CINCINNATI (CNN) -- Barack Obama and Mitt Romney resumed campaigning Monday, with both men focusing on the economy as key to their chances of winning the votes of Americans in November.
Obama told supporters here that he entered office four years ago seeking to restore "the basic bargain that made America the greatest nation on Earth." He cited the idea that "if you work hard, then you can get ahead; if you're responsible, then you can live out your dreams. You're not confined to the circumstances of your birth."
Romney, meanwhile, said in a TV interview that "in my opinion, the issue people care about is who can get the American economy going again to help people have a brighter future, with rising wages and more capacity to care for their kids and to know that their kids will get good jobs when they come out of school.
"That's what this campaign is about," the presumptive GOP said on "Fox & Friends."
Obama said he entered office at a time that the American dream "was slipping away from too many people" and that "incomes and wages were flat-lining while the cost of everything -- from college to health care to groceries to gas -- were all going up."
He said his goal has been to reclaim that dream, but that he recognized when he became president that "it might take more than one term, maybe more than one president" to do so.
Speaking from New Hampshire, Romney focused on Obama's performance in office and found it wanting: "There are 23 million people that are out of work and (who have) stopped looking for work," he said. "Median income has dropped 10% over the last four years. The American people know whether things are better now than they were four years ago ... he (Obama) just hasn't been able to do the job he told us he was going to try to do."
But Obama sought to deflect the blame and appealed to his audience for support. "The problem is that we've got a stalemate right now in Washington," he said. "This election is about more than just two candidates or political parties. It's about two different visions about how do we build a strong economy. The good news is you're the tie-breaker. The choice is up to you."
Obama also cited a new report that estimates that Romney's support for eliminating U.S. taxes on American companies' foreign incomes would create an incentive for U.S. companies to move more of their jobs overseas.
"We have not found any serious economic study that says Governor Romney's economic plan would actually create jobs until today," Obama said. "I've got to be honest, today we found out there's a new study out by nonpartisan economists that says Governor Romney's economic plan would, in fact, create 800,000 jobs. There's only one problem. The jobs wouldn't be in America."
The Romney campaign quickly fired back.
"President Obama is at it again today with another dishonest attack meant to distract from his own record of failure," Romney campaign spokeswoman Amanda Henneberg told CNN. "After spending three years pushing policies that drive jobs overseas and sending taxpayer money to foreign-owned companies, it's clear President Obama doesn't have a clue when it comes to job creation in America."
The U.S. corporate tax rate is the highest in the industrial world, which hurts the ability of American businesses to compete globally and to create jobs in the United States, she said. "Mitt Romney has a comprehensive plan to reform the corporate tax code that will lower rates, get rid of incentives for firms to create jobs in other countries, and encourage the kind of economic growth President Obama has been unable to deliver," she added.
The new back-and-forth came as both campaigns have repeatedly accused the opposing candidate of outsourcing U.S. jobs overseas.
On another topic, Romney defended his release of his 2010 tax return and the promised release of his 2011 return as sufficient, despite calls from critics that he make public earlier returns.
"John McCain ran for president and released two years of tax returns," the former CEO of Bain Capital said of the 2008 GOP candidate. "The Obama people keep on wanting more and more and more, more things to pick through, more things for their opposition research to try to make a mountain out of and to distort and to be dishonest about."
That stance is largely consistent with Romney's position during his 2002 campaign for Massachusetts governor.
Romney's Democratic rival that year, Shannon O'Brien, released her tax information and called on Romney to do the same.
Romney repeatedly declined.
"People who run for public office are exposed to extraordinary scrutiny and that's as it should be, but there are some things that are not required for release, that are private, and I think my own income taxes, and my net worth and so forth are things I'd like to keep between myself and my family," Romney said in May 2002, according to the Boston Herald.
His longtime strategist Eric Fehrnstrom cited the family's "privacy" and noted that state law did not require candidates













