No one is ignoring anything. I understand that the 10% figure is not a complete figure, just as 4% wasn't under Bush. I understand that there is a large increase in temp employment at this time.
HOWEVER, no one was expecting a decrease like this. And this includes pretty much everyone in the economic field & on Wall Street - who, I think, understand the whole "temp employment" dynamic.
Sorry the good news is so bad for you.
Call it good news all you want - it does not make it so. I pointed out some reality behind the so-called good figures, such as the fact that the UE numbers are skewed by seasonal employment. And last time I looked, the definition of GOOD was not "not as bad as we expected." But then I am not trying to spin things for the benefit of a political party. I am evaluating things as how they affect the American people, both now and in the future.
Bottom line: the news on employment figures is STILL BAD. We have 10% UE using strictly applicant for UE benefits, higher rates of discouraged workers, higher rates of underemployed workers for a total estimated UE of over 17%. Almost
1 in 5 work-capable people are out of a job, or working some PT low wage job at a fraction of their normal income. We are continuing to lose medium and high paying permanent jobs, which are - do to the season - being replaced with low paying temporary service jobs. Sorry to bust your fantasy bubble of spun honey, but those facts do not equate out to "good" news.
Do you have ANY idea what the above figure mean for future movements of the economy? We already have record defaults on personal, personal property, and revolving credit loans, the band-aid put on the mortgage problem is falling off, and people are still losing their jobs. Put it all in a package, and things do NOT look rosy no matter how much "less worse" this month is from last month.
Holiday sales increased by less than inflation - which means in terms of inflation adjusted dollars, holiday sales are down. What is going to happen when holiday sales are no longer skewing the data? What will happen to the already shaky banking industry when loan defaults continue in an upward spiral? What will happen to home mortgages when inability to pay exceeds the government help plans?
Now the UE figures may not be as bad as many economists were projecting (Predictions which you poo-pooed up until now because you were too busy parroting Obama's "UE will not go above 10% and the stimulus should be kicking in any time now", message.) but that does NOT make for "good" news, let alone "incredible". Only in the realm of blind partisan, head up your respective mascot's ass politics does "not as horrible as expected" mean "good".
And speaking of the Democrats predictions of good times to come from government over-spending - how does this news compare to what you were predicting 6 months ago with your rose colored glasses and massive doses of hallucinogens?