but counting those jobs is not easy, says mike grabell. he's part of a team tracking the stimulus for the investigative news service "pro publica." >> there's a lot of factors that go into counting a job. it's not lining up a work crew and tapping hardhats. in addition to that, there are indirect or induced jobs. things like when people who have gotten extra food stamp money or unemployment benefits are now going to store and buy groceries as they used to, that's... put all that together, you're saving the job of a grocery clerk >> brown: following the money: of the $787 billion allotted for stimulus, $120 billion went to tax cuts for individuals and small business. billions more have gone into public works, including 12,500 transportation projects. still more has gone to healthcare, smaller programs like the national parks, energy research and to 2,800 defense projects. but grabell says those are the exceptions. >> what we've seen in the first year is that most of it gone out in tax cuts or safety net programs and not in projects that wou