Good for the Roy Barons of the world. LOL
BREAKING" Blockbuster US jobs report!!! Extra! Extra!
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khicks26SBR Aristocracy
- 09-16-06
- 45704
#71Comment -
DwightShruteSBR Aristocracy
- 01-17-09
- 103420
#72Comment -
RoyBaconBARRELED IN @ SBR!
- 09-21-05
- 37074
#77This tard's reaction to the news of the best unemployment rate since 1969.
We can do better too. Better trade deals, stop illegals and lower corp taxes. We could achieve 5% wage growth if we would commit.
We are at 3.1% wage growth now. We should be able to get to 3.5% wage growth even without dems.Comment -
khicks26SBR Aristocracy
- 09-16-06
- 45704
#78This tard's reaction to the news of the best unemployment rate since 1969.
We can do better too. Better trade deals, stop illegals and lower corp taxes. We could achieve 5% wage growth if we would commit.
We are at 3.1% wage growth now. We should be able to get to 3.5% wage growth even without dems.Comment -
RoyBaconBARRELED IN @ SBR!
- 09-21-05
- 37074
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khicks26SBR Aristocracy
- 09-16-06
- 45704
#80
Accurate by who's framing?
Never happen, the jobs suck & you guys don't want to pay.Comment -
RoyBaconBARRELED IN @ SBR!
- 09-21-05
- 37074
#81
Obama's wage growth was 1%. That's not good.
Trump has accomplished 3.1% with just a tax cut. Can you imagine if we eliminated unnecessary legal/illegal immigration and better trade deals?????Comment -
khicks26SBR Aristocracy
- 09-16-06
- 45704
#82
The way you talk Roy, I thought he did that already. LOLComment -
RoyBaconBARRELED IN @ SBR!
- 09-21-05
- 37074
#83Comment -
khicks26SBR Aristocracy
- 09-16-06
- 45704
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RoyBaconBARRELED IN @ SBR!
- 09-21-05
- 37074
#85Don't do the propaganda cop out thingy.
Just admit the obvious; tax cuts ignited an excellent economic leg up. You could temper it with mentioning the debt has increased but don't cop out and be some kind of denier in the face of massive evidence.Comment -
khicks26SBR Aristocracy
- 09-16-06
- 45704
#86
3.1% just who's wages are included in that 3.1%. Would that be just hourly workers? Or does that included everyone? You know like CEO's, Doctors, & other specialty fields were most of the so called growth is going to a small % of people.
3.1% is your propaganda. You can make numbers say just about anything you want.Comment -
khicks26SBR Aristocracy
- 09-16-06
- 45704
#87How about your unemployment numbers? You know thay don't count people that have dropped out of the work force. You know they count people that are under employed as employed. They will take any crappy part time job with shit pay & no benefits & count it as employment.Comment -
khicks26SBR Aristocracy
- 09-16-06
- 45704
#88Half the country makes 30k or less a year. Whats 3.1% of 30k? Not enough to live on?Comment -
khicks26SBR Aristocracy
- 09-16-06
- 45704
#89Shall we continue?Comment -
RoyBaconBARRELED IN @ SBR!
- 09-21-05
- 37074
#90This will help you understand.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ~~~~~~~~~~
The economy added 266,000 jobs in November, according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics’ (BLS) monthly Employment Situation Report released today. The job totals for September and October were also revised upward, leading to a total increase of 41,000 additional jobs.
The return of the striking GM workers boosted November payrolls, as well. Taking the average over the past 2 months, job growth has been 211,000 per month (netting out the impact of GM on each month’s numbers). This is an increase in the rate of job growth from earlier in 2019.
November’s impressive gain greatly exceeded median market expectations by 44 percent and brought 2019’s average monthly job creation to 180,000. Since President Trump’s election, the economy has added more than 7 million jobs—5.1 million more jobs than the Congressional Budget Office projected in its final forecast before the 2016 election.
In the 36 months since President Trump was elected, the economy has created at least 100,000 jobs in 33 of those months and has added jobs every month. Considering the unprecedented length of the expansion and the 50-year low unemployment rate, continued job growth at this point again demonstrates that today’s labor market remains strong.
Because of the Trump Administration’s pro-growth policies, high labor demand is leading to increased employment and growing wages as businesses raise pay to attract workers. Nominal average hourly earnings increased at a 3.1 percent rate year-over-year, making November the 16th consecutive month that this measure of wage growth has been above 3 percent. Before the start of this streak, nominal average hourly wage gains had not reached 3 percent in more than 10 years.
When taking inflation into account, real wages are also growing. Based on the Federal Reserve’s preferred inflation measure, the Personal Consumption Expenditures (PCE) price index, inflation in the past year was 1.3 percent as of October, meaning real wages increased at a year-over-year rate of 1.9 percent (November inflation data is not yet available). Assuming inflation holds steady this month, this translates into real wage growth of more than $1,000 over the past 12 months for someone working 40 hours per week year-round at the average wage.
At 3.7 percent, November year-over-year wage growth for production and nonsupervisory workers was near a post-recession high achieved last month and again exceeded overall year-over-year wage growth. From the start of the current expansion to the end of 2016, average wage growth for production and nonsupervisory workers lagged that of managers, the bottom 10 percent of wage earners lagged that of the top 10 percent, those without a college degree lagged that of college graduates, and African Americans lagged that of white Americans. Since President Trump took office, each of these trends has been reversed, contributing to lower income inequality.
November’s 3.5 percent unemployment rate returned to the 50-year low previously achieved under the Trump Administration. The unemployment rate has stayed at or below 4 percent for 21 straight months, and during that time African Americans, Hispanics, Asians, those with disabilities, and those without a high school diploma all experienced series-low unemployment rates.
As further evidence of how much the labor market has improved under President Trump, other data released by BLS this week show that the number of people who experienced unemployment last year declined by 2.4 million compared to 2016. This number should decline again in 2019 because, under the Trump Administration, the number of people claiming unemployment insurance as a share of the population is the lowest on record since the data began in 1967.
The labor force participation rate—which includes people who are working and those currently looking for work—in November was 63.2 percent, 0.5 percentage point above the rate when President Trump was elected. The labor force participation rate for prime-age adults (ages 25-54), which largely avoids the demographic effects of the aging population, remained at 82.8 percent—1.4 percentage points above its rate in November 2016. Small changes in labor force participation can have major effects on the economy: Because of this increase, 2.1 million more prime-age adults were in the labor force in October compared to if the participation rate remained at November 2016 levels.
A faster pace of job growth in recent months shows the continued strength of the United States labor market. Low unemployment, combined with more job openings than job seekers, leads to consistent wage increases for American workers. The Trump Administration has shown that pro-growth policies have raised labor demand and had a tremendous positive effect on working Americans across demographics and the income distribution.Comment -
khicks26SBR Aristocracy
- 09-16-06
- 45704
#91Like I said, they don't count everyone. The real number is 1.9, same as it was last year. But of course Roy uses the misleading 3.1.
Again, what's 1.9% of 30k or less.
Drug prices have increased by 17% & medical debt is still leading cause of bankruptcy. So much for Trump getting lower prices.
His tariff war has increased the prices of many consumer goods, a tax on the avg. American mostly.
But you Fox News story didn't include any of this.
Shall we continue?Comment -
khicks26SBR Aristocracy
- 09-16-06
- 45704
#93Oh yeah, Trump also kicked 30 million people off Obamacare.Comment -
khicks26SBR Aristocracy
- 09-16-06
- 45704
#94Oh yeah, some of that 1.9% increase has to do with states that have put in a min wage increase. Which your tax cuts has nothing to do with.Comment -
khicks26SBR Aristocracy
- 09-16-06
- 45704
#95So you tell me Roy, who is the one using propaganda?
That would be you.Comment -
khicks26SBR Aristocracy
- 09-16-06
- 45704
#96Didn't we do this last year around this time of year?
Shall we continue?Comment -
khicks26SBR Aristocracy
- 09-16-06
- 45704
#97This will help you understand.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ~~~~~~~~~~
The economy added 266,000 jobs in November, according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics’ (BLS) monthly Employment Situation Report released today. The job totals for September and October were also revised upward, leading to a total increase of 41,000 additional jobs.
The return of the striking GM workers boosted November payrolls, as well. Taking the average over the past 2 months, job growth has been 211,000 per month (netting out the impact of GM on each month’s numbers). This is an increase in the rate of job growth from earlier in 2019.
November’s impressive gain greatly exceeded median market expectations by 44 percent and brought 2019’s average monthly job creation to 180,000. Since President Trump’s election, the economy has added more than 7 million jobs—5.1 million more jobs than the Congressional Budget Office projected in its final forecast before the 2016 election.
In the 36 months since President Trump was elected, the economy has created at least 100,000 jobs in 33 of those months and has added jobs every month. Considering the unprecedented length of the expansion and the 50-year low unemployment rate, continued job growth at this point again demonstrates that today’s labor market remains strong.
Because of the Trump Administration’s pro-growth policies, high labor demand is leading to increased employment and growing wages as businesses raise pay to attract workers. Nominal average hourly earnings increased at a 3.1 percent rate year-over-year, making November the 16th consecutive month that this measure of wage growth has been above 3 percent. Before the start of this streak, nominal average hourly wage gains had not reached 3 percent in more than 10 years.
When taking inflation into account, real wages are also growing. Based on the Federal Reserve’s preferred inflation measure, the Personal Consumption Expenditures (PCE) price index, inflation in the past year was 1.3 percent as of October, meaning real wages increased at a year-over-year rate of 1.9 percent (November inflation data is not yet available). Assuming inflation holds steady this month, this translates into real wage growth of more than $1,000 over the past 12 months for someone working 40 hours per week year-round at the average wage.
At 3.7 percent, November year-over-year wage growth for production and nonsupervisory workers was near a post-recession high achieved last month and again exceeded overall year-over-year wage growth. From the start of the current expansion to the end of 2016, average wage growth for production and nonsupervisory workers lagged that of managers, the bottom 10 percent of wage earners lagged that of the top 10 percent, those without a college degree lagged that of college graduates, and African Americans lagged that of white Americans. Since President Trump took office, each of these trends has been reversed, contributing to lower income inequality.
November’s 3.5 percent unemployment rate returned to the 50-year low previously achieved under the Trump Administration. The unemployment rate has stayed at or below 4 percent for 21 straight months, and during that time African Americans, Hispanics, Asians, those with disabilities, and those without a high school diploma all experienced series-low unemployment rates.
As further evidence of how much the labor market has improved under President Trump, other data released by BLS this week show that the number of people who experienced unemployment last year declined by 2.4 million compared to 2016. This number should decline again in 2019 because, under the Trump Administration, the number of people claiming unemployment insurance as a share of the population is the lowest on record since the data began in 1967.
The labor force participation rate—which includes people who are working and those currently looking for work—in November was 63.2 percent, 0.5 percentage point above the rate when President Trump was elected. The labor force participation rate for prime-age adults (ages 25-54), which largely avoids the demographic effects of the aging population, remained at 82.8 percent—1.4 percentage points above its rate in November 2016. Small changes in labor force participation can have major effects on the economy: Because of this increase, 2.1 million more prime-age adults were in the labor force in October compared to if the participation rate remained at November 2016 levels.
A faster pace of job growth in recent months shows the continued strength of the United States labor market. Low unemployment, combined with more job openings than job seekers, leads to consistent wage increases for American workers. The Trump Administration has shown that pro-growth policies have raised labor demand and had a tremendous positive effect on working Americans across demographics and the income distribution.
whitehouse.gov. LOL OH Roy you are a clown.Comment -
RoyBaconBARRELED IN @ SBR!
- 09-21-05
- 37074
#98
You don't have to marry socialism. I said then that I will show you wage growth in real time and here we are. Bigger than Dallas. You kept saying a recession is coming. Nope markets rising, wages rising and the unemployment rate is at a 50 year low.
We need to double down on what is working.Comment -
khicks26SBR Aristocracy
- 09-16-06
- 45704
#99As you see lower wages are rising faster than higher wages. A good thing.
You don't have to marry socialism. I said then that I will show you wage growth in real time and here we are. Bigger than Dallas. You kept saying a recession is coming. Nope markets rising, wages rising and the unemployment rate is at a 50 year low.
We need to double down on what is working.
All your tax cuts are doing is taking it out of one pocket & putting it in the other.Comment -
khicks26SBR Aristocracy
- 09-16-06
- 45704
#100As you see lower wages are rising faster than higher wages. A good thing.
You don't have to marry socialism. I said then that I will show you wage growth in real time and here we are. Bigger than Dallas. You kept saying a recession is coming. Nope markets rising, wages rising and the unemployment rate is at a 50 year low.
We need to double down on what is working.Comment -
khicks26SBR Aristocracy
- 09-16-06
- 45704
#102
I would say its better, but its offset by many of the other Trump policies. Probably still a negative & not even enough.
Surly not a reason to make a propaganda thread of how the great the tax cuts are. Plus your source is Whitehouse.gov that has a president that has told over 30k lies.
So you tell me Roy.Comment -
RoyBaconBARRELED IN @ SBR!
- 09-21-05
- 37074
#103Even the Never guys are coming around.
We can all learn new tricks, even hicks!
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Key Points
- CNBC’s Jim Cramer says no matter your view on President Trump there’s no denying we’re living in the best labor market in more than a generation.
- “This is the best number I’ve ever seen in my life,” says Cramer, 64.
- Zeroing in on the 3.5% unemployment rate in November, Cramer says, “Fifty years ago, that number was a curse. Now it’s a blessing.”
CNBC’s Jim Cramer said Friday no matter your view on President Donald Trump there’s no denying we’re living in the best labor market in more than a generation.
“You can’t contradict that these are the best numbers of our lives. You can’t,” Cramer, 64, said following the government report showing the U.S. economy created a better-than-expected 266,000 nonfarm jobs in November, with the unemployment rate dipping to 3.5%, matching a 50-year low. Economists had expected the jobless rate to hold steady at 3.6% last month.
“People don’t want to say good things” about the economy, said Cramer, echoing comments he made Thursday evening on “Mad Money,” telling investors: “Don’t let the armageddonists and the negativists and the hucksters scare you away from owning stocks.”
Referring to Trump, Cramer said Friday on “Squawk Box,” shortly after the jobs report was released, “It doesn’t matter whether you hate him or like him, these are real numbers.”
“This is the best number I’ve ever seen in my life,” Cramer said, zeroing in on the unemployment rate. “Fifty years ago, that number was a curse. Now it’s a blessing.” He added, “I don’t see inflation. I don’t see recession.”
Cramer said the strong U.S. job market is going to allow America to win the trade war with China.Comment -
rkelly110BARRELED IN @ SBR!
- 10-05-09
- 39691
#104Let's go back to the obama years, those unemployment numbers that were so good were called fake by the right. I don't believe us on the left rubbed it into the noses of the right like some people..........Comment -
RoyBaconBARRELED IN @ SBR!
- 09-21-05
- 37074
#105Dude if I told you pre Nov 16 that we could be sitting here with historic wage growth, a 50 year unemployment low, a new NAFTA, 7 million off welfare and double the amount of job openings would you take it???????????Comment
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