Biden’s boasts about 2023 economy and ‘jobs, jobs, jobs’ are more spin than reality

2023 is concluding with a polling whimper for President Joe Biden. A seriesof newpollsshow Biden’s favorability is plummeting. His polling on the economy is especially bad. According to a new Pew Research poll, only 36% of respondents say Biden “make[s] good decisions about economic policy.”A new Fox News surveyreveals just 14% of Americans think Biden’s economic policy impact has been helpful.

In an effort to reverse these falling poll numbers and duck the cost-of-living crisis facing many Americans, Biden has shifted his economic remarksof late from “Bidenomics” to job creation. “President Biden likes to talk about ‘jobs, jobs, jobs’ when touting his economic record,” reportedthe Wall Street Journal this month. “The problem is that voters are far more worried about prices, prices, prices.”

Yet a closer look at the 2023labor market data reveals the jobs picture is not as rosy as Biden’s rhetoric.

RNC BASHES BIDEN FOR ‘UNAFFORDABLE’ HOLIDAY COSTS IN FESTIVE NEW ATTACK AD

Following the November jobs report released in early December, Biden boastedhis administration has created “over 14 million jobs.” In a Labor Day speech, he claimed, “We created more jobs in two years than any president ever created in a four-year[term].”

President Joe Biden claims he has been a successful job creator. But the numbers tell a different story. (Fox News)

This job creation assertion is misleading because 9.4millionof the jobs created under Biden are merely backfill jobs temporarily lost during the pandemic. Excluding post-pandemic job returners, the economy has created an additional 4.7 million jobs under Biden. That’s significantly fewer than the 6 million created under Trump at the same point in his term.

The distribution of job creation under Biden also matters. The 2.55 million jobs created through the first 11 months of 2023 deserve an asterisk because fully half have come in the relatively unproductive government (636,000) and healthcare (623,000) sectors.

For comparison’s sake, average monthly government job creation in 2023 is 3.9 times higher than the rate of the previous administration (pre-COVID-19) and 2.4 times faster for healthcare.

Rapid expansion of government jobs is not a sign of a healthy market economy. These jobs generally extract funds from the private sector through taxation that otherwise could go to higher-valued economic activity.

Fox poll indicates 44% of voters think the economy will get worse in 2024 Video

Some healthcare jobs are productive, but many should be considered quasi-government jobs because government funds approximately 50% of healthcare spending.Many healthcare jobs are bureaucratic and feed inefficient middlemen who exist between patients and doctors.

CLICK HERE FOR MORE FOX NEWS OPINION

The government recently announcedthe U.S. spent $4.5 trillion on healthcare in 2022, amounting to 17.3% of GDP, around 50% morethan what developed nations like Germany, France and Japan spend. Job creation in this bloated sector of the economy, which will only put further upward pressure on costs, is nothing to celebrate.

Meanwhile, average private-sector wage growthremains stagnant, growing at the same rate as core inflationover the last 12 months after declining in real terms during the two previous years.

Is a labor market where employees cannot demand wages commensurate with cost of living increases truly that robust? The president’s terrible economic poll numbers also indicate Americans do not believe the labor market is as strong as Biden suggests.

CLICK HERE TO GET THE FOX NEWS APP

Even with the Federal Reserve’s interest rate pivotannounced in December, the U.S. economy faces numerous headwinds. These include high wholesale and consumer costs, elevated interest rates and record consumer and sovereign debt levels.

No wonder Biden is choosing to devote his economic remarks to jobs. But for those Americans not working in government or healthcare, the 2023labormarket is nothing to celebrate.

Alfredo Ortiz is president and CEO of Job Creators Network, author of”The Real Race Revolutionaries,” and co-host of”The Main Street Matters“podcast.

CLICK HERE TO READ MORE FROM ALFREDO ORTIZ

Alex Acosta served as the 27th U.S. secretary of Labor and is a board member at Job Creators Network.

About FOX NEWS

Check Also

Obama Can't Win With Crude Class Warfare in 2012

Pretending the past three years’ dismal economy is someone else’s fault is not likely to …

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news