Friday, December 8, 2017

One Billion New Jobs!

November nonfarm payrolls rise 228,000 vs. 200,000 est

Okay, maybe not a billion new jobs, but once again the Trump economy "surprised" analysts with better than projected job numbers. The only real surprise at this point is that anyone is actually still surprised.

All I know is that I should have been an economist.

Then I could always just write what I want, and just be surprised when I am wrong. Quite literally Paul Krugman won a Nobel Prize in economics for a well imagine socioeconomic projection that turned out to be flat wrong. He once suggested that the internet was a passing phase who's impact would fall short of that of the fax machine. Krugman recently suggested that the DJIA would not only "crash" after the Trump election, but would "never recover". 

Krugman is still is the so called economic expert for the New York Times, and frequents many cable news and Sunday morning political shows to provide our national audience with his economic projections of Republican failure and Democratic success. 

12 comments:

Anonymous said...

The Trump Bump Continues.

Anonymous said...

CHT, thank you for planting this live grenade, no liberal has dared to come near it.

Anonymous said...

The unemployment rate for Hispanics in the U.S. has returned to a historic low last seen more than a decade ago, though other labor market measures show this group has not totally recovered from the Great Recession, according to a Pew Research Center analysis of government data.

The Hispanic unemployment rate stood at 4.7% in the second quarter of 2017, about the same as in the second quarter of 2006 (4.9%). The improving labor market prospects for Latinos mirror trends for U.S. workers overall. The national unemployment rate in the second quarter of 2017 was 4.2%, compared with 4.6% in the second quarter of 2006. (Estimates are non-seasonally adjusted, but seasonally adjusted data show the same trend.)

http://www.pewresearch.org/fact-tank/2017/09/28/latino-unemployment-rate-is-back-at-historic-low/




so the alky and the pederast told us that the GOP would have to pander to hispanics to get their vote.

trump did them one better - he gave them jobs via a smoking hot economy.

Anonymous said...

307 more Gas/oil rigs are at work today then a year ago. Average pay for an oil rig worker $100,000 a year.

Anonymous said...

The combination of low skilled illegals being deported and less coming in have opened up jobs to minorities.

commie said...

Average pay for an oil rig worker $100,000 a year.


Average IQ of kansan goat fornicators......60 LOLOLOL

How's that pig you are married too??? In the sty????? LOL

Commonsense said...

Krugman is still is the so called economic expert for the New York Times, and frequents many cable news and Sunday morning political shows to provide our national audience with his economic projections of Republican failure and Democratic success.

Funny thing is the oil rig worker only gets $100,000 a year for delivering vital oil to the country while Krugman gets $3,000,000 a year for expelling green gas laden bullshit.

This is what's called a market imbalance.

Anonymous said...

HB has abandoned Pauline Krugman.

Anonymous said...

Pres Trump told Hispanics to take a chance on him. Many did, thier unemployment is at Historic low.

#Winning

James said...


A GOP Tragedy In Four Acts

Charlie Sykes: “With Roy Moore’s humiliating loss in the Alabama Senate race, the Trumpified Republican Party finds itself both defeated and dishonored, with no sign that it has yet hit bottom.

“At every stage of the run-up to this special election, Republicans could have resisted, pushed back, or drawn lines, but their failure to do so led them inexorably to this moment: the defeat of an unreconstructed bigot and ignorant crank who had the full-throated backing of the president they have embraced and empowered.

“It may be worthwhile charting the party’s descent to this moment.”

James said...

Support for Tax Plan Could Hurt Candidates

A new Quinnipiac poll finds American voters disapprove of the pending Republican tax plan by a wide margin, 55% to 26%, and 43% say they are less likely to vote for a U.S. Senator or Congressperson who supports the plan.

Key finding: “Only 16% of American voters say the tax plan will reduce their taxes, while 44% say it will increase their taxes and 30% say the tax plan will have little impact.”

James said...

Budget & Taxes
Trump Approval Hits New Low

A new Monmouth poll finds President Trump’s job approval at 32% to 56%, the lowest since he’s taken office.

The decline in Trump’s job rating has come much more from women, currently 24% to 68%, than from men, which is 40% to 44%.

Democrats lead the generic congressional ballot by 15 percentage points, 51% to 36%.