Austin American-Statesman

How Biden and Trump differ in economic data

- Louis Jacobson PolitiFact.com

Get ready: In the 2024 presidenti­al race, the candidates will talk about the economy. A lot.

We know because it’s already happening.

Incumbent President Joe Biden has touted the rapid growth of jobs on his watch. His predecesso­r and front-runner for the Republican nomination, Donald Trump, has focused on the fourdecade-high inflation that peaked in the summer of 2022.

Biden argues the economy has turned the corner on inflation. Trump counters that residual inflation continues to inflict economic pain. Voters are listening.

When the Quinnipiac University poll asked respondent­s in February for what they thought was the most urgent issue facing the country, 20% said the economy – a close second behind preserving democracy at 21%. Among Republican­s, 24% chose the economy (second to immigratio­n at 35%) while 24% of independen­ts picked the economy, making it their top issue.

PolitiFact decided to look at a few common economic talking points in the presidenti­al race. We compared the nation’s economic performanc­e not just under Biden and Trump but also under their three predecesso­rs: Barack Obama, George W. Bush, and Bill Clinton.

No president is all-powerful on economic matters. The severe but relatively brief interrupti­on the coronaviru­s pandemic caused also makes comparison­s tricky. And beyond the numbers are intangible­s, such as leadership qualities.

There’s no simple answer for who has been the better economic steward. On the numbers, Biden has some advantages over Trump, and vice versa. Other economic statistics show both presidents putting up impressive numbers during their first three years in office. (Looking at the first three years in office was the fairest comparison, as Trump’s fourth year was walloped by the coronaviru­s pandemic, and Biden’s fourth year is just 2 months old.)

Biden’s best argument: a fast rise in jobs, manufactur­ing growth

In January, Biden highlighte­d that Trump was the first president to oversee a net loss of jobs since Herbert Hoover, who was in office when the Great Depression hit – but failed to mention the 2020 pandemic caused the nosedive.

When excluding the pandemic year of 2020, we found that the economy under Biden added jobs at a faster rate than under Trump – and faster than any of Biden’s recent predecesso­rs.

Under Biden, U.S. employment is now 10% above what it was when he was sworn in. Ranking second after three years is Clinton, with almost 8%, followed by Trump with 4.4%. Both Obama and Bush had fewer jobs filled after three years than they had on their first day in office.

Biden benefited from favorable timing. He was inaugurate­d in January 2021, as the pandemic started receding. Although the jobs recovery began under Trump, Biden was blessed with a steady flow of Americans moving back into jobs that had been hampered during the pandemic.

Still, the simple return of workers sidetracke­d by the pandemic doesn’t explain all the job gains on Biden’s watch, even though Trump has tried to make that case. Employment data through Biden’s first three years in office significantly exceed where the workforce stood before the pandemic.

Given that job creation was leveling off during Trump’s last few months in office, “it was not inevitable that we would get the huge bounce back we saw under Biden,” said Dean Baker, co-founder of the liberal Center for Economic and Policy Research. Biden’s American Rescue Plan, a pandemic recovery bill passed weeks after Biden took office, “was a huge deal here.”

Another factor in the expanding labor market – though one that has become a political two-edged sword – has been higher immigratio­n rates under Biden. This has helped fuel the economy, according to analyses by the nonpartisa­n Congressio­nal Budget Office and others, even as it lets critics discuss chaos at the border.

Biden has emphasized the growth of manufactur­ing jobs when touting bills he has signed into law, including the Bipartisan Infrastruc­ture Law, the CHIPS and Science Act, and the Inflation Reduction Act.

The data show that manufactur­ing jobs have grown by about 6.5% since Biden took office. Trump ranks second at 3.4%, followed by Clinton at 2.5%. Three years into their terms, Obama and Bush had both overseen losses in manufactur­ing jobs.

Trump’s best case: inflation, wage growth, gasoline prices

Biden and Trump have dueling messages on inflation, which peaked north of 9% in summer 2022. Economists generally blame pandemic-era supply chain problems, with Biden’s aid package exacerbati­ng the rise in prices.

Biden has emphasized how much inflation has dropped.

“Wages are rising. Inflation is down,” Biden said in a Feb. 12 speech in Washington, D.C., to the National Associatio­n of Counties. The following day, Biden applauded the release of new inflation statistics showing that prices had risen by 3.1% in the year ended January 2024, about one-third of the 2022 peak level. It remains a bit above the 2% that the

Federal Reserve wants to see before lowering interest rates.

The biggest reasons inflation has eased, economists have told us, are factors that the administra­tion doesn’t control: Federal Reserve rate hikes, an oil price decline and a slowdown in China’s economy.

Inflation did not hamper Trump. During his first three years in office, Trump saw wages outpace inflation – the opposite of Biden.

For Biden, the data are improving, but that picture depends heavily on the time frame used.

If you start with Biden’s first day in office, prices have risen faster than wages – never a good sign for a president seeking reelection.

“In 2021 and 2022, people went to work and fell further behind,” said Douglas Holtz-Eakin, president of the center-right American Action Forum. “They are not over it, despite the gains in 2023.”

However, wage growth on Biden’s watch is on pace to exceed price growth within a couple of months. Also, wages have outpaced inflation for more than a year now, and wages have also outpaced inflation since Jan. 2020, the final month before the pandemic.

A difference between the Biden and Trump economies are data showing that the wage increases under Biden have been especially robust for poorer people.

Trump could make plenty of accurate claims about the pain of inflation. However, he has exaggerate­d how much prices have risen for bacon, overall food and gasoline.

In December, Trump said gasoline prices “are now $5, $6, $7 and even $8 a gallon.” We rated that claim Mostly False, since just a few gasoline stations nationally had prices that high. The nationwide average per-gallon price at the time was $3.14.

Gasoline prices have been unusually high under Biden, although they’ve dropped from their $5-per-gallon peak. That decline has stemmed from increased production, including in the United States, and the oil market’s realignmen­t after Russia invaded Ukraine in 2022, which drove Western nations to restrict purchases of Russian oil.

Today, gasoline prices remain about one-third higher than they were when Biden took office. That’s a bigger percentage increase after three years than under Clinton, Bush or Trump. Obama fared worse; gasoline prices were 89% higher at his three-year mark.

 ?? HXDBZXY/ISTOCK VIA GETTY IMAGES ?? Both presidents have overseen rising share prices. During Donald Trump’s first three years, the S&P 500, a broad market gauge, rose by 1,050 points. In Joe Biden’s first three years, it has risen by 988 points.
HXDBZXY/ISTOCK VIA GETTY IMAGES Both presidents have overseen rising share prices. During Donald Trump’s first three years, the S&P 500, a broad market gauge, rose by 1,050 points. In Joe Biden’s first three years, it has risen by 988 points.

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