I'm sure that will be better. Just don't report the bad news.
The new guy is a zealot from the Heritage Foundation and has no experience doing this kind of thing at all.
The beclowning of the government continues.
Link: https://www.cnn.com/2025/08/12/economy/antoni-bls-mulls-suspending-jobs-report
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As I've been saying for 20 years, bad data is worse than no data because you're making decisions on information that is wrong.
We need good data, period.
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factor in the expected "Adjustments" to get as good a "feel" for trends as possible... better to explain the reality and assumptions than not have any data at all...Flying totally blind is not the solution...
But the tornado was to the West instead, you'd have been better off randomly choosing an escape route.
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Flying blind has a better chance of achieving a positive outcome than acting on bad information that drives one towards sure disaster...
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Found There" isn't my cup of tea.
One would think that the Fed would be one of "those who deal with it seriously." The Fed didn't lower rates, citing the jobs report ... but there is now a predicted 96% chance of a rate cut in next meeting, solely because of the corrected data. The BLS basically determined US monetary policy by issuing incorrect data, and the Fed trusted them.
Like cheeks says, bad data is worse than no data.
...now it's your turn to prove otherwise...
Link: https://abcnews.go.com/Politics/fact-check-trumps-claims-jobless-numbers-rigged/story?id=124353890
I stated facts.
You and Trump are projecting intent onto those facts.
Rigging isn't required to justify serious changes at the BLS.
new that they (Fed) don't understand...but for Trump, we wouldn't be having this conversation.
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data, as explained in the attached article. Trump's 'Helter-Skelter' economic actions thus far haven't made it any easier for the Fed to do its job and keep Inflation under control. DJT has himself to blame....IMO, that's a fact.
Link: https://www.scotsmanguide.com/news/the-fed-relies-on-data-to-make-rate-decisions-but-what-if-the-data-is-wrong/#:~:text=It's%20no%20secret%20that%20the,course%20of%20U.S.%20monetary%20policy.
He specifically said he relied on the BLS numbers when evaluating the strength of the economy...before the corrected numbers were issued. That provides a strong implication that if he had the corrected numbers, he might have made a different decision.
I'm not arguing a conspiracy theory. I'm just stating facts. You don't like the facts for some reason I haven't quite figured out (why don't you like these facts?), so you argue against them. I suppose you have a partisan narrative you need to push, and that narrative is threatened somehow by these facts. But, I'm not arguing your narrative. You can lie all you want; I don't really care.
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For example, in Brazil, you send the government basic payroll data with an occupation code and industry code for each employee every month. It is pretty easy to compare the changes over time.
Kind of like the W-2 data employers send to the government annually—just with an occupation code added to each record.