PRINCETON, NJ -- President Barack Obama's job approval rating rose to 49% in the three-day period from Friday through Sunday, building on an upward trend that began the middle of last week. Obama's current approval rating is the highest measured since early February, and before that the highest since June 2011.

Gallup's latest three-day rolling average is based on polling conducted Friday through Sunday, March 9-11, and reflects the impact of the U.S. government's positive employment report released on Friday. Gallup's tracking of U.S. economic confidence showed a sharp positive uptick over the weekend, with the overall Economic Confidence Index at -13 and -14 in the three-day rolling averages reported Saturday and Sunday. The -13 average for March 8-10 is the most positive three-day economic confidence average recorded since Gallup began tracking in January 2008. Forty-six percent of Americans now say the economy is getting better, the highest percentage since late 2009. Gallup's full weekly report on U.S. economic confidence will be published Tuesday morning on Gallup.com.

Obama's job approval rating was at 43% as last week began. His rating improved to 48% by mid-week before rising to 49% over the weekend, suggesting that he was on the upswing even before Friday's jobs report.

Obama's weekly average for March 6-11, based on 3,632 interviews, is 48%, the highest since May 2011.

Political news coverage and punditry in recent weeks have focused on birth control and abortion policy controversies, with some news organizations reporting that the Obama re-election strategy team sees this as an opportunity to strengthen the president's position among women. Gallup's weekly tracking of Obama's job approval by gender, however, shows his gains last week coming more from men than from women. Obama's 45% approval rating among men last week is up from 41% the previous week and is the highest recorded since July of last year. Obama's job rating among women last week was 51%, up two percentage points from the week of Feb. 27 through March 4.

Obama's approval ratings among Democrats (85%), independents (44%), and Republicans (12%) all increased by two points over the prior week.

Implications

President Obama appears to have benefited from Americans' significantly improved view of the national economy, including the positive jobs report released on Friday. His weekly average job approval rating of 48% is up from his 45% average for the month of February.

The potential for more change in Obama's job approval rating going forward remains very real, particularly if gas prices continue to rise through the summer months to $5.00 per gallon or higher and when the eventual Republican presidential nominee steps up his attacks on the president. Still, President Obama's current job approval rating puts him in a better position to win re-election than was the case as recently as a few months ago. His current 49% rating ranks on the low end of the range of approval levels at which modern presidents have been re-elected, similar to George W. Bush's 48% approval from late October 2004.

Explore President Obama's approval ratings in depth and compare them with those of past presidents in the Gallup Presidential Job Approval Center.