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Jobless
Presidencies Should Result in
Jobless Presidents
by Jon Sanders
7/11/2011
In
the religious ecstasy of early
2009, when Barack Obama was yet in mid-ascension operating the “Office
of the
President-Elect” (complete with custom-made seal), he was campaigning
hard for
his stimulus plan.
On
January 10 of that year, the Obama
“administration-in-waiting” released a report by its chief economists
Christina
Romer and Jared Bernstein titled “The Job Impact of the American
Recovery and
Reinvestment Plan.” The thrust of the report was to show how the
stimulus plan
was far preferable to doing nothing.
“In
the absence of stimulus, the
economy could lose another 3 to 4 million more [jobs],” Romer and
Bernstein
estimated. With the stimulus, “we believe a reasonable range for 2010Q4
is 3.3
to 4.1 million jobs created.”
The
report included a handy graph
(ours being such a visually motivated society) that showed exactly the
choice
we faced. Without the recovery plan, unemployment would peak at a
whopping and
then-unfathomable 9 percent through the first three quarters of 2010.
With
the recovery plan, however,
unemployment would peak at just below 8 percent by late 2009 and
steadily fall
to 7 percent by the end of 2010. By now it would be around 6.6 percent.
Hundreds
of other economists,
including some Nobel laureates, warned against the folly of the
stimulus plan.
In full-page ads in major newspapers across the U.S., the Cato
Institute
published their open letter to the president, which stated,
More
government spending by Hoover and
Roosevelt did not pull the United States economy out of the Great
Depression in
the 1930s. More government spending did not solve Japan’s “lost decade”
in the
1990s. As such, it is a triumph of hope over experience to believe that
more
government spending will help the U.S. today. To improve the economy,
policymakers should focus on reforms that remove impediments to work,
saving,
investment and production. Lower tax rates and a reduction in the
burden of
government are the best ways of using fiscal policy to boost growth.
It
is now mid-July 2011. The latest
jobs report is now out, and unemployment is not around 6.6 percent as
Obama’s
economists predicted. Instead it is at 9.2 percent and rising. The same
economists predicted that the worst that unemployment would have gotten
without
the stimulus was 9 percent. With the stimulus, it not only is above
that rate,
but it has been above that rate since early 2009, shortly after the
stimulus
passed.
When
the stimulus passed in February
2009, there were 141.7 million people employed in the U.S. That number
has
fallen to 139.3 percent.
That
means there are 2.4 million fewer
people employed now than when the stimulus passed in February 2009.
It
costs a lot of money to throw this
many Americans out of work. The stimulus costs $814 billion, according
to the
CBO. In essence, we are spending about $340,000 for each net new person
put out
of work since the stimulus passed.
“Lower
tax rates and a reduction in
the burden of government are the best ways of using fiscal policy to
boost
growth,” counseled the economists who proved to know what they were
talking
about. To his very core Obama resists that truth, even at this late
hour with
so many more of his fellow Americans out of work. Three separate wars
in the
Middle East but still the president’s bitterest fight is against
lowering tax
rates and reducing the burden of government. Witness the debt ceiling
standoff
in Washington right now.
Epilogue:
On February 2, 2009, the new
president was interviewed by Matt Lauer on NBC’s “Today.” He spoke
confidently
of the stimulus plan. “One nice thing about the situation I find myself
in,” he
said, “is that I will be held accountable. I’ve got four years.”
He
added that “a year from now I think
people are going to see that we’re starting to make some progress, but
there’s
still going to be some pain out there. If I don’t have this done in
three
years,” he said, two and a half years ago, “then there’s going to be a
one-term
proposition.”
The
one term, in the president’s
stilted speech, undoubtedly refers to one presidential term. It cannot
refer to
a descriptive term. No single word could capture the colossal failure
of the
stimulus nor the staggering, stultifying ignorance behind it. Not yet,
anyway.
One day, however, the term “Obamanomics” may suffice.
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