A surge in new jobs last month that held the U.S. unemployment rate to 8.3 percent highlights a strengthening economy that bolsters President Barack Obama as he approaches re-election. If this continues, hell have the edge -- not necessarily a huge edge but an edge, said Christopher Wlezien, a political science professor at Temple University in Philadelphia and co- author with Robert Erikson of the forthcoming book The Timeline of Presidential Elections.
Employers added 227,000 jobs in February, more than forecast, the Labor Department reported today in Washington. The median projection of economists in a Bloomberg News survey called for a 210,000 increase.
The unemployment rate held steady after dropping for five consecutive months from 9.1 percent in August.
For voters who are used to an unemployment rate that starts with a 9, this looks like progress, said Dan Schnur, director of the Unruh Institute of Politics at the University of Southern California in Los Angeles, who was interviewed before the release of the jobs report. It might not be a huge victory for Obamas re-election campaign. But its not going to be a significant drag on him either.
Obama is scheduled to speak later today at a Rolls-Royce Holdings Plc (RYCEY) factory in Prince George County, Virginia, that manufactures jet engine parts.
Republican View
Rick Santorum, a former Pennsylvania senator seeking the Republican Partys 2012 presidential nomination, said today the economy is recovering in spite of the Obama administrations policies.
Certainly a quarter of a million jobs, roughly, being added is a positive step forward, Santorum said in an interview on Bloomberg Televisions Political Capital with Al Hunt airing this weekend.
The administration has consistently seen, you know, bad job reports because of bad policies that have led to those job reports, he said. And eventually, you know, the economy does recover, in spite of the headwinds that this administration has put in its place.
Gasoline Prices
The strengthening economy is beginning to translate into greater public optimism, even with recent increases in gasoline prices.
Consumer confidence climbed to a four-year high last week, according to the Bloomberg Consumer Comfort Index (COMFCOMF). For a fifth straight week, half of those surveyed also rated their personal finances as positive, bolstered by a resilient stock market, faster job growth and rising wages.
The Commerce Department last week reported that the economy grew at a 3 percent annual pace in the final quarter of 2011, up from a 1.8 percent gain the prior three months.
While potential threats loom on the horizon -- such as further gasoline price increases, a war in the Middle East or a worsening of the European debt crisis -- most private forecasts anticipate slow improvement in the unemployment rate in the months before Election Day, Nov. 6.
Over the last several months, the economy has gone from being a net negative for Obama to probably something close to a wash, said Schnur, a campaign adviser to Republican presidential candidate John McCains first bid for the White House in 2000.
Projected Joblessness
The median projection for unemployment during the final quarter of the year is 8.1 percent, according to a Bloomberg News survey of 75 economists conducted Feb. 3 to Feb. 9.
That sets the stage for a classic glass-half-full, glass- half-empty argument over the jobless rate during the summer, Schnur said.
Republican front-runner Mitt Romney previewed just such a critique on the night of the Super Tuesday Republican primaries on March 6, arguing that 8.3 percent unemployment may be the best the Obama administration can achieve, yet the country can do better than an 8 percent rate.
The White House has focused on the progress that has been made since Obama took office in January 2009. The U.S. lost 818,000 jobs that month.
Were picking up from a relatively slow growth rate, said Joel Prakken, senior managing director of Macroeconomic Advisers LLC in St. Louis. Its good news for the president but its still pretty dicey.