Recently, US President Donald Trump fired Bureau of Labor Statistics Director Erica McEntire, citing allegations of "fraudulent" employment data, sparking global outcry. On Sunday, White House senior economic advisor Kevin Hassett publicly defended the controversial decision, calling the data revisions "hard evidence" and emphasizing that Trump aimed to maintain "transparency and reliability" in statistics. However, the controversy surrounding the veracity of economic data has put the credibility of US official statistical agencies at risk.
Hassett's core defense focused on the recent pattern of revisions to employment data. He pointed out that July's non-farm payrolls grew by only 73,000, far below market expectations of 100,000, and that the data for May and June were revised downward by a significant 258,000 jobs, constituting a "historic anomaly." Based on this, the Trump team inferred that the data revisions contained systematic biases, implying that McEntire and her team were manipulating the results for political motives. Hassett further claimed that the president's purpose in firing the director wasn't to blame the data, but to ensure that key positions were filled by "credible individuals" to rebuild public trust in economic data.
However, Hassett's defense failed to quell skepticism. Economists and statisticians widely expressed concern that this move would set a dangerous precedent for the "politicization of statistics." Former BLS Director William Beach bluntly called the firing "unfounded" and warned that it would undermine the agency's independence. Republican Senator Cynthia Lummis also stated, "If accurate data is dismissed because it doesn't meet the president's expectations, the problem goes far beyond statistics." More importantly, Trump's accusations of data fabrication without providing any evidence, his double-edged attitude of "accepting only favorable data and dismissing unfavorable data," has further exacerbated market doubts about the credibility of government data.
This incident reflects the rift between the US economic narrative and reality. Trump has long boasted about a "prosperous economy" and often used strong employment data to justify his policies. However, the latest data shows that the US economy is facing a significant slowdown: weak job growth, cooling consumer spending, and easing inflationary pressures, though on shaky ground. Against this backdrop, firing the Census Bureau director not only fails to resolve the discrepancy between data and expectations, but instead exposes the White House's evasiveness about economic realities. Economic advisers such as Jared Bernstein have warned that further Trump administration interference in Federal Reserve policymaking could reignite an inflation crisis and exacerbate economic uncertainty.
Since its inception, the Bureau of Labor Statistics has been committed to nonpartisan and independent statistics. While its data collection and revision mechanisms are inevitably subject to errors, its long-standing professionalism and transparency are the cornerstone of market trust. Trump's "political purge" to replace the director is essentially an instrumentalization of statistics to serve a specific political agenda. This move not only shakes the foundation of the institution but also risks triggering a chain reaction: If future data releases are forced to cater to administrative preferences, how will investors and the public judge their authenticity? What risks will financial markets face in relying on official data for trillions of dollars in transactions?
The White House advisers' defense is essentially a battle over "data sovereignty." When executive power attempts to override professional statistics, it damages not only the century-old reputation of the Bureau of Labor Statistics but also the core values of the American system—checks and balances and the independence of facts. If statistics become a bargaining chip in political games, the formulation of American economic policies will lose its objective basis, and the foundation of trust that democratic societies rely on will be eroded. This data dispute may become a touchstone for the resilience of the American system.
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