In early 2002, George Bush decided to switch to
officially publicizing the Household Survey because it suited him better.
Here's a link:http://www.epi.org/publications/entry/webfeatures_viewpoints_job_creation_numbers/excerpt:The administration wants the public to believe the economy is strong and jobs are being created. So it has tried to muddy the issue by highlighting the slightly better trends in the household survey since the beginning of the recovery in November 2001.
Its argument is simply bad economics. Nonpartisan experts including the Bureau of Labor Statistics (the people who compile both sets of numbers), the Congressional Budget Office and the President’s Council of Economic Advisers are unanimous that the payroll survey provides the better measure of employment trends. Federal Reserve Chairman Alan Greenspan concurs. He testified before the Senate Banking Committee on Feb. 12 that “the payroll series is the more accurate number.”
This is the reason why Bush had to do it:http://usbudget.blogspot.com/2008/07/job-growth-under-bush-and-prior.htmlexcerptAs explained in my post of March 16, one must be careful in comparing changes in employment using the Household Survey. This extends to changes in the population and labor force, also from the Household Survey. Still, the job growth of nonfarm and private jobs (from the Payroll Survey) in Bush's first term was the worst since at least 1941. Taking both of Bush's terms together (through June 2008), the average monthly growth in household survey, nonfarm, and private employment were 91.2, 58.1, and 39.9 thousand, respectively. For nonfarm and private employment, this was the second worst since Eisenhower with Bush's father's term being the worst.
Here's an article from The Heritage Foundation in which they attempt to throw weight at the Household Survey, but they actually make a stronger case for the Payroll method:http://www.heritage.org/Research/Labor/CDA04-03.cfmexcerpt:Ben Bernanke, a prominent academic economist and recently appointed Governor of the Federal Reserve, commented on the survey disparity on November 6, 2003. His views are a fair reflection of the academic economists, and he confesses, "
e do not fully understand the differences in employment reported by the payroll and household surveys, and the truth probably lies in between the two series." Nevertheless, Bernanke was quick to emphasize the conventional wisdom that "greater reliance should probably be placed on the payroll survey."
I suspect your revisionary math on the unemployment chart was also faulty at best (even on your second attempt).
(on edit)
After reading through your past posts, I think I'll avoid your usual long drawn out arguments, and accept your recurring theory that George Bush is an economical wizard who fixed Clinton's economy, everybody who wants a job has one, and unemployment is at a record low.
I have a harder time with your staunch disapproval of the Lilly Ledbetter Act though. It must have been a tough pill for you to vote for Obama last November.