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I Forgot To Create Jobs: A Review
Of Obamanomics
By Austin Hill
7/10/2011
How
seriously are we to take President
Obama on economic matters? Is anybody still expecting him to “create
jobs?”
Since
the early days of his presidential
bid in 2007, many have marveled at Barack Obama’s dulcet-toned voice
and
charming demeanor, while applauding at every word he utters – including
what he
says about the economy and employment. Now, roughly two and a half
years into
his presidency, it is painfully apparent that mere charisma and smooth
talk
don’t “create jobs.”
But
why not? What, possibly, could
have gone wrong? When Mr. Obama began his presidency in January of 2009
he
noted that his “economic stimulus plan” would “save or create three to
four
million jobs.” Why hasn’t that happened?
The
only plausible, reasonable answer
to this question has to go something like this: in order for any
economy to be
sustainable, the majority of its employment opportunities absolutely
must come
from the for-profit, private sector of our economy. Sure, government
agencies
employ people too, but they should only employ people in numbers
necessary for
those agencies to provide essential basic services, and pay these
employees
commensurate with their private sector counterparts.
The
most important thing government
can do for the economy is to help to expand employment in the private
sector,
for-profit arena of our economy. And government can help make this
happen, not
by cajoling and manipulating and threatening businesses into “hiring,”
but
rather, by providing a stable and consistent regulatory environment,
reasonably
low tax rates to businesses and their investors, and encouraging free
trade.
Unfortunately,
both President Obama’s
words and deeds have been hostile towards the private sector, while at
the same
time he has encouraged the expansion of the government sector. Thus
here we are
in July of 2011, with many government employees having their
compensation and
benefits packages expanded, as many private sector businesses continue
to
eliminate eliminate jobs. President Obama has said and done the
opposite of
what a President should be doing on economic matters, and – not
surprisingly –
he has produced the opposite of what we would all want.
If
you think this is harsh or unfair,
consider some of what the President has been saying over the last few
years.
Let’s start with this quote from August of 2008, when candidate Obama
was
speaking before a stadium full of his true believers.
Several
American oil companies had
just posted some robust profits, and the soon-to-be-President Obama
seemed to
think this was a bad thing. “First of all,” candidate Obama stated,
“you’ve got
oil companies making record profits…no… no companies in history have
made the
kind of profits the oil companies are makin’ right now…They..they…….one
company, Exxon Mobil, made eleven billion dollars…billion, with a “b”
….last
quarter….they made eleven billion dollars the quarter before
that…makin’ money
hand-over-fist…makin’ out like bandits…”
That
was some great campaign rhetoric
back then. But today we are in dire need of great policies from our
President –
and maligning American companies for being “too profitable” doesn’t
incentivize
them to grow.
Fast-forward
to January 29th of 2009.
Despite the economic decline, some of the nation’s largest financial
and
lending institutions had actually just posted some hefty profits, and
had paid
their executives bonuses. And once again President Obama chastised the
achievement, stating “there will be time for them to make profits, and
there
will be time for them to get bonuses…now’s not that time, and that’s a
message
I intend to send directly to them..” Apparently, in Mr. Obama’s view,
it is
sometimes preferable for companies to be unprofitable – yet
unprofitable
companies don’t “create jobs.”
And
here’s one of my favorites, from
May of 2009. Speaking at the commencement exercises at Arizona State
University, President Obama advised the new college graduates against
private-sector success: “…You’re taught to chase after all the usual
brass
rings,” the President lamented. “Yah try to be on this ‘who’s who’ list
or that
‘top 100 list’…ya chase after the big money, ya figure out how big your
corner
office is…ya worry about whether or not ya have a fancy enough title,
or a
fancy enough car…Now you can take that road, and it may work, for some.
But at
this critical juncture in our nation’s history, at this difficult time,
let me
suggest that such an approach won’t get you where you want to go. Did
you study
business? You can go start a company…or, why not go help a struggling
not-for-profit find better and more effective ways to help folks in
need?”
From
there the President went on to
extol the many virtues of “public service” – that is, becoming a
government
employee – and how important it is for people to become public school
teachers.
Yet he had nothing positive to say about how to create the wealth that
funds
the non-profit groups and that pays for the labor of the government
employees.
Barack
Obama is the President who
loathes and chastises for-profit enterprise while praising and
expanding
government bureaucracies. Our current economic conditions provide a
mirror
image to the President’s vision.
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it at Townhall
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