Disclaimer:
This blog should not be interpreted in any political way. It does not
represent anyone’s political view on Biden’s presidency, but rather a
comparative evaluation for his performance in the economy using data from
reliable sources.
1. Biden:
“we're experiencing the strongest economic recovery in the world”.
Indeed, there has been much good news about economic recovery on the news
lately. Strong retail sales, falling unemployment, the near-record stock market (until
the Omicron News broke), growth rate at pre-pandemic level, etc. However, data
shows that a large part of the recovery happened under former president Donald
Trump.
2. Biden:
“Our economy has created a record 5.6 million jobs since I became president”.
The US Bureau of Statistics shows that the US economy added 5,583,000
jobs since the inauguration of President Biden. Indeed, this is the highest
number of jobs created in the first 10 months of any presidency since records
began in 1939. But taking into account of the low base point of jobs during the
pandemic, the number is not all that impressive. Controlling for the 22 million
jobs lost during the pandemic, only around 3 million new jobs are created during
the first 10 months of Biden’s presidency.
3. Biden:
“Wages are rising”
Data shows that workers' wages are up to 4.9% this October compared with
the same time last year. One reason could be the recent spike in the shortage of
workers in the United States. But inflation has also been rising, which means
that the cost of living is going up. The Labor Bureau of Statistics estimated
that wages actually decreased 1.2 % after controlling for inflation.
All GDP, unemployment,
inflation are essential macroeconomic indicators, and all of them discredits President
Biden’s claim about the "historic progress" that the U.S. had made on
the economy in the last 10 months. Therefore, it is reasonable to conclude that
the economic recovery has been progressing, but just not as impressive as what
the current administration claims to be.
Credit: https://www.bbc.com/news/59402975