This GOP Candidate Is Taking On Tarrant County’s Power Brokers
Chris Cuomo Provides a History of His Failed Journalism, Vogue Swoons As It...
American Society of Plastic Surgeons Opposes 'Gender Affirming' Surgeries for Children
Roger Goodell Punts on Political Halftime Show
Report: TMZ Allegedly Received a Ransom Note for Missing Nancy Guthrie
ICE Arrests Illegal Immigrant Who Was Hired by the New Orleans Police Department
How You Know Chicago Isn't That Worried About 'Gun Violence'
Gushing Over Gavin
Fellow Democratic Socialist Slams Mayor Mamdani as Storm Blackouts Leave Thousands Without...
Greg Gutfeld Blasts Hollywood and Billie Eilish for Their Hypocrisy and Disconnect From...
Liberal College Student Gets a Lesson in Taxpayer Responsibility, as She Debates SNAP...
The Judicial Coup Continues: Judge Blocks ICE From Using Tear Gas on Leftist...
Baltimore Mayor Calls Reporter Racist For Asking Why He Needs $163k Taxpayer-Funded SUV
Major Builders Announce 'Trump Homes' to Solve Affordability Crisis for First-Time Buyers
DOJ Launches Investigation Into California Catholic School Desecrated and Destroyed by Van...
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