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President Donald Trump holds a face mask as he speaks during a news conference at the White House on July 21, 2020. (AP) President Donald Trump holds a face mask as he speaks during a news conference at the White House on July 21, 2020. (AP)

President Donald Trump holds a face mask as he speaks during a news conference at the White House on July 21, 2020. (AP)

Louis Jacobson
By Louis Jacobson July 24, 2020

Unpacking Donald Trump’s statement on 'record job numbers'

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• The unemployment rate under Trump is up, and the total number of working Americans is down.

• Trump is referring to month-over-month employment increases in May and June 2020. Those increases were the highest of any month since the federal government began tabulating the statistic in 1939.

• The gains followed massive job reductions in April. The two months of gains account only for 37% of the April job losses.

During his first White House coronavirus briefing after a months-long hiatus, President Donald Trump touted recent economic improvements on his watch.

During the July 21 briefing, he was asked, "Do you want the American people to judge you on the ballot in November by how you’ve handled this pandemic so far?"

Trump responded, "I think the American people will judge us on this, but they'll judge us on the economy that I created and that already we're creating. We're setting record job numbers, as you know. I think we're going to have a very strong year next year."

Trump returned to the theme of roaring job gains in the next day’s briefing. 

"We have an economy that's going to be booming. … A lot of jobs are being produced. The job numbers will be coming out shortly, meaning over the next week or so, and I think it'll be a continuation of the last two months. The last two months have been incredible."

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Trump’s boast focuses on month-over-month job gains in May and June and ignores the huge job losses the country saw in March and April. It also overstates the overall jobs picture. Since Trump took office, the unemployment rate is significantly up, and the current number of Americans working is down. 

Yes, May and June saw significant job growth. According to the official Bureau of Labor Statistics count, non-farm employment rose by nearly 2.7 million in May and by 4.8 million in June. Those are significantly higher than the 1.1 million rise in September 1983, the previous record.

But these large increases followed a drop of more than 20 million jobs in April. That 20 million decrease is 10 times larger than the previous record for jobs lost in one month, which came in September 1945, when post-World War II demobilization was kicking in.

"The only reason the job growth numbers for May and June set records was because of the catastrophic collapse of jobs in March, and, especially, April," said Steve Fazzari, an economist at Washington University in St. Louis. "There is no way job growth would be setting records without the much worse collapse that preceded the record months."

 

In May and June, the U.S. made back about 37% of the jobs that had been lost in April. 

Economists say this is an important piece of context to consider.

The focus on the two monthly job gains is "incomplete," said Douglas Holtz-Eakin, president of the free-market American Action Forum.

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"You can’t ever just look at one or two months’ data," he said. "You have to provide some context or else you’re cherry-picking."

Gary Burtless, an economist with the Brookings Institution, used a stock market analogy to describe the current jobs situation.

"If the price of shares drops 25% in the first half of the year and then rebounds 20% in the second half of the year, stock market investors are still 10% poorer on Dec. 31 than they were on Jan. 1st," he said. "‘The U.S. unemployment rate fell to 11.1% last month …’ is not a phrase any American president wants to see. June had the highest unemployment rate in my lifetime, except for the rates in April and May. And I’m 70 years old."

The decline in April was so large that a big bounceback is not all that surprising, said Dean Baker, an economist and co-founder of the liberal Center for Economic and Policy Research.

"In fact, it would be incredibly scary if we didn't," Baker said. "The real question is how rapid the job growth will be going forward. We are still down by more than 14 million jobs. That is a disaster."

Our ruling

Trump said, "We're setting record job numbers."

Trump is fixating on one piece of the jobs puzzle, the job gains in May and June, while ignoring the rest of the picture. The gains make up less than 40% of the April losses, the nation’s unemployment rate remains over 11%, and the total number of Americans working now is less than when Trump took office.

Trump’s statement contains an element of truth but ignores critical facts that would give a different impression. We rate it Mostly False.

Our Sources

White House, "Remarks by President Trump in Press Briefing," July 21, 2020

White House, "Remarks by President Trump in Press Briefing," July 22, 2020

Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis, nonfarm employment, accessed July 23, 2020

Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis, unemployment rate, accessed July 23, 2020

Email interview with Gary Burtless, economist with the Brookings Institution, July 22, 2020

Email interview with Dean Baker, co-founder of the liberal Center for Economic and Policy Research, July 23, 2020

Email interview with Tara Sinclair, George Washington University economist, July 22, 2020

Email interview with Steve Fazzari, economist at Washington University in St. Louis, July 23, 2020

Interview with Douglas Holtz-Eakin, president of the free-market American Action Forum, July 24, 2020

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Unpacking Donald Trump’s statement on 'record job numbers'

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