The Shining City Upon a Hill

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  • SalesServiceGuy
    Field Supervisor

    Site Contributor
    5,000+ Posts
    • Dec 2009
    • 8104

    #8461
    Re: The Shining City Upon a Hill

    Strong Job Growth Points to COVID's Fading Grip on Economy

    In a buoyant sign for the U.S. economy, businesses stepped up their hiring last month as omicron faded and more Americans ventured out to spend at restaurants, shops and hotels despite surging inflation.

    Employers added a robust 678,000 jobs in February, the largest monthly total since July, the Labor Department reported Friday. The unemployment rate dropped to 3.8%, from 4% in January, extending a sharp decline in joblessness to its lowest level since before the pandemic erupted two years ago.

    Friday’s hiring figures were collected before Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, which has sent oil prices jumping and has heightened risks and uncertainties for economies in Europe and the rest of the world.

    Yet the February hiring data suggest that two years after COVID-19 sparked a nationwide shutdown and 22 million job losses, the disease is losing its grip on America's economy. More people are taking jobs or searching for work — a trend that, if it endures, will help ease the labor shortages that have bedeviled employers for the past year.

    In addition, fewer people are now working remotely because of the disease. A continuing flow of people back to offices could boost employment in urban downtowns. And the number of Americans who are delaying job hunts for fear of the disease fell sharply from January, when omicron was raging, to February.

    “All signs are that the pandemic is easing its hold on jobs and the economy,” said Jane Oates, president of Working Nation and a former Labor Department official. “Very strong numbers in very uncertain times.”

    Other recent economic data also show the economy maintaining strength as new COVID infections have plummeted. Consumer spending has risen, spurred by higher wages and savings. Restaurant traffic has regained pre-pandemic levels, hotel reservations are up and far more Americans are flying than at the height of omicron.

    Still, escalating costs for gasoline, wheat and metals such as aluminum, which are exported by both Ukraine and Russia, will likely accelerate inflation in the coming months. Higher prices and anxieties surrounding the war could slow hiring and growth later this year, though economists expect the consequences to be more severe in Europe than in the United States.

    Inflation has already reached its highest level since 1982, with price spikes especially high for such necessities as food, gasoline and rent. In response, the Federal Reserve is set to raise interest rates several times this year beginning later this month. Those increases will eventually mean higher borrowing rates for consumers and businesses, including for homes, autos and credit cards.

    Chair Jerome Powell said this week he plans to propose that the Fed raise its benchmark short-term rate by a quarter-point when it meets in about two weeks. Powell has acknowledged that high inflation has proved more persistent and has spread more broadly than he and many economists had expected.

    One figure in Friday's report could provide reassurance for the Fed's policymakers as they assess inflation pressures: Average hourly pay barely grew in February. Higher wages, while good for workers, often lead companies to raise prices to cover their higher labor costs and thereby further heighten inflation.

    But that slowdown might not last if inflation worsens. Some staffing agencies are seeing a shift in what is driving higher pay. Previously, it was companies' need to fill jobs. Now, some workers are saying they need raises to cover rising costs.

    Michelle Reisdorf, a district director at recruiter Robert Half in Chicago, who fills permanent and temporary jobs in accounting, human resources and other professional jobs, said workers are starting to cite higher gas costs when seeking a raise, particularly if they drive to offices.

    “If they know they are going to have to go onsite five days a week, they are definitely asking for more money,” she said.

    The strong hiring in February occurred across most of the economy, with restaurants, bars and hotels adding 79,000 jobs, construction 60,000 and transportation and warehousing 48,000. Though the economy still has 2.1 million fewer jobs than it did before the pandemic struck, the gap is closely fast.

    A survey by The Associated Press-NORC Center for Public Affairs Research found that Americans are now much less worried about COVID than they were in December and January. Mask mandates and other restrictions are ending.

    Data from the restaurant reservation software provider OpenTable showed that seated diners surpassed pre-pandemic levels late last month. And figures from the Transportation Security Administration reflected a sharp increase in the number of people willing to take airplane flights.

    After months of concerns about labor shortages holding back businesses, more Americans started job searches in February for the second straight month. The proportion of Americans either working or looking for a job rose to 62.3%, up from 61.5% a year ago, though it remains below the pre-pandemic level of 63.4%.



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    • SalesServiceGuy
      Field Supervisor

      Site Contributor
      5,000+ Posts
      • Dec 2009
      • 8104

      #8462
      Re: The Shining City Upon a Hill

      JEC Chairman Don Beyer: Job Growth Under President Biden Has “blown all expectations out of the water”; “GDP growth is the strongest it’s been in nearly 40 years”


      From Rep. Don Beyer (D-VA08), Chairman of the U.S. Congress Joint Economic Committee (JEC), on this morning’s report which finds that “job growth [has] blown all expectations out of the water…GDP growth is the strongest it’s been in nearly 40 years, and it’s outpacing every other major economy.”

      Great job by President Joe Biden and Democrats in Congress in helping rescue us from the deep, pandemic-induced recession we experienced in 2020.

      JEC Chairman Beyer on February Jobs Day Data

      Today, Congressman Don Beyer (D-VA), Chairman of the U.S. Congress Joint Economic Committee (JEC), released the following statement after the Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS) reported that nonfarm payroll employment increased by 678,000 in February and the unemployment rate declined to 3.8%.

      The unemployment rate was 6.6% for Black workers, 4.4% for Hispanic workers, 3.1% for Asian workers and 7.4% (not seasonally adjusted) for American Indian and Alaska Native workers.

      “During his first year in office, President Biden oversaw most jobs created in a single year, and surging job growth continued into February 2022. With 678,000 more jobs added—exceeding all expectations—the total number of jobs created under the current administration now stands at 7.4 million.

      Not only has job growth blown all expectations out of the water, but GDP growth is the strongest it’s been in nearly 40 years, and it’s outpacing every other major economy. Wages are rising—particularly among low-income workers—and unemployment is falling rapidly. It took nine years after the Great Recession for unemployment to recover as much as it has in just two years post-coronavirus recession.

      The speed and strength of this recovery reflects strong leadership and investments in families, workers and small businesses to address the pandemic and get our economy roaring again.

      Yet even as today’s data continue to show robust progress, global price spikes are straining household budgets and depriving workers of the full benefits of wage gains. President Biden announced the path forward to Building a Better America, and the most effective tools at Congress’ disposal to reduce inflationary pressure and promote broadly shared growth are investments that lower household costs for families and boost productivity.

      Workers and families have made it through an unprecedented economic challenge. We in Congress must answer this call.”

      Comment

      • bsm2
        IT Manager

        25,000+ Posts
        • Feb 2008
        • 29431

        #8463
        Re: The Shining City Upon a Hill

        Comment

        • slimslob
          Retired

          Site Contributor
          25,000+ Posts
          • May 2013
          • 36873

          #8464
          Re: The Shining City Upon a Hill

          13 GOP States Sue Biden, Seek Records of FBI Surveillance of Parents

          Comment

          • slimslob
            Retired

            Site Contributor
            25,000+ Posts
            • May 2013
            • 36873

            #8465
            Re: The Shining City Upon a Hill

            Russia and Iran Taunt Biden in Humiliating Nuclear Deal – Geller Report

            Comment

            • FrohnB
              Service Manager

              Site Contributor
              1,000+ Posts
              • Jul 2017
              • 1919

              #8466
              Re: The Shining City Upon a Hill

              Originally posted by SalesServiceGuy





              Great job by President Joe Biden and Democrats in Congress in helping rescue us from the deep, pandemic-induced recession we experienced in 2020.

              JEC Chairman Beyer on February Jobs Day Data

              Today, Congressman Don Beyer (D-VA), Chairman of the U.S. Congress Joint Economic Committee (JEC), released the following statement after the Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS) reported that nonfarm payroll employment increased by 678,000 in February and the unemployment rate declined to 3.8%.

              The unemployment rate was 6.6% for Black workers, 4.4% for Hispanic workers, 3.1% for Asian workers and 7.4% (not seasonally adjusted) for American Indian and Alaska Native workers.



              The speed and strength of this recovery reflects strong leadership and investments in families, workers and small businesses to address the pandemic and get our economy roaring again.


              Omertà

              Comment

              • SalesServiceGuy
                Field Supervisor

                Site Contributor
                5,000+ Posts
                • Dec 2009
                • 8104

                #8467
                Re: The Shining City Upon a Hill

                Originally posted by FrohnB
                Sorry to burst your bubble, but we’re still sitting at 6 million people who are “unemployed” that WERE employed prior to the “pandemic”. Until we fill those 6 million vacancies we haven’t seen any actual “job growth”.
                We could bring nearly 1 MILLION jobs back if the Coward in Chief would rescind his extremely damaging executive orders against the energy industry!
                Why are we still funding the Russian War machine by buying 600,000 barrels of oil a day from them??? For all the simpletons out there, that’s 70 MILLION dollars a day, or nearly HALF A BILLION DOLLARS A WEEK, or 26 BILLION A YEAR!! Fuckin’ Crazy!!
                North Dakota (if you opened their oil industry back up) can provide 500,000 barrels of oil a day to the U.S. all by itself!
                Open the fuckin’ taps here in the U.S., and we gain back jobs, plus we’re not dependent on ANYONE for oil! What a crazy fuckin’ idea!!!!
                ... if President Biden suddenly halted all Russian crude oil imports the USA, prices that everyday citizens in the USA would pay for gasoline would spike up even higher than they are today.

                His Press Secretary said that no option was off the table.

                Because Russia is one of the largest oil producers in the world, concern over the conflict and possible sanctioning, has pushed gas prices up nationally, according to Patrick De Haan of GasBuddy.

                He said it's the "perfect storm" as we head into the summer, when prices typically go up every year.


                Current Russian oil is being purchased at a heavy discount to spot market global prices.

                In some places like England, dock workers are refusing to offload Russian crude oil and many tanker ships hauling Russian petroleum products are being denied entry into ports.

                Comment

                • SalesServiceGuy
                  Field Supervisor

                  Site Contributor
                  5,000+ Posts
                  • Dec 2009
                  • 8104

                  #8468
                  Re: The Shining City Upon a Hill

                  What Is the Current U.S. Unemployment Rate?

                  The unemployment rate was 3.8% in February 2022


                  Unemployment is one of the most critical economic issues facing the country as it balances re-opening with safety nearly two years into the pandemic.

                  The unemployment rate reached 14.8% in April 2020 after federal and local governments shut down the economy. That was the highest since the Great Depression.

                  February 2022's unemployment fell slightly from January's, with a rate of 3.8% compared to 4.0%, but it was still higher than pre-pandemic levels: 3.5% in February 2020. The February unemployment rate was 0.2 percentage points lower than in January.

                  Notably, December 2021 marked the first time the unemployment rate has dropped below 4% since the beginning of the pandemic, so February's figures are not too far from the positive trend.

                  Overall, the number of unemployed is at 6.3 million.


                  The number of unemployed is down, but the pandemic is still affecting the employment situation, as the unemployment rate is still higher than pre-pandemic levels.

                  The Unemployment Figures in Detail

                  The total number of unemployed in February 2022 is 6.3 million, down 243,000 from January 2022. The number of long-term unemployed (those searching for jobs for 27 weeks or more) remains roughly steady at 1.7 million. A larger number, 2.1 million, lost jobs within the last five weeks. This number decreased from January's 2.4 million.

                  The labor force participation rate in February 2022 increased slightly from January 2022 by 0.1 percentage points. The labor force doesn't include those who haven't looked for a job in the past month. Some would like a job, but others dropped out of the labor force for different reasons. They may have retired, gone back to school, or had a baby.

                  Difference Between the Unemployment and Jobs Reports

                  The unemployment rate and figures from the jobs report don't always tell the same story, because they are taken from two different surveys.

                  The unemployment rate is taken from the household survey of individuals. It describes who is employed and who isn't based on their responses.

                  The number of jobs added is taken from the establishment report, more commonly called the "nonfarm payroll report." This survey of businesses describes how many jobs were created or lost by industry.

                  The number of unemployed doesn't match the number of jobs lost, because these reports are taken from completely different sources. Those discrepancies are expected, and the estimates are revised each month as more data comes in.

                  How to Use the Unemployment Rate

                  Keep in mind that the unemployment rate is a lagging indicator. It tells you what has already happened, since employers only lay off workers after business slows down.

                  Companies resist hiring new workers when a recession is over, until they can be sure that the economy will stay strong. The economy could improve for months, and the recession could be over before the unemployment rate drops. It's not suitable for predicting trends, but it's useful for confirming them.

                  Recent Unemployment History

                  You can check the unemployment rates since 1929 to put November's report into perspective,

                  Unemployment stayed above 14% for nine years between 1931 and 1940. The unemployment rate reached a record of 24.8% in 1933 after a few years of increasing. April 2020's unemployment rate skyrocketed to 14.7% in only one month.

                  Unemployment rose to 10.8% in November 1982, dropped to 3.8% in April 2000, then peaked at 10% in October 2009.1 These two recession-driven spikes resulted in elevated unemployment levels that lasted for years.

                  ... going back to 1929 there has only been eight years when the unemployment rate was lower than 3.8% most occurring during WWII.

                  the claim "
                  Sorry to burst your bubble, but we’re still sitting at 6 million people who are “unemployed” that WERE employed prior to the “pandemic” is misleading. It is impossible to have zero unemployment in any economy and those that want to have a job can easily find one.

                  Comment

                  • bsm2
                    IT Manager

                    25,000+ Posts
                    • Feb 2008
                    • 29431

                    #8469
                    Re: The Shining City Upon a Hill

                    Originally posted by FrohnB
                    Sorry to burst your bubble, but we’re still sitting at 6 million people who are “unemployed” that WERE employed prior to the “pandemic”. Until we fill those 6 million vacancies we haven’t seen any actual “job growth”.
                    We could bring nearly 1 MILLION jobs back if the Coward in Chief would rescind his extremely damaging executive orders against the energy industry!
                    Why are we still funding the Russian War machine by buying 600,000 barrels of oil a day from them??? For all the simpletons out there, that’s 70 MILLION dollars a day, or nearly HALF A BILLION DOLLARS A WEEK, or 26 BILLION A YEAR!! Fuckin’ Crazy!!
                    North Dakota (if you opened their oil industry back up) can provide 500,000 barrels of oil a day to the U.S. all by itself!
                    Open the fuckin’ taps here in the U.S., and we gain back jobs, plus we’re not dependent on ANYONE for oil! What a crazy fuckin’ idea!!!!
                    sorry to burst your little brain bubble do you really think the 70 million dollars runs the entire Russian Government and Military?

                    Sorry you don't like the great job Biden in restoring the economy of the United States jobs Everywhere wages up but Mississippi still at 7.25 per hour

                    Nebraska at 9.00 per hour
                    Pretty poor

                    PS the federal government doesn't run. The oil business or set the price of oil the free market does.

                    Comment

                    • slimslob
                      Retired

                      Site Contributor
                      25,000+ Posts
                      • May 2013
                      • 36873

                      #8470
                      Re: The Shining City Upon a Hill

                      Originally posted by SalesServiceGuy





                      Great job by President Joe Biden and Democrats in Congress in helping rescue us from the deep, pandemic-induced recession we experienced in 2020.

                      JEC Chairman Beyer on February Jobs Day Data

                      Today, Congressman Don Beyer (D-VA), Chairman of the U.S. Congress Joint Economic Committee (JEC), released the following statement after the Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS) reported that nonfarm payroll employment increased by 678,000 in February and the unemployment rate declined to 3.8%.

                      The unemployment rate was 6.6% for Black workers, 4.4% for Hispanic workers, 3.1% for Asian workers and 7.4% (not seasonally adjusted) for American Indian and Alaska Native workers.



                      The speed and strength of this recovery reflects strong leadership and investments in families, workers and small businesses to address the pandemic and get our economy roaring again.


                      Of course it blew all expectations out of the water. That is because the expectations were extremely low, almost zero.

                      Comment

                      • Phil B.
                        Field Supervisor

                        10,000+ Posts
                        • Jul 2016
                        • 22798

                        #8471
                        Re: The Shining City Upon a Hill

                        Originally posted by SalesServiceGuy
                        ... if President Biden suddenly halted all Russian crude oil imports the USA, prices that everyday citizens in the USA would pay for gasoline would spike up even higher than they are today.

                        His Press Secretary said that no option was off the table.

                        Because Russia is one of the largest oil producers in the world, concern over the conflict and possible sanctioning, has pushed gas prices up nationally, according to Patrick De Haan of GasBuddy.

                        He said it's the "perfect storm" as we head into the summer, when prices typically go up every year.


                        Current Russian oil is being purchased at a heavy discount to spot market global prices.

                        In some places like England, dock workers are refusing to offload Russian crude oil and many tanker ships hauling Russian petroleum products are being denied entry into ports.
                        That's the reason he should never have shut down the USA energy industry.
                        Russia.. Iran.. Saudi..
                        It doesn't matter where harvested as far as climate change.. but to stop putin we should be harvesting from the USA to boost OUR economy.. and help our EU and all get their energy.

                        Sent from my SM-G960U using Tapatalk

                        Comment

                        • SalesServiceGuy
                          Field Supervisor

                          Site Contributor
                          5,000+ Posts
                          • Dec 2009
                          • 8104

                          #8472
                          Re: The Shining City Upon a Hill

                          Originally posted by Phil B.
                          That's the reason he should never have shut down the USA energy industry.
                          Russia.. Iran.. Saudi..
                          It doesn't matter where harvested as far as climate change.. but to stop putin we should be harvesting from the USA to boost OUR economy.. and help our EU and all get their energy.

                          Sent from my SM-G960U using Tapatalk
                          .. what makes you think that President Biden shut down the domestic energy industry?

                          Are you referring to oil, solar, wind, water, natural gas, nuclear energy?

                          U.S. Monthly Field Production of Crude Oil (Thousand Barrels per Day)


                          2020 12,785 12,826 12,816 11,911 9,711 10,420 10,956 10,558 10,868 10,413 11,121 11,084
                          2021 11,056 9,773 11,160 11,230 11,334 11,288 11,330 11,206 10,851 11,526 11,773 11,567

                          U.S. Field Production of Crude Oil (Thousand Barrels per Day) (eia.gov)

                          Comment

                          • bsm2
                            IT Manager

                            25,000+ Posts
                            • Feb 2008
                            • 29431

                            #8473

                            Comment

                            • slimslob
                              Retired

                              Site Contributor
                              25,000+ Posts
                              • May 2013
                              • 36873

                              #8474
                              Re: The Shining City Upon a Hill

                              Another Foreign Policy Catastrophe in the Works? Iran Deal Reportedly Close - Truth Press

                              Comment

                              • Phil B.
                                Field Supervisor

                                10,000+ Posts
                                • Jul 2016
                                • 22798

                                #8475
                                Re: The Shining City Upon a Hill

                                Umm Biden canceled the Xl pipeline.

                                You need to check your text before hitting send.

                                How Much of the Keystone Pipeline Is Completed? It's estimated that just eight percent of the Keystone XL pipeline has been built so far, although President Joe Biden canceled the project in January 2021.Jun 7, 2021

                                Sent from my SM-G960U using Tapatalk

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