Presidents Don't Create Jobs, No Matter What Bill Clinton Said
Dynamic economies operate independently of the political party of whoever was elected most recently.

During his Wednesday night speech at the Democratic National Convention (DNC), former President Bill Clinton trotted out some impressive statistics to make the case that Democrats in the White House are good for the economy.
"You're going to have a hard time believing this, but so help me, I triple-checked it," Clinton said. "Since the end of the Cold War in 1989, America has created about 51 million new jobs….What's the score? Democrats 50, Republicans one"—meaning 50 million new jobs created under Democratic presidents, 1 million under Republican presidents.
But it's misleading to suggest that the president—and by extension, the major political party to which the president belongs—is singularly or even primarily responsible for the success or failure of the job market. Rather, individuals in dynamic economies operate independently of the political party that happens to occupy the White House.
Clinton's numbers are technically right: According to the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics, the economy added 2.63 million nonfarm private sector jobs while George H.W. Bush was president. During Clinton's two terms, the economy added 22.9 million jobs. Only 1.37 million jobs were added during George W. Bush's terms, with another 11.57 million during Barack Obama's tenure. During Donald Trump's single term, the economy lost 2.72 million jobs, and in Joe Biden's term through July 2024, the economy has added 15.81 million.
In total, that equals 51.56 million net jobs added since January 1989—50.28 million under Democratic presidents and 1.28 million under Republican presidents. That's not the whole story, though.
Many of the presidents' terms coincided with substantial external forces. Trump left office during a recession caused by the COVID-19 pandemic: In his first three years in office, the economy actually added 6.4 million jobs. Similarly, George W. Bush left office amid the Great Recession, during which the economy shed nearly 7.4 million jobs. Calculating Bush's term up to December 2007, the economy added 5.7 million jobs.
On the other hand, Clinton served during the dot-com boom. The tech-heavy Nasdaq composite more than doubled between January 1999 and March 2000. But then the bubble burst: The economy entered a recession in March 2001, just weeks after Clinton left office, and the Nasdaq would lose 78 percent of its value between its March 2000 high and October 2002.
"There is an avalanche of caveats that apply here, certainly," writes Philip Bump at The Washington Post. "One is that 'increase in people working' is not fully equivalent to 'jobs created,' nor is it necessarily a measure of the policies or administration of the presidents."
Kennesaw State University economics professor J.C. Bradbury argued on X that "income, output, or growth" are more important aspects of "economic well-being." Software engineer Matt Shapiro added, "Since 1995, the number of jobs created and which party was in control of the house of representatives? What's the score? Republicans 32, Democrats negative 2."
In six of Clinton's eight years in office, Republicans controlled the House—do they deserve credit for job creation? Since Democrats controlled the House during Trump's final year in office, which saw the economy shed 20.5 million jobs in a single month at the outset of the pandemic, do they deserve a share of the blame?
National economies—particularly those as large and complex as ours—are dynamic, with an infinite number of inputs and externalities. "Month-to-month job creation is just a function of the dynamic U.S. economy that's bigger than one person," Chris Douglas, associate economics professor at the University of Michigan–Flint, told Marketplace in 2022. Central planning fails for this reason: Dynamic economies are driven by individuals, each operating only with his or her own knowledge and interests in mind.
It makes sense why Clinton would use these numbers to make his case. (He used a very similar argument in his 2012 DNC speech.) Trump is also no stranger to boasting about job gains during his term, including during the pandemic, and even claimed jobs added before he took office.
But in either case, it's misleading for a political party to take all the credit for positive job gains just because its guy was in office. Luckily for us all, the economy chugs along independently of who's in the White House at any given moment in time.
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Is this the same Bill Clinton who has been accused of rape multiple times, had a number of his business associates die mysteriously and sold a lot of our tech to China?
That Bill Clinton?
At least he’s not some impeached, womanizing rapist.
Referring to Donnie or Bubba?
The inability to understand humor is the sign of a dull mind.
turd, the ass-clown of the commentariat, lies; it’s all he ever does. turd is a kiddie diddler, and a pathological liar, entirely too stupid to remember which lies he posted even minutes ago, and also too stupid to understand we all know he’s a liar.
If anything he posts isn’t a lie, it’s totally accidental.
turd lies; it’s what he does. turd is a lying pile of lefty shit.
Who are your referring to? Bill Clinton IS an impeached womanizing rapist.
You’re not really supposed to believe ALL women.
"Since the end of the Cold War in 1989, America has created about 51 million new jobs….What's the score? Democrats 50, Republicans one"
I wonder which jobs report he was using?
Obviously presidents have a fuckton more to do with jobs than they do with the money supply/inflation. Since the economy tends to grow more with Dem presidents the jobs numbers are no surprise.
Also we all know Donnie’s shitty economic numbers were really Nancy’s fault.
You were banned for posting a link to kiddie porn.
Your tribe is in power and the economy is good:
"Good thing we got out of the mess created by the other tribe."
Your tribe is in power and the economy is bad:
"Still haven't recovered from the mess created by the other tribe."
Their tribe is in power and the economy is good:
"They're taking credit for what our tribe did last administration."
Their tribe is in power and the economy is bad:
"See? They're a bunch of evil fuckups."
Lol. You think the economy is great.
He got into the wood alcohol again.
turd, the ass-wipe of the commentariat, lies; it’s all he ever does. turd is a kiddie diddler, and a pathological liar, entirely too stupid to remember which lies he posted even minutes ago, and also too stupid to understand we all know he’s a liar.
If anything he posts isn’t a lie, it’s totally accidental.
turd lies; it’s what he does. turd is a lying pile of lefty shit.
Presidents create jobs. They’re just government jobs.
Feds created 800k jobs put of nothing. If you listen to jeffsarc every illegal creates their own job and has no negative effect on the economy.
eatin' ain't cheatin'.
Close but no cigar.
In my opinion the commodification of PC's made the dotcom boom possible.
A basic desktop went from $2000 + to under $1000.
I loved my atari800
pfft. Commodore 64 was the best
I liked playing Vs. Tennis on my friend's C64 but I think my games were better overall I had boxes of floppies with every arcade game made ... and a group of trading nerds who didn't have C64s lol
Archon on NES.
I remember having to type in the code for games from listings in magazines. Fun times.
The only real games that I remember on C64 were Jeopardy (I think, maybe some other quiz bowl type game) and Rags to Riches. I could never finish Rags to Riches because the computer would lock up about midway through. Oh well.
Oh yeah? I had a VIC-20.
Oh I did too.
True story: I wrote a program on a VIC-20 that accidentally overwrote the character set. Couldn't do anything with it after that.
Govt fiscal policy can create or destroy jobs, but fiscal policy often requires Congress's cooperation. If the President does not play an important role in creating jobs, then STFU about Biden's not creating jobs!
NO, government fiscal policy can't create jobs. It can get out of the way and allow jobs to be created.
Actually, it’s worse. The empirical Keynesian multiplier is less than one. Pelosi famously declared that it was essentially 4-5, when she was bragging about all the jobs that she was creating. Nope.
I've not found anywhere that definitively sets it at 0.8. I am quite prepared to think it may be 0.8 at some parts of the cycle, but I will dismiss any claim unless strongly evidenced that it has anything close to a constant value - whether greater or less than 1 - across the cycle.
OTOH, Pelosi is likely to be full of it here. If it were that large, it would surely have been evident long before now.
…then STFU about Biden’s not creating jobs!
Got pretty butthurt about the downward revision in the numbers, did you?
Actually, about one-third of all the new jobs in the past two years have been government jobs, so he is sorta right.
Except that the Government actually destroys more jobs than it creates through hiring government workers.
At most, government fails to prevent the creation of jobs.
"economies operate independently of the political party"
That was BEFORE the nation was conquered by [Na]tional So[zi]alist[s].
And the very reason politics has gotten so all-involving and contentious to practically every citizen.
What about all the jobs rebuilding countries Presidents are want to bomb into the stone age?
As long as you're not limiting yourself to American jobs or sans broken windows fallacy jobs then sure. Not so certain how that plays politically with American broken windows and paying for jobs internationally though.
Having lived in CA, it's obvious that D executives can kill jobs.
Wrong article.
Trump left office during a recession caused by the COVID-19 pandemic
The recession wasn't caused by the COVID-19 pandemic. It caused by the reaction of various government overlords who played God with the livelihoods of the citizens and residents of their respective States, Commonwealths, Counties, Cities, Towns, and other municipalities.