
Donald Trump is predictably trumpeting a February jobs report that saw 235,000 jobs added, and while it is debatable whether Trump can take any credit for jobs created under Obama-era policies, it is a fact that Trump has failed to improve on Obama's performance, or even to meet his own standards.

Donald Trump was quick to retweet a Drudge report headline trumpeting February jobs numbers that were, in Drudge's words, "great again," but were actually a continuation of the record-setting trend set by President Barack Obama:

It is definitely too early to tell what effect, if any, Trump's election has had on employment. But during his first month in office, no new economic laws or policies have been enacted, thus these job gains are substantively thanks to Obama.


The February jobs report also saw upward revisions of the last two months of Obama's presidency by 12,000 jobs, including a revised January estimate of 238,000 jobs, which is larger than the total for which Trump now seeks credit. As Politico's Ben White notes, this month's numbers are identical to the last two February reports under Obama:

Hard to see any Trump bump in these numbers. Nearly identical to last two Febs.

Feb. 2015: 238K

Feb 2016: 237K

Feb. 2017: 235K pic.twitter.com/Mbleugxhmp — Ben White (@morningmoneyben) March 10, 2017

To be fair, attitudes toward Trump and his presidency are likely baked into these numbers to some degree, but the fact that he has not improved on Obama's performance would indicate tepidness, at best, in those attitudes.

And Trump's performance is also a marked failure when measured against his own previous standards, as this month's numbers fall well short of the benchmark Trump set in 2012:

Today's job report is not a good sign & we could be facing another recession. No real job growth. We need over 300K new jobs a month. — Donald J. Trump (@realDonaldTrump) December 7, 2012

The labor force participation rate, a favorite hobby horse of Trump's, sits at 63 percent, nearly identical to what it was when Trump criticized Obama in 2014, and lower than it was when Trump slammed Obama in previous years:

With the labor participation rate at a 36 yr. low, over 92M Americans are out of the work force. — Donald J. Trump (@realDonaldTrump) September 8, 2014

If you include people who have left the work force, unemployment rate is 15%. Labor participation rate is lowest in 70 yrs. — Donald J. Trump (@realDonaldTrump) September 20, 2013

Welcome to the @BarackObama recovery--the labor force participation rate is at a NEW 30 year low of 64.3% http://t.co/7SRYZNQ1 — Donald J. Trump (@realDonaldTrump) May 4, 2012

At this point, though, jobs numbers are a poor indicator of Trump's performance as president, and at best merely hint at perceptions of his policies to come. Once those policies begin to take effect, the story could be quite different. But for now, this is just the strong Obama economy still chugging along.