As Hillary Clinton takes the baton from President Obama tonight, she has to acknowledge two key truths about the "Obama economy":
1. Americans are vastly better off than they were 8 years ago.
2. But most are worried. They feel they should be a lot better off than they are (and a significant number have yet to recover).
Clinton has to walk that line of celebrating the turnaround, but also laying out a vision for how America reaches its full potential, especially on growth and worker pay. Overall, most experts dub the Obama economy as a "B+ economy" or the "Good, but not great economy."
Here are some key stats:
Jobs: 14.4 million jobs added in this recovery. Unemployment peaked at 10% in 2010 and is now only 4.9%. Great story for Obama and Clinton.
Economic growth: The Obama economy has grown about 2% a year. That's decent, but the pre-recession average is over 3%. OK story.
Stocks: Obama has delivered a bull market for stocks. The Dow and S&P 500 are at record highs and the Nasdaq (the tech heavy index) is above its Dot-com era peak. Great story.
Worker pay: The typical American family brings home just shy of $54,000 a year, almost exactly the same as 20 years ago (once you adjust for inflation). Wage growth has been very low under Obama. It's the "missing piece" of the recovery. Not good.
Housing: Home prices have finally recovered to their pre-crash (2005) highs. The median price is now $231,000. Good story, finally.
Related: The Obama/US economy: 10 key facts to know
Student debt: 70% of students graduate college with debt. The average student leaves with nearly $29,000 in debt (versus about $20,000 a decade ago). Worrisome.
Government debt: Government debt has nearly doubled under Obama from $10 trillion to $19 trillion. Concerning.
Gas prices: American oil production is at a 43-year high. Gas prices are at the very cheap rate of $2.15 a gallon. Great story.
Related: Many 2012 Republican campaign promises have come true under...Obama?
Inequality: By just about any measure, it's going up. There's a big divide between job and earnings prospects for 4-year college grads and everyone else. Not good.
Reason to hope? Average income for the bottom 99% grew 3.9% in 2015, the best growth in 17 years, according to University of California Berkeley Professor Emmanuel Saez. However, the Top 1% saw their income grow 7.7%. His most recent calculations by Saez show the Top 1% captured 52% of total income growth from 2009 to 2015.
-- Tami Luhby contributed to this story.