Fall in jobless rate strips Romney of an argument - Washington Post [dayinformations.blogspot.com]
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Answer by Wolfe Graynight
Go to your trash and read them
For Mitt Romney, it was the number that proved everything. Since the very first speech of his campaign, the Republican candidate has used a simple figure to bolster his argument that President Obama couldnât fix the U.S. economy: 8 percent.
In this campaign, begun in the midst of a staggering downturn, monthly unemployment reports have been a running scorecard. They distill a vast and complicated economy down to terms simple enough for a stump speech: a number and a direction, up or down.
For Romney, any number above 8 percent proved he was right and Obama was wrong.
Obama had promised, Romney told audiences repeatedly, never to let unemployment get that high. Instead, Romney said, the jobless rate blew past 8Â percent and got stuck there.
Until Friday.
The 0.3 percent dip in unemployment in September, from 8.1 to 7.8 percent, deprived Romney of one of his central campaign themes.
It was enough to put him on the defensive just as he was basking in the afterglow of his debate performance Wednesday, the best moment of his campaign against Obama so far. It wasnât because the figures showed a healthy economy â" they didnât â" but because the economy had crossed a threshold that Romney had implied it would never cross without him.
âWe can do better,â Romney said Friday at a rally in the Virginia coal-country town of Abingdon. It was the same argument he has used throughout the campaign, but without the number heâd always used to hammer it home. âThere were fewer new jobs created this month than last month. And the unemployment rate .â.â. has come down very, very slowly, but itâs come down nonetheless.â
The political importance of the 8Â percent threshold was driven home, in a backhanded way, by a few conservatives who floated a conspiracy theory that Fridayâs dip had been engineered to give Obama a boost.
Former General Electric chief executive Jack Welch wrote on Twitter: âthese Chicago guys will do anything. canât debate so change numbers.â
The Bureau of Labor Statistics said the data were worked out the same way as always, with no interference. And Welch later conceded that he had no evidence of a conspiracy.
There is no special economic magic to 8 percent. A truly healthy economy, experts say, would have a rate far lower.
âEight is bad, 7.9 is bad, 8.1 is bad,â said Douglas Holtz-Eakin, a former director of the Congressional Budget Office and an adviser to GOP nominee John McCain in 2008. âWe want to be at six.â
But the figure assumed its political significance in early 2009, before Obama had taken office, in a report written by a pair of his advisers, Christina Romer and Jared Bernstein. That report projected, with caveats, that if Congress passed a large stimulus package, unemployment would peak at 8 percent.
The stimulus passed. But the rate kept going up.
It reached 10 percent in October 2009 and then fell only slowly, despite the billions pouring in from the government. Before last month, the rate had hovered between 8.3 and 8.1 percent. Obamaâs advisers later said they had not understood the depth of the countryâs economic troubles when they made their projection.
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