Left: Republican presidential nominee and former U.S. President Donald Trump on September 4 in Harrisburg, Pennsylvania. Right: U.S. President Joe Biden at the White House in Washington on September 3.
Kevin Dietsch/Getty Images/Susan Walsh/AP
Presidential terms don’t start and end in a vacuum, and economic cycles can carry over regardless of party. Additionally, the ups and downs of the labor market and the broader economy are influenced by factors beyond a single president (although specific economic policies can influence economic and job growth).
When Trump took office in 2017, he inherited a strong economy, including a robust labor market, which was in the throes of its longest-ever expansion that started in 2010 and continued until March 2020, when the Covid-19 pandemic crippled global economies, including that of the US.
In 2016, the US added an average of nearly 194,000 jobs per month, according to Bureau of Labor Statistics data. In the two years before, those average gains were even higher: 226,000 in 2015 and nearly 250,000 in 2014.
Job gains remained above historical averages in 2017 through 2019, with 177,000 jobs added on average per month.
Nearly 22 million jobs were lost under Trump in March and April 2020 when the global economy cratered on account of the pandemic. Following substantial relief and recovery measures, the US started regaining jobs immediately, adding more than 12 million jobs from May 2020 through December 2020, according to Bureau of Labor Statistics data.
The recovery continued after Biden took office, with the US reaching and surpassing its pre-pandemic (February 2020) employment totals in June 2022.
The job gains didn’t stop there. Since June 2022, the US has added nearly 6.4 million more jobs in what’s become the fifth-longest period of employment expansion on record. In total under Biden, 16.26 million jobs have been added.
The effects of the Covid-19 pandemic make it difficult to have an apples-to-apples comparison between the two administrations.
When trying to strip out the pandemic effects, one could compare the job gains starting in July 2022 (as the US returned to pre-pandemic employment levels in June 2022) through August 2024, to the 26-month period of July 2017 to August 2019: From July 2022 through August, there were 6.4 million jobs added, or roughly 247,300 jobs per month; and from July 2017 to August 2019, there were 4.6 million jobs added, or more than 175,600?jobs per month.