If
the Obama administration has been skillful in one area, it has been convincing
people that the current economy is the best they could hope for and to lower
their expectations accordingly.
"No one could have fully repaired all
of the damage he found in just four years," Bill Clinton said at the
Democratic convention earlier this year. The message: Don't expect too much.
This is the new normal.
Friday's jobless numbers indicate that
message is penetrating. People are simply giving up on this economy.
Superficially, the numbers seemed good:
The official rate fell from 7.9 percent to 7.7 percent, according to the Labor
Department. The more expansive U-6 number, which unlike the official rate
includes the underemployed jobless and discouraged, fell to 14.4 percent from
14.6 percent. Overall, employers reported a net gain of 147,000 jobs.
What is driving the decline in the jobless
rate, though, is not the expansion of the economy, it is the shrinkage of the
workforce. The number of Americans reporting they had jobs actually fell by
122,000 last month. The only reason the unemployment rate fell is that more
than 350,000 Americans left the labor force entirely. If the labor
participation rate was the same today as it was when Obama was sworn into
office, the official jobless rate would be 10.7 percent, notes the American
Enterprise Institute's James Pethokoukis. Those are not signs of a healthy
economy.
But not everyone is suffering equally. Dig
deeper into the Bureau of Labor Statistics data and you'll see that the number
of employed Americans over age 55 actually grew by 177,000.



















