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According to the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS), the U.S. economy added 303,000 jobs in the month of March and the unemployment rate was little changed at 3.8 percent. Estimates for the monthly jobs report released Friday morning had called for 200,000 jobs to be added.
President Biden is sure to take a victory lap on the headline number in March’s print of the employment situation, but he — as usual — will gloss over some key data points that tell a different story about the U.S. economy under “Bidenomics.”
Where Jobs Were Added
Continuing a trend in recent months, the major sectors with job gains included government — not a sign of real economic growth — and quasi-government jobs in health care. According to BLS, health care accounted for 72,000 jobs while 71,000 jobs were added in government.
President Joe Biden insists that his “Bidenomics” agenda is working to “build the economy from the bottom up and the middle out,” but the numbers don’t match his words.
What Kind of Jobs Were Added and Who Got Them
Among them: how many of these added jobs are only part-time positions. As E.J. Antoni of the Heritage Foundation noted, full-time employment in March 2024 is lower than it was in February 2023.
Another notable disparity in the jobs data is the way American vs. foreign-born individuals have weathered the Biden economy. Over the last 12 months, more than 650,000 native-born Americans have lost jobs as their foreign-born counterparts — more than one million of them — got jobs.
Lagging Participation and Downward Revisions
The labor force participation rate was “little changed” in March at 62.7 percent according to BLS, meaning three years into Biden’s “Build Back Better” agenda there are fewer participants now than there were before the COVID-19 pandemic.