Obama took over when there was nowhere to go but up. Worst recession in 75 years. QE1, 2 & 3 surely helped his cause.JohnStOnge wrote: ↑Thu Feb 20, 2020 7:00 pmFirst of all, I don't agree with your premise that the President controls the situation to the extent of saying "that kind of success." Secondly I don't agree with your apparent premise that it's easier to take over when a crisis is going on than it is to take over when the economy has been in recovery for years and everything is humming along.AZGrizFan wrote: ↑Wed Feb 19, 2020 8:09 pm
So you can’t refute the data, so you can only attack the verbiage?
Surely even YOU can see the trend change AFTER 2011. And once again, you want to anoint him for success during a time when literally ANYONE could have had that kind of success. Tell you what: I’ll give him full credit for 10 and 11 if YOU acknowledge there was a definite downward trend AFTER that point. And a positive trend change once Trump took office.
I can disagree with your approach because it does not consider all the post-Trump data. It ignores the first half of 2019; which is characterized by below average numbers. And in those data two quarters is 20% of the post-Trump data.
Now, I will tell you that I did a preliminary trend analysis using the quarterly data 2012 through 2 quarters of 2019. So far it looks like a downward trend throughout the period that slows down during 2017 through the first half of 2019. Since I did initially find a trend I have to do some other stuff to make sure it holds up. I'd have to get some notes i use to do that out and I don't feel like doing that right now.
If it does hold up it still leaves the question of how important it is at this point that the downward trend slowed if the mean 2012-2016 is not significantly different than that for 2017 through half of 2019. There hasn't been any dramatic surge in creation of manufacturing jobs. In fact if you've been paying attention to reports you know that's been slowing recently. Example at https://markets.businessinsider.com/new ... 1028577666.
Trump took over near (what appeared for all intents and purposes) the tail end of the 7 year expansion....yet, despite NO QE, several rate hikes, and his own stupidity (tariffs, etc) he’s managed to keep and even expand on Obama’s manufacturing numbers. And I can look at the graph YOU posted and see a trend shift. Looking at the quarterly data/annual averages just reinforces that trend change. 2019 isn’t done (or at least the data isn’t out). If it comes out that 3rd & 4th quarters look like 1st and 2nd, then there’s been another trend change. But it doesn’t change the fact that Trump reversed Obama’s downward spiral from 2012-2016. And you can call it what you want, but to ME, 100,000-140,000 MORE manufacturing jobs IS a surge.