Internewscast Journal
  • Home
  • US News
  • Local News
  • Health
  • People
  • Guest Post
  • Support Our Cause
Internewscast Journal
  • Home
  • US News
  • Local News
  • Health
  • People
  • Guest Post
  • Support Our Cause
Home Local news Is Jobs Data Trustworthy? Economists and Wall Street Continue to Rely on It
  • Local news

Is Jobs Data Trustworthy? Economists and Wall Street Continue to Rely on It

    How reliable is the jobs data? Economists and Wall Street still trust it
    Up next
    Judge says Sean ‘Diddy’ Combs must stay in jail until he is sentenced
    Court Orders Sean ‘Diddy’ Combs to Remain in Custody Until Sentencing
    Published on 05 August 2025
    Author
    Internewscast
    Tags
    • and,
    • Business,
    • Coronavirus,
    • Data,
    • Donald Trump,
    • Economists,
    • Erica Groshen,
    • Erika McEntarfer,
    • Ernie Tedeschi,
    • Heather Boushey,
    • how,
    • Jobs,
    • Joe Biden,
    • Kamala Harris,
    • Kevin Hassett,
    • Politics,
    • reliable,
    • still,
    • street,
    • The,
    • trust,
    • U.S. news,
    • wall
    Share this @internewscast.com
    FacebookXRedditPinterest

    WASHINGTON – The monthly employment report is always under scrutiny both on Wall Street and within Washington; however, it has gained even more significance following President Donald Trump’s decision to dismiss the official responsible for overseeing it this past Friday.

    Trump alleged that June’s job numbers were manipulated to discredit him and other Republicans, labeling them as “RIGGED.” However, he did not provide any proof. Even William Beach, the official appointed by Trump during his first presidency to supervise the report, criticized the removal of Erika McEntarfer, who was appointed by former President Joe Biden as the director of the Bureau of Labor Statistics. This action came after the latest jobs report published on Friday showed tepid hiring in July, with a nearly stagnant job market in May and June, immediately after Trump had implemented extensive tariffs.

    For a long time, economists and investors have trusted these employment figures, as stock prices and bond yields often respond dramatically upon their release. Yet, the most recent revisions were notably large—the most considerable seen outside a recession in fifty years. Surveys utilized for compiling the report are encountering difficulties as response rates have declined, especially after the COVID outbreak, with fewer businesses participating.

    Nonetheless, that hasn’t led most economists to doubt them.

    “The bottom line for me is, I wouldn’t take the low collection rate as any evidence that the numbers are less reliable,” stated Omair Sharif, founder and chief economist at Inflation Insights, a consultancy firm.

    Academics, statisticians, and economists have sounded alarms over time about shrinking budgets impairing the government’s capability to gather economic data. Although there were several government commissions assessing methods to enhance survey participation, these were disbanded by the Trump administration earlier this year.

    Heather Boushey, a leading economic advisor in the Biden administration, highlighted that without Trump’s dismissal of McEntarfer, last week’s data indicating a decelerating economy would have received greater attention.

    “We’re having this conversation about made-up issues to distract us from what the data is showing,” Boushey said. “Revisions of this magnitude in a negative direction may indicate bad things to come for the labor market.”

    Here are some things to know about the jobs report:

    Economists and Wall Street trust the data

    Most economists say that the Bureau of Labor Statistics is a nonpolitical agency staffed by people obsessed with getting the numbers right. The only political appointee is the commissioner, who doesn’t see the data until it’s finalized, two days before it is issued to the public.

    Erica Groshen, the BLS commissioner from 2013 to 2017, said she suggested different language in the report to “liven it up”, but was shot down. She was told that if asked to describe a cup as half-empty or half-full, BLS says “it is an eight ounce cup with four ounces of liquid.”

    The revised jobs data that has attracted Trump’s ire is actually more in line with other figures than before the revision. For example, payroll processor ADP uses data from its millions of clients to calculate its own jobs report, and it showed a sharp hiring slowdown in May and June that is closer to the revised BLS data.

    Trump and his White House have a long track record of celebrating the jobs numbers — when they are good.

    These are the figures is Trump attacking

    Trump has focused on the revisions to the May and June data, which on Friday were revised lower, with job gains in May reduced to 19,000 from 144,000, and for June to just 14,000 from 147,000. Every month’s jobs data is revised in the following two months.

    Trump also repeated a largely inaccurate attack from the campaign about an annual revision last August, which reduced total employment in the United States by 818,000, or about 0.5%. The government also revises employment figures every year.

    Trump charged the annual revision was released before the 2024 presidential election to “boost” Vice President Kamala Harris’s “chances of Victory,” yet it was two months before the election and widely reported at the time that the revision lowered hiring during the Biden-Harris administration and pointed to a weaker economy.

    Here’s why the government revises the data

    The monthly revisions occur because many companies that respond to the government’s surveys send their data in late, or correct the figures they’ve already submitted. The proportion of companies sending in their data later has risen in the past decade.

    Every year, the BLS does an additional revision based on actual job counts that are derived from state unemployment insurance records. Those figures cover 95% of U.S. businesses and aren’t derived from a survey but are not available in real time.

    These are the factors that cause revisions

    Figuring out how many new jobs have been added or lost each month is more complicated than it may sound. For example, if one person takes a second job, should you focus on the number of jobs, which has increased, or the number of employed people, which hasn’t? (The government measures both: The unemployment rate is based on how many people either have or don’t have jobs, while the number of jobs added or lost is counted separately).

    Each month, the government surveys about 121,000 businesses and government agencies at over 630,000 locations — including multiple locations for the same business — covering about one-third of all workers.

    Still, the government also has to make estimates: What if a company goes out of business? It likely won’t fill out any forms showing the jobs lost. And what about new businesses? They can take a while to get on the government’s radar.

    The BLS seeks to capture these trends by estimating their impact on employment. Those estimates can be wrong, of course, until they are fixed by the annual revisions.

    The revisions are often larger around turning points in the economy. For example, when the economy is growing, there may be more startups than the government expects, so revisions will be higher. If the economy is slowing or slipping into a recession, the revisions may be larger on the downside.

    Here’s why the May and June revisions may have been so large

    Ernie Tedeschi, an economic adviser to the Biden administration, points to the current dynamics of the labor market: Both hiring and firing have sharply declined, and fewer Americans are quitting their jobs to take other work. As a result, most of the job gains or losses each month are probably occurring at new companies, or those going out of business.

    And those are the ones the government uses models to estimate, which can make them more volatile.

    Groshen also points out that since the pandemic there has been a surge of new start-up companies, after many Americans lost their jobs or sought more independence. Yet they may not have created as many jobs as startups did pre-COVID, which throws off the government’s models.

    Revisions seem to be getting bigger

    The revisions to May and June’s job totals, which reduced hiring by a total of 258,000, were the largest — outside recessions — since 1967, according to economists at Goldman Sachs.

    Kevin Hassett, Trump’s top economic adviser, went on NBC’s “Meet the Press” on Sunday and said, “What we’ve seen over the last few years is massive revisions to the jobs numbers.”

    Hassett blamed a sharp drop in response rates to the government’s surveys during and after the pandemic: “When COVID happened, because response rates went down a lot, then revision rates skyrocketed.”

    Yet calculations by Tedeschi show that while revisions spiked after the pandemic, they have since declined and are much smaller than in the 1960s and 1970s.

    Other concerns about the government’s data

    Many economists and statisticians have sounded the alarm about things like declining response rates for years. A decade ago, about 60% of companies surveyed by BLS responded. Now, only about 40% do.

    The decline has been an international phenomenon, particularly since COVID. The United Kingdom has even suspended publication of an official unemployment rate because of falling responses.

    And earlier this year the BLS said that it was cutting back on its collection of inflation data because of the Trump administration’s hiring freeze, raising concerns about the robustness of price data just as economists are trying to gauge the impact of tariffs on inflation.

    U.S. government statistical agencies have seen an inflation-adjusted 16% drop in funding since 2009, according to a July report from the American Statistical Association.

    “We are at an inflection point,” the report said. “To meet current and future challenges requires thoughtful, well-planned investment … In contrast, what we have observed is uncoordinated and unplanned reductions with no visible plan for the future.

    Copyright 2025 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed without permission.

    Share this @internewscast.com
    FacebookXRedditPinterest
    You May Also Like
    Dead body reported at Walt Disney World, sheriff’s office says
    • Local news

    Body Discovered at Walt Disney World, Confirms Sheriff’s Office

    ORANGE COUNTY, Fla. – On Friday night, a deceased individual was discovered…
    • Internewscast
    • January 3, 2026
    Rhode Island firefighters rescue a yellow Lab from an icy pond on New Year's Day
    • Local news

    Heroic Rhode Island Firefighters Save Yellow Lab from Icy Pond on New Year’s Day

    WESTERLY, R.I. – On New Year’s Day, a yellow Labrador named Phoenix…
    • Internewscast
    • January 2, 2026
    Military-backed party leads in early election results in Myanmar
    • Local news

    Breaking: Military-Backed Party Dominates Early Myanmar Election Results – What This Means for the Nation’s Future

    BANGKOK – Myanmar’s election commission, appointed by the military, has started unveiling…
    • Internewscast
    • January 3, 2026
    Former baseball player Lenny Dykstra faces drug charges after New Year's Day traffic stop
    • Local news

    Ex-MLB Star Lenny Dykstra Arrested on Drug Charges Following New Year’s Traffic Incident

    Former baseball star Lenny Dykstra is facing legal troubles after Pennsylvania State…
    • Internewscast
    • January 3, 2026
    Nice afternoon in Central Florida with changes on the way. Here’s your forecast
    • Local news

    Central Florida’s Pleasant Afternoon: Discover What’s Next in Your Weather Forecast

    ORLANDO, Fla. – A high-pressure system is making its way eastward across…
    • Internewscast
    • January 2, 2026

    Local Community Rallies Against BWXT Expansion: Urges Decision Makers to Deny Proposal

    In the quiet community of Telford, Tennessee, the battle over the proposed…
    • Internewscast
    • January 3, 2026
    3 hospitalized after fire breaks out at Cocoa Beach home
    • Local news

    Three Hospitalized in Cocoa Beach House Fire: Emergency Response Swiftly Contained Blaze

    COCOA BEACH, Fla. – A fire erupted at a Cocoa Beach residence…
    • Internewscast
    • January 2, 2026

    Exciting Weekend in the Tri-Cities: Powerlifting Championship and Basketball Events Set to Energize the Community

    A variety of events, including basketball games dedicated to a family impacted…
    • Internewscast
    • January 2, 2026
    RunDisney unveils 2026–27 race season calendar at Walt Disney World
    • Local news

    Unlock the Magic: runDisney Announces Exciting 2026-27 Race Calendar at Walt Disney World!

    BAY LAKE, Fla. – The upcoming Walt Disney World Marathon Weekend, supported…
    • Internewscast
    • January 2, 2026
    Japan says Trump has invited its leader to the US. It comes as ties with China are strained
    • Local news

    Japan Announces Invitation from Trump for Leader’s US Visit Amidst Strained China Relations

    WASHINGTON – In a recent phone conversation, President Donald Trump extended an…
    • Internewscast
    • January 3, 2026
    FORGET ORANGES: Will this ‘superfruit’ be the next big thing in Florida?
    • Local news

    Move Over Oranges: Discover Florida’s Latest Superfruit Sensation!

    When people think of Florida, images of oranges and pineapples often come…
    • Internewscast
    • January 2, 2026
    Pickup truck strikes pedestrians, crashes into Brevard County building, police say
    • Local news

    Pickup Truck Hits Pedestrians and Collides with Brevard County Building, Police Report

    COCOA, Fla. – A tragic accident in Cocoa on Friday afternoon claimed…
    • Internewscast
    • January 2, 2026
    Trump orders Chinese-controlled firm to unwind chip asset deal, citing national security risks
    • Asia

    Trump Blocks Chinese Firm’s Chip Acquisition Over National Security Concerns: A Major Move in U.S. Tech Protection

    In a decisive move underscoring national security priorities, President Donald Trump on…
    • Internewscast
    • January 3, 2026
    'I needed to leave'... Former Liverpool wonderkid TYLER MORTON on Reds' 'amazing' title victory, his Anfield 'frustrations', loving Lyon life, winning the Euros and why he has to speak slowly in France
    • Sport

    From Anfield Dreams to Lyon Life: Tyler Morton on Liverpool’s Triumphs, Frustrations, and His French Adventure

    Tyler Morton finds himself speaking at a measured pace these days, a…
    • Internewscast
    • January 3, 2026
    Swiss nightclub promoted flaming bottle stunts before deadly inferno in packed New Year's Eve venue
    • US

    Swiss Nightclub’s Pre-Inferno Promotional Stunts Under Scrutiny Following Tragic New Year’s Eve Blaze

    A luxurious nightclub nestled in the Swiss Alps became the site of…
    • Internewscast
    • January 3, 2026
    Military-backed party leads in early election results in Myanmar
    • Local news

    Breaking: Military-Backed Party Dominates Early Myanmar Election Results – What This Means for the Nation’s Future

    BANGKOK – Myanmar’s election commission, appointed by the military, has started…
    • Internewscast
    • January 3, 2026
    Internewscast Journal
    • Home
    • Privacy Policy
    • DMCA Notice
    • Terms and Conditions
    • Guest Post
    • Support Our Cause
    Copyright 2023. All Right Reserverd.