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Go Home Screw Job

POLITICS DECEMBER 23, 2009

Screw Job

President Obama is like a pilot who took the controls of the plane in mid-flight after the engines fell out. It’s obvious that he didn’t cause the problem. But the passengers are going to focus on the fact that the plane was still airborne before he took over, and now, he’s crash-landing in the ocean.

That’s Obama’s problem in the debate over the economy. His arguments are true. The trouble is, they don’t feel true, and they feel less and less true as time goes by.

Republicans focus relentlessly on the simple fact that the economy is in worse shape now than it was before Obama took office. The trajectory may have improved, but the level has worsened--more people are out of work now than on January 20.

The Obama administration predicted in January that, if its stimulus package passed, unemployment would stay below 8 percent, yet it has crossed 10 percent. You have probably heard this statistic if you have heard any Republican in elected or unelected office open his mouth at any point over the last half-dozen months. The implication of this statistic--sometimes made explicit--is that the stimulus failed to alleviate, or even caused, rising unemployment.

The more plausible interpretation is that the Obama administration’s January forecast, along with most private forecasts at the time, underestimated the depth of the recession. One bit of evidence for that view is that unemployment hit 8 percent by February, which was about the same time that the stimulus passed and long before it could take effect.

What level unemployment would have reached without a stimulus is, of course, a total guess. Republicans have ridiculed the administration’s efforts to tabulate the jobs that the stimulus saved. The implication here is that, because you can’t count something, it doesn’t exist. It’s true that there’s no way to actually count the number of jobs saved by the stimulus. Even if you could accurately tabulate the workers hired by federal grants, you’d be missing all the jobs saved by the money those workers are spending. Not to mention the impact of the tax cuts, which account for two-fifths of the cost of the stimulus. So, while the positive effect of the stimulus is necessarily a guess, it’s a guess shared by nonpartisan government agencies like the Congressional Budget Office as well as all the leading macroeconomic forecasters.

If you look at a graph of jobs lost by month, it resembles a pyramid, with the stack building through 2008, peaking in January 2009, then dropping down around zero over the course of this year. No serious person could dispute that the rise in unemployment reflects anything but the aftershocks of an economic collapse that predate the Obama presidency. (This likewise holds true of the rising budget deficit: CBO numbers show that approximately 100 percent of the long-term deficit increase results from Bush policies and the effects of the slowdown.)

The Republican strategy here consists of two nifty steps. Step one consists of affixing Obama with the blame for rising unemployment. Step two is, when Obama points out that the economic collapse occurred before he took office, pummel him as a classless blame-shirker. Columns by National Review editor Rich Lowry (“Obama the graceless”), Wall Street Journal columnist William McGurn (“The post-gracious president”), and numerous other conservative worthies have harped upon this theme. Obama must accede to the Republican campaign to blame him for the consequences of the 2008 economic collapse because to do otherwise would violate social etiquette. Obama’s pointing out that he inherited the recession is “graceless, whiny, and tin-eared,” complains Lowry.

At first, in a fit of naïveté, I assumed that the conservative belief in the impropriety of a president blaming his predecessor must be a deeply held principle unrelated to the partisan identity of the presidents in question. Sadly, after a quick search of the recent historical record, the scales fell from before my eyes. President Bush repeatedly asserted that he “inherited a recession”--the one that began in March of 2001--from Bill Clinton. He also charged that Clinton’s weakness in the face of terrorism emboldened Al Qaeda to strike on September 11, which I would argue is even ruder than anything Obama has said about Bush. That particular theme also features prominently in Lowry’s 2003 book, Legacy: Paying the Price for the Clinton Years.

Obama’s trickiest dilemma is that the public does not agree with--or, to put it less charitably, understand--the basis for his anti-recession strategy. Whatever your view of deficits, they clearly make more sense during a recession than during an expansion, when deficit spending can help fuel overheated growth. The trouble is, public opinion tends to get loose with the purse strings during boom times and tight during recessions, which is the opposite of what you want. During the 1990s boom, the public favored expanded social spending and tax cuts over paying down the national debt. Today, by overwhelming margins, they favor an immediate balanced budget, even in the face of economic catastrophe.

That is, of course, insane. But Republicans have taken full advantage of the public’s fiscal insanity. President Bush used to scoff at proposals to pay down the national debt, saying, “The surplus means the government has more money than it needs.” Nowadays, Republicans like John Boehner say things like, “American families are tightening their belts,” and, therefore, Washington should “lead by example and show the American people that the government can go on a diet as well.”

What sounds to the American people like simple common sense is economic malpractice, and vice versa. Thus the Democrats’ predicament: High unemployment is making them unpopular, but the only steps they can take to reduce unemployment are themselves unpopular. If the Democrats actually gave the people what they say they want--$1.4 trillion in spending cuts and/or tax hikes to eliminate the 2010 deficit--Republicans would capture approximately 100 percent of Congress in the next election.

“The American people are a lot smarter than people in Washington think,” White House communications director Dan Pfeiffer said. “They understand we have to deal with jobs and deficits in a coordinated strategy.” If the administration is dumb enough to actually believe that, it would help explain how they’ve let Republicans win the political argument over the economy.

Jonathan Chait is a senior editor of The New Republic.

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14 comments

Maybe, the public is upset about the deficit because the impression is (entirely true) that the Obama administration prioritized saving Wall Street banks and brokerages ahead of the real economy. The administration claims that they had to do that first to save the rest of the economy. But that's bullshit. Haven't you read anything Simon Johnson says on your own site? Wall Street is a rent-seeking sector (i.e. parasite). It depends on the rest of the economy. If you'd given the TARP money to the American people, we'd be in much better shape today. There were ways prevent a financial system collapse and still allow the banks that should have gone bankrupt to do so. Many of the commentators on this site and other economists have suggested them, the fact is the Obama administration just didn't listen to anyone besides its friends at Goldman Sachs. For that he justly deserves blame, even if the recession itself is Bush's fault.

- acria multa

December 23, 2009 at 12:58am

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Excellent post acria multa. Mr. Scheiber's post allows us to understand the way these guys still look at themselves. As incredibly as it may sound they still look at themselves delusionally as saviours that follow "the laws of Economics". The fact that those "laws" benefit them primarily and only in a very dubious and indirect way other people seems not to be a part of these guys worldvision. The Reich would last for a 1000 years even after Stalingrad... Since the darwinistic "laws" would never allow for the master race to be beaten by the slave race... Even if the Eastern front was shattered into pieces, even if Berlin was being completely destroyed, people that saw that something was seriously wrong simply did not understand "the laws"... It always comes to this in these kinds of worldviews: regular people not understanding "the laws" while the world falls apart...

- luispc

December 23, 2009 at 2:33am

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The recession is neither Bush's nor Obama's fault, although I would put a substantial portion of blame on the Fed (mostly Greenspan) for keeping interest rates so low as to encourage too much private debt. And Barney Frank for encouraging and rewarding risky home loans to unqualified borrowers. Also "irrational exhuberance" in the ability of the US economy to create high rates of return for alll the money pouring into Wall Street from IRA's and foreign creditors based on the false belief that there is no limit to our ability to innovate. That is nobody's fault. And everybody's That being said, even with the 1987 crash and the 2008 crash, return on investment over that period is still solid at about 7% per year. I agree that the banks and GM should have been allowed to fail. Those assets would have been picked up by genuine innovators and failure would not have been rewarded. Obama claims he is for the people, yet his economic staff is mostly composed of Wall Street "fat cats" whom he decries. I despise rent seekers, and Obama is actively seeking to create a rent seeking economy - in health care and in energy. I am nauseated by both efforts. I believe that a stimulus was necessary, but the mess that was passed, did not have a chance of doing much good. Yes, a crisis should not be wasted. If Obama had announced a massive program for high speed rail system, as Eisenhower announced the Interstate Highway system in the 50's, there would have bennfar less justified grumbling and Obama's approval would not be in the toilet.

- r.ennis

December 23, 2009 at 11:02am

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The reason unemployment has been higher than predicted is simple. Obama's economic team was predicting unemployment from Okun's law, which relates GDP drop and unemployment. Basically, a drop in GDP of X will produce job losses of Y. However, the GDP drop in the last Bush months had initially been seriously underestimated. Also, because of the intensity of the initial panic, a large number of jobs were lost relative to decline in GDP. At any rate, the GDP collapse and most job loss had happened by March 2001. Not Obama's fault. His only fault was having advisers who hadn't yet learned to make pessimistic predictions and exceed them. But given Summers' "we will have job growth by spring" remark, they're learning. By the way, acria multa, the latest estimates show that all but $42 billion of the TARP money will be recovered. The government will make a profit on its deals with banks, but will lose money on auto companies and AIG. $42 billion vs. global economic collapse. Not hard. Johnson may well be right about the need to split apart some of these banks and financial firms, but it's hard for me to see TARP as anything short of complete success.

- WillPastor

December 23, 2009 at 11:17am

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“The American People are a lot smarter than people in Washington think,” says Dan Pfeiffer. “If the Administration is dumb enough to actually believe that…..” says Jonathan Chait. Wow, way to sell magazines! Insult all your potential readers. A new, novel approach to the “It’s not Obama’s fault” mantra.

- nacnud1

December 23, 2009 at 11:20am

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A more honest assessment of how we got to where we are in Chait's post would have been appreciated. It's true that Obama in not responsible for the recession/depression conditions before January of this year-- those were due to the lack of Fed actions AND to Bush's action re economic, tax and war policies. However, it is also true that by January of 2009 it was VERY obvious (Not who da thunk it?!!!) that the downturn was very severe and unemployment was going to be much greater than 8%. Obama opted to push for and accept a minimal stimulus package that limited the increase in unemployment but did not put the US on a strong path to recovery. Even now, the Obama administration sends mixed messages as to how to proceed on job stimulation. There is no fire in their collective bellies.

- gdbittner

December 23, 2009 at 12:47pm

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"...see TARP as anything short of complete success." The problem with this narrative is the following: should the government be transformed into a receiver of God knows what kind of "financial operations"? Should the government be transformed into the direct sponsor of the perpetuation of a bunch of unproductive moguls that would have fallen without its help? Since, no matter what fictions one builds right now, the moguls would have fallen last year without those billions... And one other thing: to declare the TARP a success right now may be an exageration. Indeed, the rent seekers have absorved what they could after being provided by the government with oxygen... They did not reproduce their "success" into nothing tangible for real people's lives... And their "success" may prove very brief taking into account that those rent seekers are unable to produce oxygen in the long term (they only produce carbon, even if profitable in the short term, it is still carbon...) and the government decided that it would dedicate its energies exclusively to giving them oxygen, thus following "the laws"...

- luispc

December 23, 2009 at 12:49pm

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I don't blame Obama for unemployment, I blame Congress, both Democrats, who took over Congress two years before the Messiah took office, and the Republicans who, spurred on by the brain-dead liberal Bush, spent like drunken sailors (with apologies to drunken sailors). However, Comrade Obama has done NOTHING that will improve employment (unless you count all the government employees needed to spend the money). We need low taxes, small government, and freedom to allow people to pursue their own interests without the permission of the bureaucrats and self-appointed tyrants who "run" the government. Wealth transfer is theft. It is reasonable to tax us for public services; it is theft to tax us to give to others. Obama and Bush are both socialists but Obama is the more committed ideologue. Charity is a virtue; welfare is theft.

- dalefogden

December 23, 2009 at 2:34pm

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Excuse me, Dale, I think you dropped your teabags and your copy of "Atlas Shrugged." Ladies and gentlemen, a perfect example of the Republican nihilism Jonathan Chait was talking about earlier this week. The socialists must have a "really big tent" policy if they can claim both Bush and Obama as members.

- zardoz67

December 23, 2009 at 3:13pm

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I second Zardoz. Assuming that the copy of "Atlas Shrugged" was hardback and hit Dale on the foot, I would sincerely hope that he is paying for his medical care out of his own pocket and will not avail himself of Medicare or some other parasitical government program.

- wildboy

December 23, 2009 at 4:49pm

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Stop trying to find a middle ground with the GOP. They are not interested. The GOP focus is on the 2010 election and not on anything otherwise remotely useful. The stimulus tax cuts are a drain on the treasury that has not created one new job. New jobs can only be created by the government by building stuff right now. Ignore the Party of No and get on with doing what is necessary. If unemployment drops significantly by November 2010 then the election will take care of itself.

- sdmcleod

December 23, 2009 at 5:35pm

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The Democrats stating that jobs will follow after the health of whatever" is restored is total BS. We should have immediately started generating green jobs" along with pulling back jobs that were sent overseas. Instead, so far, the Obama administration has helped out the banks, many of whom, who have within one year paid back their tarp loans. I don't think many people who have defaulted on their mortgages have been able to catch up with their loans within one year. When Franklin Roosevelt was president the reforms he generated were forced by the middle class who started rioting and attacking bankers, destroying produce, and so on. It appears that when it comes to health care reform the middle class may have to resort once again to public disruption to force our Presidents and representatives to do the right thing.

- bobsr

December 23, 2009 at 10:02pm

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Yes Dale Fogden, the economic crisis was caused by government spending. Not subprime mortgages, not the commercial real estate collapse, not ill-conceived securities. Nope it was earmarks all along. I love it when people have to mold reality to fit their ideologies. Luispc, I don't like helping bankers any more than anyone else does. But weighing the consequences of the collapse of Bank of America and Citibank (and just about every other financial firm) vs. the philosophical discomfort brought on by helping them, I think it is a no brainer. The key thing is to create regulation to prevent this from happening again, and perhaps impose a tax on the financial sector to recoup the damages this country has suffered.

- WillPastor

December 23, 2009 at 10:55pm

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What I see is that you found an easy puppet to beat in the Ron Paul line of argument, represented here by Dale Fogden. While you do that, you keep forgetting that the God market logic + trickle down mantra (supposedly after the "laws of Economics") was defended both by Bush and Obama, while showing utmost insesivity towards unemployment (which according to "the Laws of economics" will miraculously be solved by itself when the financial sector seeks its rents and tries to convert the government's given 700 billion into tin air). "Yes Dale Fogden, the economic crisis was caused by government spending. Not subprime mortgages, not the commercial real estate collapse, not ill-conceived securities. Nope it was earmarks all along. I love it when people have to mold reality to fit their ideologies." Ultimately the cause was to pretend that the market could in itself and by itself satisfy all needs, including home ownership by all. If the market myth did not take over people's heads, perhaps you had not created debt programs at high interests instead of housing programs at afordable prices. This revisionism that puts the blame of the crisis in the government that sponsored lending to the poor means the forgetfulness of the legitimating speech used by banks when convincing government to cover for their debt programs at high interests. Talking about molding reality to fit ideology... Anyway it seems that the market defenders while adopting this argumentative strategy are unaware that they are defeating themselves... Indeed, they are acknowledging that the market should have not been used to satisfy needs of people, but for some other end... that it is a value in itself independently of the welfare it produces. This is precisely why they are behaving as Nazis after Stalingrad: they are unaware that the ship is sinking after being completely blind by their ideology (which they name "the Laws") and now have started to shoot their own feet big time, I would love to watch the "divine justice" show (since all this will end catastrophically for the defenders of "the Laws") if it wasn't costing so much suffering amongst regular people who trusted the system and that now are in need and, worst of all, watching their children growing in need and in trauma. Yes, this is the worst part: watching people suffering while ideologues preserve their "Laws". Even if one knows that the backfire is in the proportion of the unfairness of the situation. "Luispc, I don't like helping bankers any more than anyone else does. But weighing the consequences of the collapse of Bank of America and Citibank (and just about every other financial firm) vs. the philosophical discomfort brought on by helping them, I think it is a no brainer" This is a false way of putting the question. Implicit in this formulation is the idea that welfare of people depends on the perpetuation of the financial sector as it was working until the crisis. This is what is implicit in Bush and Obama's speech and policies. And this is what is wrong. So I'm not weighting success against "philosophical discomfort". I'm weighting destructive stubborness self-justified by "the Laws" against actually suffering by regular people whose lives are being destroyed and not mended.

- luispc

December 24, 2009 at 3:08am

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