Democrats love this chart, but the fact remains...if you showed from Bushes entire presidency and compared it with Obamas presidency, you would see Bush created 7.2 million jobs vs Obama (as of June 2012) lost a total of 473,000 jobs. Also remember that unemployment rate when Bush took office was in the 4% range. Its hard to create jobs when everyone already has a job. Pretty easy to create jobs when nobody has one.
The numbers falling out of the workforce is staggering. This is serious, real serious. http://finance.yahoo.com/blogs/breakout/why-drop-unemployment-rate-tragic-144809610.html
Nice metaphors, they certainly don't apply to ryan/romney ticket, but nice anyway. Hopefully we'll have more legitimate entrepreneurs, traders, risk takers, not those looking to get paid by a big company for doing crap work. TECHNOLOGY has made most Mfg jobs obsolete, and no one gets it. No more jobs, just room for entrepreneurs. Of course people stop looking for non-existent jobs, why should they? http://www.converge.org.nz/pirm/nutech.htm http://www.economist.com/blogs/freeexchange/2012/08/growth-0
you mean the ONE month out of NINETY-SIX where 800k jobs were lost, right? You also realize that after a perfectly natural correction the economy tends to begin growing? You also realize that crash was going to happen no matter what, due to both private and public sector policies and practices, don't you? Anyway, Presidents and govts don't create private sector jobs.. they can only provide an environment where it is possible.. obama's policies stifle private sector growth. Like I said before, the economy continues to "grow" (lol) in spite of obama, not because of him. Look up the participation and employment ratios on the BLS website.. the jobs we are adding are not even keeping up with growth of the population and workforce, AFTER the second largest correction in history. I forgot to mention that^
Bush did not create 7.2 million jobs,he created 3 million.If you count the jobs loss within 6 months of him leaving office he is in the red http://blogs.wsj.com/economics/2009/01/09/bush-on-jobs-the-worst-track-record-on-record/ Bush On Jobs: The Worst Track Record On Record By WSJ Staff President George W. Bush entered office in 2001 just as a recession was starting, and is preparing to leave in the middle of a long one. Thatâs almost 22 months of recession during his 96 months in office. His job-creation record wonât look much better. The Bush administration created about three million jobs (net) over its eight years, a fraction of the 23 million jobs created under President Bill Clintonâs administration and only slightly better than President George H.W. Bush did in his four years in office. Hereâs a look at job creation under each president since the Labor Department started keeping payroll records in 1939. The counts are based on total payrolls between the start of the month the president took office (using the final payroll count for the end of the prior December) and his final December in office. Because the size of the economy and labor force varies, we also calculate in percentage terms how much the total payroll count expanded under each president. The current President Bush, once taking account how long heâs been in office, shows the worst track record for job creation since the government began keeping records.