Townhall...
A
Grim Jobs
Report for America
By Larry
Kudlow
June 6, 2012
You would
think $1 trillion in spending stimulus and $2.5 trillion of Fed
pump-priming
would produce an economy a whole lot stronger than 1.9 percent GDP,
which was
the revised first-quarter number. And you’d think all that government
spending
would deliver a whole lot more jobs than 69,000 in May.
But it
hasn’t happened.
The
Keynesian government-spending model has proven a complete failure. It’s
the
Obama model. And it has produced such an anemic recovery that frankly,
at 2
percent growth, we’re back on the front end of a potential recession.
If
anything goes wrong -- like another blow-up in Europe -- there’s no
safety
margin to stop a new recession.
And that
brings us to the grim May employment report, which generated only
69,000
nonfarm payrolls. It’s the third consecutive subpar tally, replete with
downward revisions for the two prior months. It’s a devastating number
for the
American economy, and a catastrophic number for Obama’s reelection
hopes. All
momentum on jobs and the economy has evaporated.
Inside the
May report, the data is just as bad. The unemployment rate rose
slightly from
8.1 to 8.2 percent. The so called U6 unemployment rate, tracking the
marginally
employed or completely discouraged, increased to 14.8 percent from 14.5
percent. And labor earnings are barely rising at 1.7 percent over the
past
year, almost in line with the inflation rate. In fact, through April,
after-tax, after-inflation income is scarcely rising at 0.6 percent for
the
past year.
The private
workweek also fell in May. So did the manufacturing workweek and
aggregate
hours worked for all employees. The small-business household survey did
rise,
but that follows declines in the prior two months.
Barack
Obama doesn’t get this, but businesses create jobs. And firms have to
be
profitable in order to hire. Yet the president is on the campaign trail
criticizing Mitt Romney by degrading the importance of profits. Huh?
Without
profits businesses can’t expand. And if they don’t expand, they can’t
hire. And
if they don’t have profitable rates of return, they’re not going to
attract new
capital for investment.
Which
brings us to a couple of important reasons for the virtual freeze in
hiring.
First
there’s the fiscal tax cliff. If all the Bush tax rates go up,
incentives will
go down and liquidity will leave the system. You can’t pick up a
newspaper
these days and not find a story about how the fiscal cliff is elevating
uncertainty and slowing U.S. growth. House Speaker John Boehner asked
Obama for
help in extending the Bush tax cuts this summer. But Obama said no.
Instead, he
wants to raise marginal tax rates on successful upper-income earners,
capital
gains, dividends, estates, and many successful corporations.
Where’s the
corporate tax reform that would lower rates and broaden the base and
end the
double-taxation of the overseas profits of American companies? A business tax cut would
help enormously, but
it’s nowhere in sight. Neither is the Keystone Pipeline, which is a
surefire
job-creator. Obama is too busy trashing Bain Capital profits and
Romney’s
business career, both of which, by the way, have recently been praised
by
former president Bill Clinton. (It was Clinton, you might recall, who
lowered
investment taxes and presided over an economic boom.)
A second
uncertainty facing businesses is the Supreme Court decision on
Obamacare due in
a few weeks. If all those crazy tax-and-regulation mandates are deemed
unconstitutional, it’s Katy bar the door as businesses put profits to
work and
hire. But they’re not going to move until they see that court decision.
Then
there’s the whole European mess with the threat of banking contagion
from
Spain, Greece, and Italy. That could blow up the whole world economy if
it goes
completely sour. The Europeans should guarantee all bank deposits,
interbank
loans, and bank debt until this story is straightened out. But they’re
not. So
the problem festers.
And now
European companies are withdrawing money from local banks and investing
in
dollars (especially through Treasury bonds that are yielding an
incredibly low
1.5 percent). But the rapid rise of King Dollar is generating commodity
deflation, which is a deterrent to manufacturing production. According
to the
May ISM report, manufacturing is slowing.
The Fed may
yet launch a new quantitative easing to stop commodity deflation and
accommodate the gigantic worldwide dollar demand. But the merits of
this move
are dubious. On the other hand, an extension of the Bush tax cuts right
now
would stop the economic and job slide and reestablish certainty.
In fact,
all the countries around the world should move to the supply side with
lower
tax rates to spur economic-growth incentives. Europe, China, and Latin
America
ought to go back and read Ronald Reagan’s speeches and examine his
actions when
he faced a similar crisis 30 years ago. It would be an hour or two well
spent.
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