President Biden is closing out the year with a look back at some of his administration’s accomplishments —but some of Joe’s “accolades” are being met with skepticism by, well, nearly everyone. Take for example this tweet about the economy:

“We’re ending 2021 with what one analyst described as the strongest first-year economic track record of any president in the last 50 years,” Biden wrote. “Let’s keep the progress going.”

What about the supply chain crisis? $4.50 a gallon gas prices? Inflation? National debt? And, perhaps most importantly, who is this “analyst” Biden references?

It’s not Mark Zandi, chief economist at Moody’s Analytics, who downgraded his first-quarter U.S. gross domestic product forecast to 2.2% growth from 5.2% as he “can see the economic damage mounting going into the first quarter.” It’s also not former Treasury Secretary Larry Summers, who told Bloomberg News, “we’ve got a fairly serious inflationary situation” on our hands.

The President’s job approval is currently sitting at record-breaking lows, with ratings rivaling that of the economically-challenged Carter administration. A recent PBS NewsHour/NPR/Marist poll shows 55 percent of Americans disapprove of Biden’s performance, including 44 percent who strongly disapprove. His disapproval ratings have jumped 20 points since he took office.