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Subject: [TriumphOfContent] Bewitched by the Numbers (Bob Herbert - The NY
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http://www.nytimes.com/2011/02/05/opinion/05herbert.html



OP-ED COLUMNIST


Bewitched by the Numbers


By BOB
<http://topics.nytimes.com/top/opinion/editorialsandoped/oped/columnists/bob
herbert/index.html?inline=nyt-per> HERBERT


Published: February 4, 2011

The data zealots have utterly discombobulated themselves.


Damon Winter/The New York Times

Bob Herbert

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They were expecting something on the order of 150,000 new jobs to have been
created in January. That would have been a lousy number, but they were fully
prepared to spin it as being pretty good. They thought the official jobless
rate might hop up a tick to 9.5 percent.

Instead, the economy created just 36,000 jobs in January, an absolutely
dreadful number. But the unemployment rate fell like a stone from 9.4
percent to 9.0 percent.

The crunchers stared at the numbers in disbelief. They moved them this way
and that. No matter how they arranged them, they made no sense. Nothing even
close to enough jobs were being created to bring the unemployment rate down,
but for two successive months it had dropped sharply. (It dived from 9.8
percent to 9.4 in December.)

A baffled commentator on CNBC said, "I think there is an improvement in the
economy, though you can't see it in today's payroll survey."

Mark Zandi of Moody's Analytics, who is frequently very good at this stuff,
said: "I think these numbers are meaningless. I don't think they mean
anything."

What data zealots need to do is leave their hermetically sealed rooms and
step outside, take a walk among the millions of Americans who are hurting to
the bone. They should talk with families that are suffering, losing their
homes, doubling up, checking into homeless shelters.

We behave as though the numbers are an end in themselves - just get the
G.D.P. up or the jobless rate down - and we'll be on our way to fat city.
But the numbers are just tools, abstractions to help guide us, orient us.
They aren't the be-all and end-all. They don't tell us squat about the
flesh-and-blood reality of the mom or dad lying awake in the dark of night,
worrying about the repo man coming for the family van or the foreclosure
notice that's sure to materialize any day now.

The policy makers who rely on the data zealots are just as detached from the
real world of real people. They're always promising in the most earnest
tones imaginable to do something about employment, to ease the awful squeeze
on the middle class (policy makers never talk about the poor), to reform
education, and so on.

They say those things because they have to. But they are far more obsessed
with the numbers than they are with the struggles and suffering of real
people. You won't hear policy makers acknowledging that the unemployment
numbers would be much worse if not for the millions of people who have left
the work force over the past few years. What happened to those folks? How
are they and their families faring?

The policy makers don't tell us that most of the new jobs being created in
such meager numbers are, in fact, poor ones, with lousy pay and few or no
benefits. What we hear is what the data zealots pump out week after week,
that the market is up, retail sales are strong, Wall Street salaries and
bonuses are streaking, as always, to the moon, and that businesses are
sitting on mountains of cash. So all must be right with the world.

Jobs? Well, the less said the better.

What's really happening, of course, is the same thing that's been happening
in this country for the longest time - the folks at the top are doing
fabulously well and they are not interested in the least in spreading the
wealth around.

The people running the country - the ones with the real clout, whether
Democrats or Republicans - are all part of this power elite. Ordinary people
may be struggling, but both the Obama administration and the Republican
Party leadership are down on their knees slavishly kissing the rings of the
financial and corporate kingpins.

I love when the wackos call President Obama a socialist. Wasn't it his
budget director, Peter Orszag, who moved effortlessly from his job in the
administration to a hotshot post at Citigroup, beneficiary of tons of
government largess? And didn't the president's new chief of staff, William
Daley, arrive in his powerful new post fresh from the executive suite of
JPMorgan Chase? And isn't the incoming chairman of Mr. Obama's Council on
Jobs and Competitiveness very conveniently the chairman and chief executive
of General Electric, Jeffrey Immelt?

You might ask: Who represents working people? The answer, as Tevye would say
with grave emphasis in "Fiddler on the Roof," is, "I don't know."

Maybe the data zealots have stumbled on a solution. They've created a model
in which a radically insufficient number of jobs has resulted in a sharp
decline in the official gauge of unemployment. If that trend can be
sustained, we'll eventually get the jobless rate down to zero. People will
still be suffering, but full employment will have finally been achieved.




-------------------------------------
Steven G. Brant
Founder and Principal
Trimtab Management Systems
303 Park Avenue South, Suite 1413
New York, NY 10010
(646) 221-1933
[email protected] 
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http://bit.ly/1cA8YD (memorial essay to Russ Ackoff)

"Human history becomes more and more 
a race between education and catastrophe." 
- H. G. Wells 


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