Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

‘Millions of jobs’ claim inflated

- LOUIS JACOBSON Louis Jacobson is a reporter for PolitiFact.com. The Journal Sentinel’s PolitiFact Wisconsin is part of the PolitiFact network.

In a tweet from his first foreign trip as president, President Donald Trump touted his accomplish­ments on one of the cornerston­es of his presidenti­al campaign — jobs.

Trump traveled to Saudi Arabia, Israel, Brussels and Rome on a mix of business and diplomatic tasks from May 20 to 27.

“Just arrived in Italy for the G7. Trip has been very successful. We made and saved the USA many billions of dollars and millions of jobs,” Trump tweeted.

Millions of jobs? That would be a massive shot in the arm for the economy. For a sense of scale, Wal-Mart, the nation’s largest private employer, has 2.3 million employees; the secondlarg­est, Yum Brands, which includes Taco Bell, Pizza Hut and KFC, has about 500,000.

The problem is, the White House has been cagey about exactly where this projection comes from.

For starters, Trump’s use of the word “millions” represents a thousand-fold expansion from what Trump had said just days earlier, when he told the audience in a speech in Saudi Arabia: “Yesterday, we signed historic agreements with the Kingdom that will invest almost $400 billion in our two countries and create many thousands of jobs in America and Saudi Arabia.”

Meanwhile, over two days of inquiries to the White House, officials were unable to provide us with full details of the $110 billion arms deal with Saudi Arabia, which itself is just a portion of the $400 billion investment package Trump cited in his speech.

When the Washington Post Fact Checker asked the White House for details about Trump’s tweet, a White House official responded that Trump was referring to “benefits to trade from the entire trip from Saudi Arabia to the G7” — that is, including Trump’s meetings with the heads of other advanced industrial­ized nations in Europe toward the end of the trip. (It’s not clear what

trade deals were discussed in the European portion of the trip.)

In any case, assuming “millions” of jobs from unspecifie­d investment­s is not justified, economists say.

“There’s not enough informatio­n to substantia­te his claims on millions of jobs,” said Chris Lafakis, senior economist at Moody’s.

In the meantime, here’s what we know and don’t know.

The arms deal

The Defense Security Cooperatio­n Agency issued a news release on May 20 saying the United States and Saudi Arabia agreed to a $110 billion package on five main areas: border security and counterter­rorism, maritime and coastal security, air force modernizat­ion, air and missile defense, and cybersecur­ity and communicat­ions upgrades.

The release detailed six specific areas, with links to documents that offered a dollar amount. They were:

Munitions and support: $6.8 billion;

Multi-Mission Surface Combatant ships: $11.25 billion;

Ammunition for the Royal Saudi Land Forces: $500 million;

Saudi Abrams Main Battle Tanks and HERCULES Armored Recovery Vehicles: $1.15 billion;

Chinook cargo helicopter­s: $3.51 billion;

Persistent Threat Detection System Aerostats: $525 million.

That totals $23.74 billion, leaving $86 billion from the package unspecifie­d.

Using other available data, John Pike, the director of globalsecu­rity.org, told PolitiFact that he can estimate perhaps $50 billion in arms sales, “most of which was initiated under Obama,” he said.

Bloomberg calculatio­ns

Reporters at Bloomberg have written several articles about the deals signed in the Saudi portion of the trip, focusing on agreements outside the $110 billion arms deal. They include:

Agreements signed by Saudi oil company Aramco: $50 billion;

Commitment­s by Saudi Arabia’s Public Investment Fund to an infrastruc­ture investment fund with the Blackstone Group. (Blackstone, Bloomberg reported separately, has close ties to the family of Trump’s son-in-law, Jared Kushner.) $20 billion;

General Electric memorandum of understand­ing with Saudi Arabia: $15 billion;

Honeywell Internatio­nal memorandum of understand­ing with Saudi Aramco: $3.6 billion;

McDermott Internatio­nal memorandum of understand­ing with Saudi Aramco: $2.8 billion;

Jacobs Engineerin­g Group memorandum of understand­ing: $250 million;

Rowan Companies memorandum of understand­ing with Saudi Aramco for offshore drilling rigs: $7 billion;

Rowan memorandum of understand­ing with Saudi Aramco for its supply chain: $1.2 billion;

Nabors Industries memorandum of understand­ing on well and rig services on an existing joint venture worth $9 billion;

Nabors memorandum of understand­ing with Saudi Aramco for its supply chain: $1.6 billion; Weatherfor­d Internatio­nal memorandum of understand­ing: potential value of $2 billion. That works out to about $112

PolitiFact on TODAY’S TMJ 4

You can watch PolitiFact Wisconsin segments on Wednesday and Friday evenings during the TODAY’S TMJ 4 Live at 6 newscast. billion, coming on top of the $110 billion in arms sales. Bloomberg cited a few more items without specific dollar amounts, including a jet purchase from Boeing by SaudiGulf Airlines, and a joint venture between National Oilwell Varco and Saudi Aramco for the manufactur­e of drilling rigs and equipment.

That leaves more than half of Trump’s $400 billion figure — just for the Saudi leg of the trip — undisclose­d, to say nothing of what deals may have been struck in the European portion of the trip.

And for now, the Washington Post reported that several key CEOs of companies that signed deals have been a lot more restrained than Trump about promising specific numbers of jobs.

“There is absolutely zero chance that the trip created millions of jobs,” said Dean Baker, a liberal economist. Even if jobs were created — possibly in the thousands, not the millions — “this may or may not lead to any net job creation, since the Fed could easily offset it with higher interest rates.”

Our rating

Trump said that deals struck on his first foreign trip as president created and saved “millions of jobs.”

We can’t know for sure how many jobs will be created or saved — nor, despite the certainty of his language, does Trump — but the evidence at this point is so thin and so premature as to be little more than puffery or wishful thinking. We rate the statement False.

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