Unemployment lowest its been in almost three years.

Jarod

Well-known member
Contributor
So all you who were blaming President Obama, are you going to give him credit now?

Three years ago President Obama became President during the worst recession since the Great Depression, now unemployment (a trailing indicator) is improving and better than just a few months after he took office.

The ship has turned around.
 
Funny, every major news agency is leading with this story on their webcites...

Except FOX!
 
So all you who were blaming President Obama, are you going to give him credit now?

For the slowest recovery after a recession? Yeah, I suppose we can give him credit for that.

Three years ago President Obama became President during the worst recession since the Great Depression, now unemployment (a trailing indicator) is improving and better than just a few months after he took office.

It was not the worst recession since the Great Depression. Unemployment and inflation were both FAR higher in the 1981 recession.

The ship has turned around.

I would say it is turning.
 
when you attack every industry with profits, profits are slower to come by.
It's inspite of Obama not because of him.
 
For the slowest recovery after a recession? Yeah, I suppose we can give him credit for that.



It was not the worst recession since the Great Depression. Unemployment and inflation were both FAR higher in the 1981 recession.



I would say it is turning.


Hey SF, what was the peak to trough decline in GDP in the 1981 recession (as a percentage) as compared to the most recent one? And I don't think it's accurate to say that unemployment was far higher in the 1981 recession. Yes, the unemployment rate peaked higher (at 10.8% compared to 10.1%), but in terms of total job losses, the most recent recession was worse.
 
Hey SF, what was the peak to trough decline in GDP in the 1981 recession (as a percentage) as compared to the most recent one? And I don't think it's accurate to say that unemployment was far higher in the 1981 recession. Yes, the unemployment rate peaked higher (at 10.8% compared to 10.1%), but in terms of total job losses, the most recent recession was worse.

Tell us Dung, does the average person say, well GDP decline was worse this time so that makes it tougher on me. Or do they say unemployment and inflation were far higher in 1981. The effect on the average person then was FAR worse. It isn't even close. I am also not talking about the 'peak' rate. ONE month at 10% this time. TEN months of 10% plus unemployment.

In terms of total job losses? Please highlight your data for us.
 
Tell us Dung, does the average person say, well GDP decline was worse this time so that makes it tougher on me. Or do they say unemployment and inflation were far higher in 1981. The effect on the average person then was FAR worse. It isn't even close. I am also not talking about the 'peak' rate. ONE month at 10% this time. TEN months of 10% plus unemployment.

In terms of total job losses? Please highlight your data for us.

You really should get in the habit of answering the questions posed to you before asking questions. So, about the decline in GDP . . .

On which recession was "worse," you're just elevating the one statistic that was demonstrably worse during the 1981 recession and saying it is all that matters because of its unmeasureable impact on the average person. That's nonsense, particularly because inflation is something that the FED can make policy to change. The recession happened because inflation was high and the FED wanted to get control of it and when it got control of it, it changed its policies to promote sustainable growth and full employment.

The latest recession was dramatically different and it, and the subsequent recovery, were far worse in many ways, most importantly, the inability of the FED to do much to promote a return to full employment. Interest rates were already low. We've been at zero for a long long time. The FED cannot make interest rates go any lower. (The Germans have actually offered bond at more than face value, we haven't done that yet). So, this recession and recovery are far worse, but in different ways than 1981.

In terms of job losses, its hard to measure because of population changes and a different labor market, but the best metric is probably the percentage decline in employment population rate. Here's two charts for 1981 -1983 and 2007 - 2010, respectively:

fredgraph.png



fredgraph.png



The decline in the 1981-82 recession was about 2.5%. The decline in 2007-2010 was almost 5%
 
You really should get in the habit of answering the questions posed to you before asking questions. So, about the decline in GDP . . .

On which recession was "worse," you're just elevating the one statistic that was demonstrably worse during the 1981 recession and saying it is all that matters because of its unmeasureable impact on the average person. That's nonsense, particularly because inflation is something that the FED can make policy to change. The recession happened because inflation was high and the FED wanted to get control of it and when it got control of it, it changed its policies to promote sustainable growth and full employment.

The latest recession was dramatically different and it, and the subsequent recovery, were far worse in many ways, most importantly, the inability of the FED to do much to promote a return to full employment. Interest rates were already low. We've been at zero for a long long time. The FED cannot make interest rates go any lower. (The Germans have actually offered bond at more than face value, we haven't done that yet). So, this recession and recovery are far worse, but in different ways than 1981.

In terms of job losses, its hard to measure because of population changes and a different labor market, but the best metric is probably the percentage decline in employment population rate. Here's two charts for 1981 -1983 and 2007 - 2010, respectively:

The decline in the 1981-82 recession was about 2.5%. The decline in 2007-2010 was almost 5%

Year Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec Annual
1980 6.3 6.3 6.3 6.9 7.5 7.6 7.8 7.7 7.5 7.5 7.5 7.2
1981 7.5 7.4 7.4 7.2 7.5 7.5 7.2 7.4 7.6 7.9 8.3 8.5
1982 8.6 8.9 9.0 9.3 9.4 9.6 9.8 9.8 10.1 10.4 10.8 10.8
1983 10.4 10.4 10.3 10.2 10.1 10.1 9.4 9.5 9.2 8.8 8.5 8.3

TEN months of double digit unemployment.

Year Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec Annual
2008 5.0 4.9 5.1 5.0 5.4 5.6 5.8 6.1 6.1 6.5 6.8 7.3
2009 7.8 8.3 8.7 8.9 9.4 9.5 9.5 9.6 9.8 10.0 9.9 9.9
2010 9.7 9.8 9.8 9.9 9.6 9.4 9.5 9.6 9.5 9.5 9.8 9.4
2011 9.1 9.0 8.9 9.0 9.0 9.1 9.1 9.1 9.0 8.9 8.7 8.5
2012 8.3


Couple the above with double digit inflation for the 1981 recession... it was far worse. To pretend otherwise simply because GDP declined by a greater percentage?

You truly are a fucking idiot. In terms of impact on the lives of the average American, the two aren't close. 1981 was far worse.

As for the Fed... the Fed is not the be all end all of the government. Yes, they have the ability to fight inflation. They showed that when Reagan let Volcker crush inflation.

But to pretend that is the extent of the governments ability to correct the recession is blatantly false and you know it. There are countless things Obama COULD have done to actually create job growth. But instead he spent his time and energy ramming Obamacare down our throats.

As for the labor participation rate... no, that is not a good comparison. Saying 'well the first only went down 2.5% and the second 5% so the second is worse' is quite simply ridiculous.

1) Why is it your charts cut off the 1981 recession a month or so after the technical definition of the end of the recession and yet give the bulk of the year after the 2008 recession? Hmm... could it be because unemployment hadn't peaked yet in the first and had in the second?

2) Do the math. Using a similar cut off you are looking at about 2.5% and 4% declines in raw numbers. But when you actually count the percentage drop to actually compare apples to apples, the drops are 4.2% (2.5 decline/start point of 59.5) and 6.3% (4% decline/start point of 63%). Amazing how that brings the numbers closer.

3) The best metric is not the employment population rate. You want to use it because you think it lends credence to your bullshit. The best metric is the unemployment rate. It measures those who are looking for a job and cannot get one. It is a consistently run survey. It is apples to apples. When you look at the labor participation rate, that can be effected by multiple factors. Did they leave the labor market because of a lack of jobs or because they retired or because they went from working to stay at home parent? Do you know what caused each of the declines Dung?

4) TEN Months of double digit unemployment vs. ONE.

5) Sustained double digit inflation vs. modest to weak inflation
 
Year Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec Annual
1980 6.3 6.3 6.3 6.9 7.5 7.6 7.8 7.7 7.5 7.5 7.5 7.2
1981 7.5 7.4 7.4 7.2 7.5 7.5 7.2 7.4 7.6 7.9 8.3 8.5
1982 8.6 8.9 9.0 9.3 9.4 9.6 9.8 9.8 10.1 10.4 10.8 10.8
1983 10.4 10.4 10.3 10.2 10.1 10.1 9.4 9.5 9.2 8.8 8.5 8.3

TEN months of double digit unemployment.

Year Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec Annual
2008 5.0 4.9 5.1 5.0 5.4 5.6 5.8 6.1 6.1 6.5 6.8 7.3
2009 7.8 8.3 8.7 8.9 9.4 9.5 9.5 9.6 9.8 10.0 9.9 9.9
2010 9.7 9.8 9.8 9.9 9.6 9.4 9.5 9.6 9.5 9.5 9.8 9.4
2011 9.1 9.0 8.9 9.0 9.0 9.1 9.1 9.1 9.0 8.9 8.7 8.5
2012 8.3


Couple the above with double digit inflation for the 1981 recession... it was far worse. To pretend otherwise simply because GDP declined by a greater percentage?

You truly are a fucking idiot. In terms of impact on the lives of the average American, the two aren't close. 1981 was far worse.

No, not "simply because" but because in terms of recession and recovery, the job losses associated with the present recession are worse, while unemployment during the recession in 1981 was higher. Here's another chart for you showing the amount of time for employment to reach pre-recession levels. Again, the most recent recession is far worse:

JobsChartPostWW2recessionsNov11.jpg



As for the Fed... the Fed is not the be all end all of the government. Yes, they have the ability to fight inflation. They showed that when Reagan let Volcker crush inflation.

But to pretend that is the extent of the governments ability to correct the recession is blatantly false and you know it. There are countless things Obama COULD have done to actually create job growth. But instead he spent his time and energy ramming Obamacare down our throats.

I never suggested that the FED was the be all and end all of government. But to suggest that monetary policy isn't an important tool for both controlling inflation and promoting full employment is lunacy. In the 1981-82, the FED had tools in its arsenal to ramp up growth once inflation was curbed, and it did so. The traditional means doing that is lowering interest rates. We already had very low interest rates when went into recession. The FED dropped rates to zero and there they have remained (and will remain). The FED has limited other tools to promote growth and full employment, at leas that it is willing to employ. QEI and II were examples of that, but quantitative easing has limited effectiveness. The FED has been unwilling to do anything right now that might cause an uptick in inflation. Thus, the FED has been unable (or unwilling) to do much of anything to promote growth.

On the fiscal side of things, Reagan dramatically increased spending (which is what we ought to be doing now). Obama had the stimulus. That was his one shot and it wasn't enough. In a sane world, we'd do more. Instead, we're doing much more modest things like payroll tax holidays and Obama has to fight to get even that. Fiscal policy is dragging the economy down now while in the 1980s Reagan was ramping up spending (and deficits).

In short, in the early 80s you had both fiscal and monetary policymakers doing things to promote growth and full employment. Now, the fiscal side is unwilling to so anything and the fiscal side is cutting back.

As for the labor participation rate... no, that is not a good comparison. Saying 'well the first only went down 2.5% and the second 5% so the second is worse' is quite simply ridiculous.

I used the employment-population ratio, not labor participation. What's wrong with it as a metric? What do you suggest as a metric for measuring job losses?


1) Why is it your charts cut off the 1981 recession a month or so after the technical definition of the end of the recession and yet give the bulk of the year after the 2008 recession? Hmm... could it be because unemployment hadn't peaked yet in the first and had in the second?

I can do a longer chart if you want. I just used whole year periods, not that it matters much. Here's the same chart through the end of 1984:

fredgraph.png




2) Do the math. Using a similar cut off you are looking at about 2.5% and 4% declines in raw numbers. But when you actually count the percentage drop to actually compare apples to apples, the drops are 4.2% (2.5 decline/start point of 59.5) and 6.3% (4% decline/start point of 63%). Amazing how that brings the numbers closer.

If you actually do the math, peak to trough you are looking at declines of 2.5% and 4.8%. Using your same apples to apples comparison, its a 4.2% drop as compared to a 7.6% drop. Doesn't bring the numbers that much closer.


3) The best metric is not the employment population rate. You want to use it because you think it lends credence to your bullshit. The best metric is the unemployment rate. It measures those who are looking for a job and cannot get one. It is a consistently run survey. It is apples to apples. When you look at the labor participation rate, that can be effected by multiple factors. Did they leave the labor market because of a lack of jobs or because they retired or because they went from working to stay at home parent? Do you know what caused each of the declines Dung?

The unemployment rate doesn't measure actual job losses and it is subject to underlying factors (that you so aptly describe) that can skew the numbers, most particularly the labor participation rate. That's why I don't use it. All of the criticisms that you use for the labor participation rate (which I didn't use, mid you) are equally applicable to the unemployment rate.

I use the employment-population ratio because it is a more accurate measure of jobs because, unlike the unemployment rate, it is not dependent on labor market participation. While comparing em-pop numbers across decades is stupid because of changes in employment patterns more generally (two worker households, female employment and the like), comparing it over a period of two or three years doesn't have those problems.

4) TEN Months of double digit unemployment vs. ONE.

You said that once or twice already.


5) Sustained double digit inflation vs. modest to weak inflation

You said that once or twice, too. We were having a discussion about jobs.
 
No, not "simply because" but because in terms of recession and recovery, the job losses associated with the present recession are worse, while unemployment during the recession in 1981 was higher. Here's another chart for you showing the amount of time for employment to reach pre-recession levels. Again, the most recent recession is far worse:

No, they are NOT worse. The unemployment rate was FAR worse for FAR longer during the early 80's. What part of TEN STRAIGHT MONTHS ABOVE 10% are you failing to comprehend? Looking at a chart that shows how long it takes to recover is also good. It shows that the Reagan recovery was FAR more successful than that of Obama, despite the unemployment situation being worse during the recession Reagan faced. your chart says exactly what we have been saying... Obama has FAILED when it comes to job creation.


I never suggested that the FED was the be all and end all of government. But to suggest that monetary policy isn't an important tool for both controlling inflation and promoting full employment is lunacy.

But you DID state that the Fed was able to effectively combat inflation with the 80's recession, which is true. You then went on to comment that the Fed today isn't able to do the same because rates are at zero. You seemed to be blaming it on the Fed's inability while ignoring the FACT that it is NOT the Fed that needs to act this time. Also, I never suggested that monetary policy wasn't an important tool. It is quite simply NOT the tool we need for this particular job.

In the 1981-82, the FED had tools in its arsenal to ramp up growth once inflation was curbed, and it did so. The traditional means doing that is lowering interest rates. We already had very low interest rates when went into recession. The FED dropped rates to zero and there they have remained (and will remain). The FED has limited other tools to promote growth and full employment, at leas that it is willing to employ. QEI and II were examples of that, but quantitative easing has limited effectiveness. The FED has been unwilling to do anything right now that might cause an uptick in inflation. Thus, the FED has been unable (or unwilling) to do much of anything to promote growth.

The reason it is pointless to bring up Dung is that inflation is NOT the problem this time. While both are recessions, they are not the same. Quantitative easing is simply a measure to push the problem into the future. It does little to solve the employment problems we are facing. This is the point you are not grasping. It is not the Fed that needs to take action.

On the fiscal side of things, Reagan dramatically increased spending (which is what we ought to be doing now). Obama had the stimulus. That was his one shot and it wasn't enough. In a sane world, we'd do more. Instead, we're doing much more modest things like payroll tax holidays and Obama has to fight to get even that. Fiscal policy is dragging the economy down now while in the 1980s Reagan was ramping up spending (and deficits).

Give me a fucking break. Obama has had Trillion dollar+ deficits every year. The problem is NOT a lack of spending. period.

In short, in the early 80s you had both fiscal and monetary policymakers doing things to promote growth and full employment. Now, the fiscal side is unwilling to so anything and the fiscal side is cutting back.

Total crock of shit.


I used the employment-population ratio, not labor participation. What's wrong with it as a metric? What do you suggest as a metric for measuring job losses?

Please... do enlighten us as to how vastly different those two are. Do you even know how they are calculated and what the difference is?

I already explained to you what is wrong with that metric.

If you want a metric to measure job losses... look at the JOBS numbers. If you want a metric to be able to compare the two periods, you look at the UNEMPLOYMENT RATE. That is the best metric to compare the two. Which has already been stated.

The unemployment rate doesn't measure actual job losses and it is subject to underlying factors (that you so aptly describe) that can skew the numbers, most particularly the labor participation rate. That's why I don't use it. All of the criticisms that you use for the labor participation rate (which I didn't use, mid you) are equally applicable to the unemployment rate.

Yes, you used the labor participation rates twin sister. Fucking idiot

I use the employment-population ratio because it is a more accurate measure of jobs because, unlike the unemployment rate, it is not dependent on labor market participation. While comparing em-pop numbers across decades is stupid because of changes in employment patterns more generally (two worker households, female employment and the like), comparing it over a period of two or three years doesn't have those problems.

No, it is not more accurate. It includes anyone who worked at least ONE hour in the given week.

And no moron, we were having a discussion about the severity of the two recessions you moron.
 
No, they are NOT worse. The unemployment rate was FAR worse for FAR longer during the early 80's. What part of TEN STRAIGHT MONTHS ABOVE 10% are you failing to comprehend? Looking at a chart that shows how long it takes to recover is also good. It shows that the Reagan recovery was FAR more successful than that of Obama, despite the unemployment situation being worse during the recession Reagan faced. your chart says exactly what we have been saying... Obama has FAILED when it comes to job creation.

Respectfully, we disagree. You repeating the same statistics over and over and over again is not going to change our disagreement. I think your focus on those statistics is wrong and that you aren't looking at the broader picture of the recession.


But you DID state that the Fed was able to effectively combat inflation with the 80's recession, which is true. You then went on to comment that the Fed today isn't able to do the same because rates are at zero. You seemed to be blaming it on the Fed's inability while ignoring the FACT that it is NOT the Fed that needs to act this time. Also, I never suggested that monetary policy wasn't an important tool. It is quite simply NOT the tool we need for this particular job.

The FED's dual mandate is price stability and full employment. That mandate doesn't change. The FED always has that dual mandate. It isn't a "FACT" that it is NOT the fed that needs to act this time. That's just not true. The FED has a responsibility to act all the time in pursuit of its dual mandates. I imagine that if inflation was at double the FED target rate for 3+ years you wouldn't suggest that the FED didn't need to act. Why is it different for unemployment? And yes, monetary policy is exactly the tool for this particular job. The trouble is that the traditional tools are not available and the FED is unwilling to do anything that isn't within the realm of its traditional tools.


The reason it is pointless to bring up Dung is that inflation is NOT the problem this time. While both are recessions, they are not the same. Quantitative easing is simply a measure to push the problem into the future. It does little to solve the employment problems we are facing. This is the point you are not grasping. It is not the Fed that needs to take action.

I know inflation is not the problem this time. This recession is very different from the 1981 recession. My point, SF, is that the FED created the 1981 recession and it ended the 1981 recession through the traditional method of changing interest rates. The FED had available to it and used the traditional tools. With the current recession, rates were already low, went to zero and can't go any lower. The traditional tool is no longer available. Quantitative easing was a policy adopted because it can't go lower than 0, but it isn't terribly effective.


Give me a fucking break. Obama has had Trillion dollar+ deficits every year. The problem is NOT a lack of spending. period.

Spending is only one side of the deficit equation. And, given the peak to trough drop in GDP and the drop in aggregate demand associated with it, substantially increased spending was called for.


Total crock of shit.

Um, how so?


Please... do enlighten us as to how vastly different those two are. Do you even know how they are calculated and what the difference is?

They are vastly different and if you want to get a sense of job losses you should look to employment population ratio since it's a fairly straightforward calculation of the proportion of the non-institutionalized population over the age of 16 that is employed. "Employed" is very broadly defined. It basically measures the percentage of people that have jobs. So if you want to get a sense of the job losses, measuring the percentage of people at time A versus time B is a good indicator.

Labor market participation rate, by contrast, is all persons over the age of 16 that aren't instituionalized that are employed or unemployed. The "or unemployed" part is the important difference. "Unemployed" means actively looking and available for work. So the labor market participation rate includes not just people with jobs, but people who don't have jobs but want jobs and are actively looking for them. Whether people want and look for work varies greatly depending on a who host of factors. For these reasons, because it includes the unemployed, which is highly variable, it isn't a good metric for measuring job losses.

The two are different and the reasons why the unemployment rate isn't a good indicator of job losses is precisely the reason that labor-market participation is not a good indicator.


I already explained to you what is wrong with that metric.

No, you didn't. You explain what is wrong with labor market participation, and in so doing, you implicitly explained what is wrong with using the unemployment rate.

If you want a metric to measure job losses... look at the JOBS numbers. If you want a metric to be able to compare the two periods, you look at the UNEMPLOYMENT RATE. That is the best metric to compare the two. Which has already been stated.

Jobs numbers is a hard comparator because of population and demographic changes. The unemployment rate is inadequate for the reasons you described. If you want to look at job numbers, you the percentage of population employed, a superior metric.


Yes, you used the labor participation rates twin sister. Fucking idiot

Actually, no, I didn't. You did. You're shit-bagging labor participation rate while trumpeting unemployment, which is a component of the labor participation rate. And the reasons you identified as problems with labor participation are problems with the unemployment rate, not with the employment side of the labor participation equation.


No, it is not more accurate. It includes anyone who worked at least ONE hour in the given week.

Right. It includes anyone who has a job. Call me crazy, but that seems like a good metric for measuring jobs.


And no moron, we were having a discussion about the severity of the two recessions you moron.

Yes, we are, sunshine.
 
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Respectfully, we disagree. You repeating the same statistics over and over and over again is not going to change our disagreement. I think your focus on those statistics is wrong and that you aren't looking at the broader picture of the recession.

LMAO... wrong moron... it is you who is not looking at the broader picture.

The FED's dual mandate is price stability and full employment. That mandate doesn't change.
No shit moron. That doesn't mean the Fed is the only one that can act. They cannot act for the very fucking reasons you mentioned. They wasted their tools and now have none.


I know inflation is not the problem this time. This recession is very different from the 1981 recession. My point, SF, is that the FED created the 1981 recession and it ended the 1981 recession through the traditional method of changing interest rates. The FED had available to it and used the traditional tools. With the current recession, rates were already low, went to zero and can't go any lower. The traditional tool is no longer available. Quantitative easing was a policy adopted because it can't go lower than 0, but it isn't terribly effective.

Exactly which is why it is NOT the Fed that needs to act here. They have no effective tools.


Spending is only one side of the deficit equation. And, given the peak to trough drop in GDP and the drop in aggregate demand associated with it, substantially increased spending was called for.

LMAO.

They are vastly different and if you want to get a sense of job losses you should look to employment population ratio since it's a fairly straightforward calculation of the proportion of the non-institutionalized population over the age of 16 that is employed. "Employed" is very broadly defined. It basically measures the percentage of people that have jobs. So if you want to get a sense of the job losses, measuring the percentage of people at time A versus time B is a good indicator.

Labor market participation rate, by contrast, is all persons over the age of 16 that aren't instituionalized that are employed or unemployed. The "or unemployed" part is the important difference. "Unemployed" means actively looking and available for work. So the labor market participation rate includes not just people with jobs, but people who don't have jobs but want jobs and are actively looking for them. Whether people want and look for work varies greatly depending on a who host of factors. For these reasons, because it includes the unemployed, which is highly variable, it isn't a good metric for measuring job losses.

The two are different and the reasons why the unemployment rate isn't a good indicator of job losses is precisely the reason that labor-market participation is not a good indicator.

LMAO... of the two, the labor market participation rate is the more reliable. Counting people who worked 'one hour' during the week should count as a job? Are you fucking kidding? you whine about variability yet you rely on a number that uses such moronic definitions of a 'job'?

The unemployment rate is not perfect. But it is the better metric. It is an apples to apples comparison. Percent of people looking for a job that cannot find one. Period.

Actually, no, I didn't. You did. You're shit-bagging labor participation rate while trumpeting unemployment, which is a component of the labor participation rate. And the reasons you identified as problems with labor participation are problems with the unemployment rate, not with the employment side of the labor participation equation.

You truly need an economics lesson.

Right. It includes anyone who has a job. Call me crazy, but that seems like a good metric for measuring jobs.

So if Bush had created 20 million one hour per week 'jobs' that would have been amazing to you... right?

Yes, we are, sunshine.

this is how fucking retarded you are... we were talking about the severity of the recessions. Are you saying jobs is the only factor there? Just because we discussed jobs as a component of the recessions doesn't mean that is the only factor we were discussing. You are aware that anyone can look up this thread and see what we were talking about right?

You fucking retard.
 
Here are two last charts. This is the percentage change in employment during the two recessions:

1981-1982:

fredgraph.png



2007-2009:

fredgraph.png



The most recent recession was worse in terms of percentage job losses.
 
So all you who were blaming President Obama, are you going to give him credit now?

Three years ago President Obama became President during the worst recession since the Great Depression, now unemployment (a trailing indicator) is improving and better than just a few months after he took office.

The ship has turned around.

How many people have simply given up looking for a job? The unemployment figures don't take that into account.
 
Also, unemployment is now at 8.3%! It's been showing a steady pattern of going down by .2% every month for the past few months. We might very well be at the end of this recession; I think I lost hope far too early.
 
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