Trump. Generati 304,000 nuovi posti di lavoro, 5.3 milioni dalla elezione.
Giuseppe Sandro Mela.
2019-02-05.
Dal momento in cui è stato eletto, Mr Trump ha generato 5.3 milioni di posti di lavoro.
Non solo.
«average hourly pay for workers rose 3.2 percent from a year earlier, to $27.56 from $26.71.»
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«The Bureau of Labor Statistics, in its first monthly Employment Situation Report of 2019, revealed nonfarm payroll employment rose by 304,000 jobs in January»
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«The figure was far in excess of expectations of 165,000, and well above the previous 12-month average gain of 223,000»
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«Numerous sectors experienced job growth in January, including mining and logging (7,000), transportation and warehousing (27,000), and construction (52,000)»
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«January 2019 marked the 100thstraight month of positive job growth and the sixteenth consecutive month of employment growth of at least 100,000 new jobs»
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Prendiamo atto che mentre l’economica dell’Unione Europea e dell’Eurozona langue e la fascia dei miseri e dei poveri sta salendo al 20% della popolazione totale, in due soli anni Mr Trump ha fatto generare 5.3 milioni di posti di lavoro, unitamente ad un incremento del 3.2% dei salari.
L’unica vera lotta alla miseria ed alla povertà è la generazione di posti di lavoro degnamente remunerati. Tutto il resto è aria fritta.
Questi dati dovrebbero farci porre molte domande.
La prima è se il modello economico propugnato ed applicato da Mr Trump non sia più efficiente di quello europeo. Le teorie economiche l’applicazione delle quali non generi posti di lavoro e ricchezza dovrebbero essere rimosse senza tanti complimenti.
La seconda è se la litigiosità interna degli Stati Uniti verta argomenti effettivamente utili ai Cittadini Contribuenti, ovvero non ne ostacoli la crescita economica.
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A nostro personale parere, ciò che conta sono i fatti.
– The Bureau of Labor Statistics, in its first monthly Employment Situation Report of 2019, revealed nonfarm payroll employment rose by 304,000 jobs in January
– The figure was far in excess of expectations of 165,000, and well above the previous 12-month average gain of 223,000
– Numerous sectors experienced job growth in January, including mining and logging (7,000), transportation and warehousing (27,000), and construction (52,000)
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WASHINGTON DC – The White House was delighted with the employment figures for January announced on Friday.
The Bureau of Labor Statistics, in its first monthly Employment Situation Report of 2019, revealed nonfarm payroll employment rose by 304,000 jobs in January, far exceeding market expectations of 165,000, and well above the previous 12-month average gain of 223,000.
January 2019 marked the 100thstraight month of positive job growth and the sixteenth consecutive month of employment growth of at least 100,000 new jobs.
Job gains in December were revised down by 90,000 and November jobs were revised up by 20,000 for a cumulative loss to total employment of 70,000 jobs in the previous months. Nevertheless, despite these downward revisions, the 223,000 average monthly jobs created in 2018 remains well above the pace of monthly job creation in 2016 (193,000) and 2017 (179,000).
Numerous sectors experienced job growth in January, including mining and logging (7,000), transportation and warehousing (27,000), construction (52,000), education and health services (55,000), and leisure and hospitality (74,000).
“The economy has added 4.9 million jobs since January 2017 and 5.3 million jobs since President Donald J. Trump was elected in November 2016, the White House said in a statement released on Friday.
“The report also indicates that wages are continuing to rise. Nominal average hourly earnings rose by 3.2 percent over the past 12 months, marking the 6th straight month that year-over-year wage gains were at or above 3 percent. Prior to 2018, nominal average hourly wage gains had not reached 3 percent since April 2009. Taking inflation into account, real wages are also growing. Based on the most recent Personal Consumption Expenditures (PCE) price index data from November, inflation in the past year was 1.8 percent, and based on the most recent Consumer Price Index (CPI-U) price data from December, the inflation in the past year was 1.9 percent (the most recently available data).”
[Questo articolo è molto lungo e riporta numerosi grafici]
U.S. employers added 304,000 jobs in January, and the nation’s unemployment rate ticked up to 4 percent, according to data released Friday by the Labor Department. Meanwhile, average hourly pay for workers rose 3.2 percent from a year earlier, to $27.56 from $26.71.
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