Hi again.  Here's the brilliant dissection of Romney's Job Plan I intended
sending out this morning.
I sent out half my mailing before realizing I was sending out the McReynolds
reflection.  Anyway,
they both make sense to me and, I hope, you.
Ed
 
http://www.nytimes.com/2012/10/19/opinion/krugman-snow-job-on-jobs.html?nl=t
odaysheadlines
<http://www.nytimes.com/2012/10/19/opinion/krugman-snow-job-on-jobs.html?nl=
todaysheadlines&emc=edit_th_20121019&_r=0> &emc=edit_th_20121019&_r=0
 
Snow Job on Jobs
 
Paul Krugman
NY Times Op-Ed: October 19, 2012
 
Mitt Romney talks a lot about jobs. But does he have a plan to create any? 
 
You can defend President Obama's jobs record - recovery from a severe
financial crisis is always difficult, and especially so when the opposition
party does its best to block every policy initiative you propose. And things
have definitely improved over the past year. Still, unemployment remains
high after all these years, and a candidate with a real plan to make things
better could make a strong case for his election. 

But Mr. Romney, it turns out, doesn't have a plan; he's just faking it. In
saying that, I don't mean that I disagree with his economic philosophy; I
do, but that's a separate point. I mean, instead, that Mr. Romney's campaign
is telling lies: claiming that its numbers add up when they don't, claiming
that independent studies support its position when those studies do no such
thing. 

Before I get there, however, let me take a minute to talk about Mr. Romney's
claim that he knows how to fix the economy because he's been a successful
businessman. That would be a dubious claim even if he were honestly
representing his business career, because the skills needed to run a
business and those needed to manage economic policy are very different. In
any case, however, his portrait of his own experience is so misleading that
it takes your breath away. 

For Mr. Romney, who started as a business consultant and then moved into the
heady world of private equity, insists on portraying himself as a plucky
small businessman. 

I am not making this up. In Tuesday's debate, he declared, "I came through
small business. I understand how hard it is to start a small business." In
his speech at the Republican convention, he declared, "When I was 37, I
helped start a small company." 

Ahem. It's true that when Bain Capital started, it had only a handful of
employees. But it had $37 million in funds, raised from sources that
included wealthy Europeans investing through Panamanian shell companies and
Central American oligarchs living in Miami while death squads associated
with their families ravaged their home nations. Hey, doesn't every plucky
little start-up have access to that kind of financing? 

But back to the Romney jobs plan. As many people have noted, the plan has
five points but contains no specifics. Loosely speaking, however, it calls
for a return to Bushonomics: tax cuts for the wealthy plus weaker
environmental protection. And Mr. Romney says that the plan would create 12
million jobs over the next four years. 

Where does that number come from? When pressed, the campaign cited three
studies that it claimed supported its assertions. In fact, however, those
studies did no such thing. 

Just for the record, one study concluded that America might gain two million
jobs if China stopped infringing on U.S. patents and other intellectual
property; this would be nice, but Mr. Romney hasn't proposed anything that
would bring about that outcome. Another study suggested that growth in the
energy sector might add three million jobs in the next few years - but these
were predicted gains under current policy, that is, they would happen no
matter who wins the election, not as a consequence of the Romney plan. 

Finally, a third study examined the effects of the Romney tax plan and
argued (implausibly, but that's another issue) that it would lead to a large
increase in the number of Americans who want to work. But how does that help
cure a situation in which there are already millions more Americans seeking
work than there are jobs available? It's irrelevant to Mr. Romney's claims. 

So when the campaign says that these three studies support its claims about
jobs, it is, to use the technical term, lying - just as it is when it says
that six independent studies support its claims about taxes (they don't). 

What do Mr. Romney's economic advisers actually believe? As best as I can
tell, they're placing their faith in the confidence fairy, in the belief
that their candidate's victory would inspire an employment boom without the
need for any real change in policy. In fact, in his infamous Boca Raton "47
percent" remarks, Mr. Romney himself asserted that he would give a big boost
to the economy simply by being elected, "without actually doing anything."
And what about the overwhelming evidence that our weak economy isn't about
confidence, it's about the hangover from a terrible financial crisis? Never
mind. 

To summarize, then, the true Romney plan is to create an economic boom
through the sheer power of Mr. Romney's personal awesomeness. But the
campaign doesn't dare say that, for fear that voters would (rightly)
consider it ridiculous. So what we're getting instead is an attempt to
brazen it out with nakedly false claims. There's no jobs plan; just a plan
for a snow job on the American people. 

  _____  

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