It may be too early to claim that, after just seven weeks as president, Donald Trump has already made the economy great again. But Friday’s jobs numbers — along with other indicators — are certainly grounds for optimism.

The Labor Department said non-farm payroll employment grew by 235,000 in February. That’s a larger gain than expected — and more than twice the average monthly jobs growth under President Barack Obama.

Construction jobs, in particular, shot up by 58,000 — the biggest jump in almost 10 years. And that came on top of a January surge of 40,000 new construction jobs.

Overall unemployment, meanwhile, held steady at a reasonable 4.7 percent. And notably, labor-force participation among a key age group, 25- to 54-year-olds, ticked up a point — to 81.7 percent in February, from 80.6 percent in September 2015, a low not seen since 1984.

That may mean working-age folks who gave up looking for a job under Obama may now be starting to jump back into the game.

And all this is taking place as the stock market has hit record highs: The Dow closed Friday up more than 13 percent since Trump won the November election.

There’s more. Consumer confidence is at a 15-year high. And the Federal Reserve is apparently upbeat, too: It’s widely expected to raise interest rates this moth.

Trump’s critics pooh-pooh all the good news. They note — rightly — that February was unusually warm and that job growth actually began under Obama.

And, again, it’s a bit early to give Trump too much credit here.

Yet it’s also hard to deny that Trump’s approach — deregulation that’s already under way, the promise of tax cuts coming reasonably soon, the move to replace ObamaCare and his heavy focus on the economy generally — is striking a sweet note with both businesses and consumers.

Heck, if the numbers keep improving, at some point even Trump’s critics will have to give him some points.