http://bit.ly/CcUwP

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Tony Fratto is envious.

Mr. Fratto was a colleague of mine in the Bush administration, and as a
senior member of the White House communications shop, he knows just how
difficult it can be to deal with a press corps skeptical about presidential
economic claims. It now appears, however, that Mr. Fratto's problem was that
he simply lacked the magic words -- jobs "saved or created."

"Saved or created" has become the signature phrase for Barack Obama as he
describes what his stimulus is doing for American jobs. His latest
invocation came yesterday, when the president declared that the stimulus had
already saved or created at least 150,000 American jobs -- and announced he
was ramping up some of the stimulus spending so he could "save or create" an
additional 600,000 jobs this summer. These numbers come in the context of an
earlier Obama promise that his recovery plan will "save or create three to
four million jobs over the next two years."

Mr. Fratto sees a double standard at play. "We would never have used a
formula like 'save or create,'" he tells me. "To begin with, the number is
pure fiction -- the administration has no way to measure how many jobs are
actually being 'saved.' And if we had tried to use something this flimsy,
the press would never have let us get away with it."

Of course, the inability to measure Mr. Obama's jobs formula is part of its
attraction. Never mind that no one -- not the Labor Department, not the
Treasury, not the Bureau of Labor Statistics -- actually measures "jobs
saved." As the New York Times delicately reports, Mr. Obama's jobs claims
are "based on macroeconomic estimates, not an actual counting of jobs." Nice
work if you can get away with it.

And get away with it he has. However dubious it may be as an economic
measure, as a political formula "save or create" allows the president to
invoke numbers that convey an illusion of precision. Harvard economist and
former Bush economic adviser Greg Mankiw calls it a "non-measurable metric."
And on his blog, he acknowledges the political attraction.

"The expression 'create or save,' which has been used regularly by the
President and his economic team, is an act of political genius," writes Mr.
Mankiw. "You can measure how many jobs are created between two points in
time. But there is no way to measure how many jobs are saved. Even if things
get much, much worse, the President can say that there would have been 4
million fewer jobs without the stimulus."

It's not only former Bush staffers such as Messrs. Fratto and Mankiw who
have noted the political convenience here. During a March hearing of the
Senate Finance Committee, Chairman Max Baucus challenged Treasury Secretary
Timothy Geithner on the formula.

"You created a situation where you cannot be wrong," said the Montana
Democrat. "If the economy loses two million jobs over the next few years,
you can say yes, but it would've lost 5.5 million jobs. If we create a
million jobs, you can say, well, it would have lost 2.5 million jobs. You've
given yourself complete leverage where you cannot be wrong, because you can
take any scenario and make yourself look correct."

Now, something's wrong when the president invokes a formula that makes it
impossible for him to be wrong and it goes largely unchallenged. It's true
that almost any government spending will create some jobs and save others.
But as Milton Friedman once pointed out, that doesn't tell you much: The
government, after all, can create jobs by hiring people to dig holes and
fill them in.

If the "saved or created" formula looks brilliant, it's only because Mr.
Obama and his team are not being called on their claims. And don't expect
much to change. So long as the news continues to repeat the administration's
line that the stimulus has already "saved or created" 150,000 jobs over a
time period when the U.S. economy suffered an overall job loss 10 times that
number, the White House would be insane to give up a formula that allows
them to spin job losses into jobs saved.

"You would think that any self-respecting White House press corps would show
some of the same skepticism toward President Obama's jobs claims that they
did toward President Bush's tax cuts," says Mr. Fratto. "But I'm still
waiting."
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Which is why Limbaugh went from calling the mainstream media the "drive by"
media -- since they act like drive by vigilantes against Republican
president and politicians -- to the "state run" media, because they CLEARLY
and uncritically gobble up almost everything The One or Democrats generally
say and "report" it as Gospel truth.

- Bob



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