I'd like an explanation of "Obamanomics" myself. What constitutes that obviously derogatory moniker?
That the current Administration took proper emergency steps to save the auto industry? Rescue the major banks?
Enacted policies that stopped the hemorrhaging of almost 800,000 jobs per month and reversed the trend so that we've now had thirty straight months of continuous job growth, however small?
Made us a net petroleum exporter for the first time in decades?Presided over a recovery that's been encouraging and confidence-building enough for the Dow Jones Industrial Average to soar almost 70 percent since the day Obama took office and for the NASDAQ and S&P to currently sit at levels not witnessed since the early days of the George W. Bush presidency?No high oil prices did that. Those prices would have been high with or without Obama.
Overseen policies and steadily improving conditions that have allowed the HDI ranking of the United States to rise from 13th place in the world at the end of the Bush Administration to fourth last year?
What's this "Obamanomics" you're talking about? If it's the above, I'll agree it exists. And it somehow seems to kinda be working.
After reading the posts from our resident "economists", I decided to stick with the professional economists like Paul Krugman thank you.
(My God, I can't believe that gturner still think that he's an expert on economics)
I would truly love to know what economic measures Obama took that his predecessor didn't or wouldn't have.
Stimulus spending? Check.
Corporate welfare? Check.
Bank bailouts? Check.
Tax cuts? Check.
Interest rate cuts? Check.
I would truly love to know what economic measures Obama took that his predecessor didn't or wouldn't have.
Stimulus spending? Check.
Corporate welfare? Check.
Bank bailouts? Check.
Tax cuts? Check.
Interest rate cuts? Check.
It only proves that if you want to be a successful Economist, don't go to Harvard! Obama is the most embarrasing student Harvard ever had, I'm not sending my kids there!
We don't know what would have happened if those industries were't rescued. Saving those companies creates a moral hazard and encourages them to take larger risks knowing that government will save them if things go wrong. A failure can have a positive effect on an industry, because people will know they are risking their own money and be suitably cautious about it.
I would truly love to know what economic measures Obama took that his predecessor didn't or wouldn't have.
Stimulus spending? Check.
Corporate welfare? Check.
Bank bailouts? Check.
Tax cuts? Check.
Interest rate cuts? Check.
It only proves that if you want to be a successful Economist, don't go to Harvard! Obama is the most embarrasing student Harvard ever had, I'm not sending my kids there!
Yeah, man, everybody knows Harvard is a terrible school. Totally overrated. I bet if your kids got a free ride to Harvard you'd just throw that shit right in the trash, huh?
Oh, man.![]()
We don't know what would have happened if those industries were't rescued. Saving those companies creates a moral hazard and encourages them to take larger risks knowing that government will save them if things go wrong. A failure can have a positive effect on an industry, because people will know they are risking their own money and be suitably cautious about it.
There's a difference between letting one company go bankrupt, take federal bailout money and then have to restructure and start again from square one. We were talking scores of banks and auto companies with their tendrils all over the planet and the very health of the global economy itself. We knew enough about what would have happened that we didn't dare risk letting them fail. The resulting economic meltdown would have had the potential to set off a new, worldwide Great Depression that could have eclipsed the damage caused by the first one eighty years ago. You know in Star Trek there is something known as the Prime Directive, perhaps we need a "Prime Directive" in Economics to prevent government from meddling in economics so the economy can recover.
I sincerely doubt in any way, shape or form that letting all the banks and two of the three big automakers fail and flatline would have been anything positive for our economy or the world's at large. It's hard to say our nation is learning positive, constructive lessons and growing from them with close to 30% unemployment, which is what many economists in 2008 and 2009 were forecasting had no appropriate emergency action been taken.
It only proves that if you want to be a successful Economist, don't go to Harvard! Obama is the most embarrasing student Harvard ever had, I'm not sending my kids there!
The unemployment numbers don't tell the story because it's so long-term that people dropped out of the workforce.
http://data.bls.gov/timeseries/LNS11300000/
It dropped from a stable 66% down to 63.5%, so about 7.5 million Americans just gave up, and as of Auguist 2012, it was still dropping.
http://static8.businessinsider.com/...vilian-labor-force-participation-may-2012.jpg
We've already lost all the gains we'd held since the late 1970's.
Yet that number included unemployed people who don't have jobs but are looking for work (they're in the labor force). Drop 8.1% off that and you get the percentage of people who actually have jobs, which is now the lowest since 1948, when soldiers were returning and Rosie the Riveter was going back to being a homemaker.
If this is success, I'd sure hate to see what failure looks like.
After reading the posts from our resident "economists", I decided to stick with the professional economists like Paul Krugman thank you.
(My God, I can't believe that gturner still think that he's an expert on economics)
Paul Krugman is a Democrat first and an economist second, I'd go with Milton Friedman, not Thomas Friedman. Generally speaking an economist that teaches students in school is not a practising economist, his theories only have to make sense on the chalkboard and often don't work in real life.
Small, unimpressive job growth is still preferable to losing pretty close to one million jobs per month. And it's been happening for thirty months in a row without interruption. Unemployment was a little over 10% at one stage. Now it's two points lower.
It might not be the kind of economic improvement you like or want, but it's improvement nonetheless and by most meaningful standards of measurement the United States is an economically healthier nation today than it was the night Barack Obama was elected or the afternoon he was sworn into office. A financial meltdown and crisis this enormous takes a while to dig completely out of, and even now the eurozone across the Atlantic is experiencing colossal problems and is threatened with collapse. The world's going to still be feeling the lingering effects of the 2008-09 crisis for a little while to come, and I sincerely doubt that an administration led by President John McCain would have done any better.
Small, unimpressive job growth is still preferable to losing pretty close to one million jobs per month. And it's been happening for thirty months in a row without interruption. Unemployment was a little over 10% at one stage. Now it's two points lower.
The unemployment numbers don't tell the story because it's so long-term that people dropped out of the workforce.
http://data.bls.gov/timeseries/LNS11300000/
It dropped from a stable 66% down to 63.5%, so about 7.5 million Americans just gave up, and as of Auguist 2012, it was still dropping.
http://static8.businessinsider.com/...vilian-labor-force-participation-may-2012.jpg
We've already lost all the gains we'd held since the late 1970's.
Yet that number included unemployed people who don't have jobs but are looking for work (they're in the labor force). Drop 8.1% off that and you get the percentage of people who actually have jobs, which is now the lowest since 1948, when soldiers were returning and Rosie the Riveter was going back to being a homemaker.
If this is success, I'd sure hate to see what failure looks like.
It's not success, it's mitigation of tremendous damage--which, by the way, Obama did not cause, but thirty damn years of trickle-down bullshit did.
The unemployment numbers don't tell the story because it's so long-term that people dropped out of the workforce.
http://data.bls.gov/timeseries/LNS11300000/
It dropped from a stable 66% down to 63.5%, so about 7.5 million Americans just gave up, and as of Auguist 2012, it was still dropping.
http://static8.businessinsider.com/...vilian-labor-force-participation-may-2012.jpg
We've already lost all the gains we'd held since the late 1970's.
Yet that number included unemployed people who don't have jobs but are looking for work (they're in the labor force). Drop 8.1% off that and you get the percentage of people who actually have jobs, which is now the lowest since 1948, when soldiers were returning and Rosie the Riveter was going back to being a homemaker.
If this is success, I'd sure hate to see what failure looks like.
It's not success, it's mitigation of tremendous damage--which, by the way, Obama did not cause, but thirty damn years of trickle-down bullshit did.
Oh sure it is, but the burden of proof is on you, we don't know how much damage there would have been because we can't test it. I think Obama and his friends are just lowering the bars to make it look like what he's done in the last four years is progress. One might argue instead that government intervention has prolonged the recession because most businesses expect higher government expenditures to lead eventually to higher taxes, which is why we need to get expenditures back down to 2008 levels as soon as possible and end the stimulus spending that has become part of the baseline budget.
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