Campaign season always brings a blizzard of misleading economic
statistics. Candidates and their satraps spin the numbers to tell the story
that they want the electorate to buy.
Naturally, this causes many of us to seek out someone
somewhere who can offer a clear and objective appraisal of what is really going
on.
Since most commentators want to exercise influence over the
election, it’s not an easy task.
For my part I pay special attention to recovering Obama supporters,
people who supported Obama in the last election but who have since shown better
judgment.
Among them, Mort Zuckerman of U. S. News and World Report. Zuckerman has offered an excellent
analysis of the current employment situation. His is a dark and sobering
vision. I recommend it to your attention.
He begins:
America's
great job creation machine is sputtering badly. It is now estimated that
structural unemployment has risen from 5 percent before the crisis to close to
7 percent today. This means that one third of the rise in American joblessness
may be impervious to the business cycle; it represents lost jobs that cannot be
restored by boosting demand.
The
problem now is not that people are being laid off by the millions. When an economy has
reached bottom, as it did, it has already shed much of its labor, and layoffs
slow. But the anemic recovery has not yielded job vacancies. Hiring today is at
about 70 percent of the 2006 level. Given the increase in unemployed totals,
job seekers are only about one third as likely to find work as in 2006.
Compare
that to the fabled Great Depression of the 1930s. In the three years after
1933, the economy rebounded with growth rates of 11 percent, 9 percent, and 13
percent. But in 2010, months into our recovery, growth was about 3 percent,
followed by 1.7 percent growth in 2011. The rate for 2012 could be about 2
percent—below the 3.4 percent throughout the postwar period.
The Great Recession continues. For some, it has become a
Depression.
Next, Zuckerman explains how the uncertainties created by Obamacare
have forced employers to make fewer new hires.
By now, even Barney Frank is saying that Obama’s obsession with health
care reform was a mistake, so you know that the tide has turned.
In Zuckerman’s words:
Each
month more Americans lose hope, permanently alienated from the workplace, their
savings exhausted. The gradual expansion of the economy is too little to hope
the cavalry is riding to the rescue. Real, authentic job creation will not come
from Washington. It has to come out of the energy and spirits of the private
sector. Two thirds of our employment is concentrated in 6 million small and
medium-size businesses. We are not going to create jobs until they are in a
state of mind to do so. They are not yet, and in part that's because of policy
uncertainty that has depressed or confused them.
According
to the Heritage Foundation, private sector hiring through June 2011 was 10
times slower following the passage of President Obama's healthcare bill
compared to the prior 16 months. Economists at Stanford University and the
University of Chicago estimated in the fall of 2011 that policy uncertainty has
cost more than 2 million jobs since early 2010. These estimates reflect the
small business community's reluctance to make new hires until employers know
exactly what the law means in practice. The high level of temporary employment
is a reflection of the same uncertainty. Businesses hedge their bets with
short-term help.
We are living through the Obama administration’s calamitous
policy failure.
Zuckerman concludes:
There
is no doubt that the next presidential term will start with a rate of
unemployment that is far higher than what President Obama inherited when he
took office. The programs that he has put in place have failed. The U.S. economic recovery is
like a person who promises much and doesn't deliver. There are not many months
left for Obama to persuade the nation to measure his performance by a different
mark.
3 comments:
Whether Obama's policies have failed is up to interpretation. If your perspective is that his goal was to have America recover, preserving her fundamentally, then yes, he's failed.
If your perspective is that his goal is to change her fundamentally into a different entity, then he's succeeding. After all you have to tear down the old to build the new.
But let me add... It's good to see those who worshipped him coming around. Regardless of perspective. Obama was a huge mistake, no matter how you look at it.
I think you're quite right to draw attention to the fact that, from his own perspective, Obama is succeeding.
I find that to be truly frightening.
Post a Comment