Politicians To Blame For Weak Job Growth, Economists Say

Lakhota

Diamond Member
Jul 14, 2011
158,124
72,715
2,330
Native America
By Bonnie Kavoussi

Five years after the economic downturn began, the unemployment rate is nearly double what it was in 2007. According to some economists, politicians are to blame.

"It's a failure of leadership," said Joseph Brusuelas, senior economist at Bloomberg LP. "After close to four years of Obama administration policy and two years of GOP rule, there's enough blame to go around."

After stabilizing in 2009, the job market has been adding only enough jobs to keep up with population growth. Friday's jobs report proved no different: The economy added only 96,000 jobs in August.

Both conservative and liberal economists agree that elected politicians have the ability to change the situation, but are failing to do so.

"Two years of Congressional inaction in the face of high unemployment and with interest rates at the zero lower bound is inexcusable," said Justin Wolfers, an economics professor at the University of Michigan.

President Barack Obama can take credit for implementing a $787 billion stimulus that saved or created more than 3 million jobs, according to the Congressional Budget Office. But many economists argue that the hurried law did not go far enough. Obama made another attempt at job creation last year when he introduced a jobs bill to Congress that economists estimated would create roughly 2 million jobs if passed. Congressional Republicans have blocked the bill, advocating austerity instead.

Some economists highlighted what they see as the government's failure to take action as the economy continues to struggle. Wolfers said that the government should unleash another round of fiscal stimulus and retrain the long-term unemployed. He also said that the Federal Reserve should tolerate higher inflation and make a credible statement that it will do whatever it takes to bring down the unemployment rate. Such policies, he said, would spur hiring by creating "confidence that this recession won't be allowed to continue."

In terms of its own hiring practices, the government has been cutting jobs largely at the state and local levels. Though the government typically adds jobs, there now are 639,000 fewer government workers than in January 2009, when Obama took office, according to the Labor Department.

"What we’re doing is a radical departure from historical practice," Wolfers said. "We've ended up with Tea Party economic policy."

More: Politicians To Blame For Weak Job Growth, Economists Say
 
o-gold.jpg
 
Yup, Obama is amazing --- everyone else is to blame. Think we have been hearing that so long it doesn't really carry the elephants weight like it once did. I know the dems is the party of no accountability --- but then isn't that the real problem?
 
We have just had the fastest drop in unemployment since 1984....from 10.2% to 8.1%. All this in spite of the fact that House Republicans have blocked infrastructure spending bills that would have helped. Why? Because Republicans are more concerned with winning the election than helping America.
 
The three big parts of the economy are auto sales, retail sales, and home sales.

Auto and retail sales are back to normal.

Housing inventory just returned to normal.

Housing starts next year will begin to bring down unemployment.
 

Forum List

Back
Top