Treasury Secretary Bessent Declares Trump's Workforce Revolution Is Working.
Bessent Drops Bombshell: Government Job Cuts Mean Every New Job Is a Real, Good-Paying Private Sector Win
Stats: +49,000 private sector jobs | +8,000 government jobs | BLS June 2026
Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent delivered a pointed and defiant declaration this week, arguing that the Trump administration's aggressive purge of federal government jobs has fundamentally transformed the quality of America's employment landscape. Speaking with unmistakable confidence, Bessent made the case that by stripping back a bloated federal workforce, every single job now being created in the economy is a good-paying, productive private sector position — the kind of job, he argued, that actually builds wealth for American workers rather than expanding an unaccountable government payroll. The statement represents one of the sharpest and most direct defenses yet of the administration's controversial "reprivatization" economic strategy, which has reshaped federal hiring policy throughout 2025 and into 2026.
"We have cut government jobs, so all the jobs we are generating now are good-paying private sector jobs."
— Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent
The backdrop to Bessent's remarks is the Bureau of Labor Statistics' June 2026 jobs report, which recorded a net addition of 49,000 private sector jobs alongside 8,000 government jobs in a month characterized by modest overall growth. While critics on the left were quick to point to the slow headline number as evidence of economic weakness, the Trump administration seized on the private-sector composition of the gains as validation of its core philosophy — that the surest path to broadly shared prosperity runs through the private economy, not through Washington. The administration's deliberate reduction of the federal civilian workforce, driven in large part by the Department of Government Efficiency's sweeping cost-cutting mandate, has been one of the most controversial and consequential domestic policy moves of the Trump second term.
Bessent's framing cuts directly to the heart of the administration's economic argument: that government employment, however large in headline numbers, does not create real value the way private sector jobs do. By removing federal positions from the equation, the Trump team is presenting each new private sector hire as a clean, unambiguous win — proof, they say, that their deregulatory agenda and workforce restructuring are producing a stronger, more self-sustaining economy. Whether the broader labor market ultimately validates that thesis will be one of the defining economic questions heading into the latter half of 2026, but for now, Bessent is making clear that the administration has no intention of reversing course.
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