But only his opinions are his. The BLS numbers are the BLS numbers, not his, as well the number of jobs created during the Clinton adminsitration, the math of numbers of jobs per month isn't his, and neither are the stats.
But they are publicly available, and although their math is not entirely public, I have not found a
consistently better source that everyone could agree on.
So I pulled these off the the BLS database precisely because I didn't want to accept that his numbers were accurate. They are not that far off, and the numbers I got from the BLS include periodic revisions made by the BLS as other data comes in, after his was posted. I just used the AVERAGE function in excel to get a monthly average across years:
"Monthly Growth in Total Nonfarm Employment, Seasonally Adjusted: 1980-2008
Average Per Month Thousands.
Year
----
1980 22
1981 -4
1982 -177
1983 288
1984 323
1985 208
1986 158
1987 263
1988 270
1989 162
1990 26
1991 -71
1992 96
1993 233
1994 321
1995 179
1996 233
1997 280
1998 250
1999 264
2000 163
2001 -147
2002 -45
2003 7
2004 173
2005 211
2006 175
2007 91
2008 -256
2009 -373
The best years were, of course,Clinton, partly based on his tax increases and partly based on the government-funded research in ARPA which became the Internet, and the resultant dot com boom.
Bush came in, did the tax cuts, got some anemic growth, then the jobs just fell off the charts (so much for the tax cuts=jobs theory).
We need about 125,000 jobs a month just to stay even. If we want to employ the 15 million people who are unemployed (U3), we would have to create jobs above that. Let's say 200,000 above the break-even - that would still take us till mid 2016 - and that doesn't take care of the ones who have left the market (always happens in a recession and they don't come back until we are out), and it doesn't take care of those who are working but can't make enough to pay their bills (U6).
So let's be overly optimistic - let's say we can create 325,000 jobs a month, a number even the best job creator of the modern era never reached - how many people who are unemployed today will be able to wait until 2016 to have even a chance at a job?
I would love to see anything at all that will create enough demand to add 325,000 jobs a month, every month, starting this month, for the next 6 1/4 years.
I may not like his politics or opinions, but the data is not that far off. 2020 is, for a lot of people.
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That said, I might not trust me either - here is the path to the data:
I have read those figures in so many places, and looked it up once to prove it to myself, don't remember where. So I just use 100,000 as the most conservative figure I have found. It is probably higher, just based on how many people are aging upwards, but 100K is good enough for this.
To get the employment data start at:
http://www.bls.gov/webapps/legacy/cesbtab1.htm For Total Nonfarm - Select box for Seasonally Adjusted
at bottom of table select "Retrieve"
on next page select More Formatting Options
Deselect Original Data Value
Select 1 month net change
On right side change From year to 1980 (or whatever)
Select "Retrieve Data" at bottom.
That's total nonfarm employment as it goes up and
down each month.
Select the .xls printed next to Download, save it,
and pull it up in Excel. Average each of the lines.
In general, Clinton was '93 through 2000, W was 2001 through 2008.