Why Bill Gates Sounding the Alarm Over Climate Alarmism Should Infuriate You
Democrats Signal That It's Time to Wave the White Flag on Schumer Shutdown
Progressive Podcaster Goes on Unhinged Tirade Against Establishment Democrats and Charlie...
This Democrat Candidate's Excuse for Having a Nazi Tattoo Isn't Going to Help
'This Is Extortion:' Even CNBC Has Turned on Democrats Over the Schumer Shutdown
Obama’s June Call for Government-Regulated Media Lines Up With His Current Global Censorsh...
Jake Tapper Hammers Rep. Melanie Stansbury Over Her Party's Refusal to End the...
Former Acting Homeland Security Secretary Chad Wolf Endorses Ted Cruz's Stop FUNDERs Act
Zohran Mamdani Is a Trial Balloon for the Democratic Socialists' Planned Takeover of...
Michael Shellenberger Sounds the Alarm: Leftists Are Pushing for Global Speech Censorship
Newsom Brutally Fact-Checked Over Latest Anti-Trump Sales Pitch
Why Trump MUST Win on Rare Earths!
SAF Wants SCOTUS to Accept Case on Gun Sales Ban for Adults Under...
SNAP Users Erupt on TikTok — Promise Looting Sprees If Food Stamps Are...
Israel Resumes Adherence to Trump-Brokered Ceasefire — Hours After Deadly Strikes in Gaza
Tipsheet

CNBC: The Shutdown Didn't Hurt Economy, Jobs Are Booming

AP Photo/Andrew Harnik

The January jobs report is out today, and, despite the longest partial government shutdown in history, things are looking good. Don't take my word for it. CNBC's Sara Eisen explained why the economy is on the uptick Friday morning. Economists projected about 170,000 jobs added last month, but what we got was well over 300,000. 

Advertisement

What does it all mean, "Morning Joe" anchor Mika Brzezinski wanted to know.

"They mean that the economy is still going strong and that employers aren't really fazed by the shutdown," Eisen said.

"Companies didn't hesitate to hire," she added. "It did not shake confidence."

She had some more numbers to prove it. 

It was "a bumper year for job creation," Eisen continued. The average per month for private employment was in the "2s." The new number is higher than the average for every month of last year. Again, she saw "no effect in terms of hiring for private employers" in regards to the shutdown.

Moreover, more people are entering the workforce. The current participation rate is 63.2 percent - the highest since 2013.

"Wow," Brzezinksi said.

Advertisement

January marked the 100th straight month for job gains. President Trump and other Republicans leaders were stoked to share the news.

The Labor Department noted that the unemployment rate rose from 3.9 percent to 4 percent, but that is largely due to the partial government shutdown. Eisen would "write that off" as a temporary setback.

Join the conversation as a VIP Member

Recommended

Trending on Townhall Videos