gross job losses. The result is an accurate count of net gains, reported quarterly and about seven months after the quarter ends. It is an important number, but almost universally ignored by the media and economic observers.
Essentially, it provides a good scorecard for Q2. At the time of the original BLS releases, the net gain in private jobs was reported as 428K. After the first revisions, which merely include more responses to the survey, the number was 554K. ADP, which does not try to match the first BLS estimates, choosing instead to align with the revised numbers, estimated net job growth of 588K.
Both were a bit high.
Why should we care?
Understanding the gross changes provides a much better picture of the dynamics of the labor market.
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