For four years, the Biden regime peddled a fairy tale of economic triumph, crowing about job booms while Americans drowned in skyrocketing costs and record debt.
Families juggled second jobs, raided savings, and racked up credit-card bills just to eat, all while the administration and its media lapdogs insisted the economy was thriving.
Now, the truth is out: the Labor Department admits hundreds of thousands of those hyped jobs were pure fiction, conjured to prop up Biden’s image before the 2024 election.
The numbers don’t lie, but the regime sure did.
Newly released data exposes the extent of these discrepancies, raising questions about the integrity of economic reporting under Joe Biden.
The Bureau of Labor Statistics recently revealed that job growth from March 2023 to March 2024 was overstated by 598,000 nonfarm payrolls, marking the largest revision since 2009.
Initial monthly reports boasted 2.9 million jobs were added during this period, but the BLS’s preliminary annual benchmark, derived from the more comprehensive Quarterly Census of Employment and Wages, slashed this to 2.3 million—a 30% drop.
This reduces the average monthly job gain to 173,500, significantly below the 242,000 initially claimed.
For July to September 2023, the BLS’s Business Employment Dynamics data reported a net loss of 1,000 private-sector jobs, contradicting the monthly reports of 399,000 jobs gained.
Similarly, from March to June 2023, monthly reports estimated 398,000 jobs added, while BED showed a loss of 163,000 private-sector jobs. This suggests a net loss of over 160,000 jobs in mid-2023, not the near-800,000 gain advertised.
These revisions suggest the economy shed over 160,000 jobs during mid-2023, rather than gaining nearly 800,000 as claimed.

The BLS’s monthly nonfarm payroll reports, based on a survey of approximately 121,000 businesses representing 631,000 worksites, repeatedly overestimated job growth under Biden.
Revisions for February and March 2025 alone cut reported job gains by 58,000. February was revised from 117,000 to 102,000; March was slashed from 228,000 to 185,000.
In 2023, ownward revisions totaled a staggering 443,000, with 10 of 12 months adjusted lower.
This pattern of optimistic initial reports, followed by quiet corrections, misled the public about the economy’s strength.
The monthly payroll reports and BED data differ in scope, with BED excluding certain sectors like government and agriculture, while monthly reports include broader nonfarm payrolls.
However, the QCEW, covering about 95% of U.S. jobs through quarterly tax reports, provides a much more accurate benchmark. Its lag—data for March 2024 was released in August 2024, meaning initial monthly estimates often go unchallenged until revisions surface.
While the Biden regime celebrated job growth, Americans faced mounting financial pressure. Credit-card debt surged to $1.14 trillion by mid-2024, up 14.6% from January 2021 when adjusted for inflation, reflecting families’ struggles to afford basic necessities.
As 60% of Americans live paycheck to paycheck, many took second or third jobs, inflating payroll counts without increasing employment.
The labor force participation rate remained 0.7 points below pre-pandemic levels, with nearly 2 million fewer workers than under President Trump.
Despite claims of a historic economic recovery, voters expressed skepticism.
Polls showed widespread disapproval of Biden’s economic handling, driven by inflation and stagnant real wages, which fell by over 5% since January 2021.
This discontent culminated in President Donald Trump’s 2024 election victory, securing the popular vote and every swing state, as Americans sought relief from financial hardship.
The BLS anticipates further downward revisions in the next annual benchmark, potentially exceeding the 598,000-job reduction for 2023-2024.
It was obvious from the day they stole the election that every word from the Biden cabal was a lie.
The economy wasn’t thriving—it was a rigged numbers game, with fake jobs and empty promises peddled to a suffering nation.
The data now speaks for itself, and Americans saw through the charade, sending Trump back to clean up the mess.
Years from now, we’ll still be peeling back the layers of deception, but one thing’s clear: the Biden regime’s economic fairy tale fooled no one who checked their wallet.
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