On Friday, the Bureau of Labor Statistics released January’s jobs report and,
as has been the case for some time now, the news was good. The economy
added 257,000 jobs during the month. This exceeded general expectations
that job growth would be around 230,000.
Also, the strong numbers for both November and December were revised
upward, with November now showing 423,000 jobs added and December coming
in at 329,000. The unemployment rate showed little change as it sits at
5.7%.
Beyond steady job growth, there was plenty of other
good news to glean from the report. One of the reasons the unemployment
rate didn’t drop and actually raised a tad bit is due to the labor
participation rate. Typically, wingnut critics tend to dismiss the
unemployment rate and jobs report from the BLS because they feel the
numbers are skewed due to the number of people who have given up on
working and dropped out of the labor force. (Much of the decrease in the
labor participation rate over recent years is due to baby boomers
retiring.) In January, the labor participation rate ticked up to 62.9%,
leading to a slight bump up in the unemployment rate despite the number
of jobs added.
Also, wages showed a decent increase in the month,
as the average wage jumped up 12 cents an hour to $24.75. For the year,
wages have increased by 2.2%, which is the level the Federal Reserve
wants to see sustained before they decide to increase interest rates. In
December, average wages had actually decreased by 5 cents an hour, so
it is definitely nice to see the increase in January and the overall
trend that wages are increasing, even if still not as quickly as most
working- and middle-class workers would like.
Of course, not everyone welcomed this solid jobs
report with open arms. As is typically the case, Faux News had to
immediately put a negative spin on it. The image below from Faux &
Friends Friday morning says it all.
Yep, the hosts on Faux’s poutrage morning show felt that the the real headline should be
that the unemployment rate went up. No mention about the average job
growth of 336,000 jobs over the past three months. Let’s not point out
that wages are increasing. God forbid discussing the sustained private
job growth we’ve seen under President Obama. Instead, let’s just have
Steve Doocy end the segment by claiming that the real news is that the
“unemployment rate ticks up to 5.7.”
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