American Spectator
 
 

_The  Obama Watch_ (http://spectator.org/departments/the-obama-watch)  
_The Rout of Obamanomics_ 
(http://spectator.org/archives/2010/07/07/the-rout-of-obamanomics) 
By _Peter Ferrara_ (http://spectator.org/people/peter-ferrara)  on 7.7.10 @ 
 6:08AM 
In February 2009, I published a commentary in the Wall Street  Journal 
entitled "Reaganomics v. Obamanomics," which pointed out that  President 
Obama's 
economic policies were exactly the opposite of President  Reagan's. I 
predicted that as a result they would produce exactly the opposite  results. 
Art 
Laffer has produced a far more sophisticated argument advancing a  similar 
analysis.  
But the June unemployment report released last Friday shows an economy  
doing much worse at this point than even I expected. More than 30 months after  
the official start of the recession, the economy is still losing jobs,  
with non-farm payroll employment declining by 125,000 jobs in June. A total of  
652,000 workers fled the workforce in June, and therefore were no longer 
counted  as unemployed, which is why the unemployment rate fell from 9.7% to 
9.5%. That  follows 322,000 who dropped out of the workforce in May, for a 
total of nearly a  million workers dropping out of the labor force in the last 
two months alone. If  those million workers had remained in the workforce 
looking for work, the  unemployment rate would be 10.1%.  
Moreover, average hours worked per week dropped for all workers, as did  
average hourly earnings.  
President Obama's Fairy Tale Bedtime Story  
But there was President Obama in a highly revealing speech on June 30  in 
Racine, Wisconsin, congratulating himself for having saved America from  
another Great Depression. He said, "Now every economist who has looked  at it 
has said that the Recovery Act [stimulus bill] did its job," starting a  
passage that will soon be memorialized as another chapter in Aesop's  Fables. 
As 
Obama said those words, on the very same day in the Wall  Street Journal was 
a commentary by Allan Meltzer, Professor of Economics at  Carnegie Mellon 
University, entitled, "Why Obamanomics Has Failed." Maybe Obama  just hadn't 
read the Journal yet that day.  
But Obama continued in Racine, "[The stimulus bill] put a brake on the  
collapse of the economy. We avoided a Great Depression. We are now  growing 
again." (Emphasis added.)  
Instead of avoiding a Great Depression, however, President Obama is  
leading us into one. The National Bureau of Economic Research (NBER) scores the 
 
recession as officially starting in December, 2007. Now 31 months later, with 
 unemployment still near 10% and the work force still declining, NBER says 
it  still cannot determine an official end to the recession. The longest 
recession  since World War II previously has been 16 months, with the average 
being 10  months. By next month, the period since the last recession started 
will be  twice as long as the previous postwar recession record.  
Yet, now we hear talk of another, double dip, downturn, reflected in  the 
newly declining markets, where the S&P 500 is now lower than the price  of 
gold for the first time in history. The comprehensive Obama tax rate  
increases scheduled for next year stand poised to pour napalm on this 
developing  
bonfire. For all the talk of how uncertainty is hurting the economy, the  
certainty of those tax rate increases once they become effective will be far  
worse.  
A renewed, double dip, downturn, 31 months after the recession started  and 
with unemployment already near 10%, would be a depression scenario, far  
worse than I have been predicting here and elsewhere for over a year now. 
While  I have discovered from my sojourns on "progressive" talk radio 
("progressive" is  a polite word for socialist) that the Left is now denying 
history. 
For hundreds  of years Western economies have been plagued by the business 
cycle, with the  economy falling into downturns, and then naturally 
recovering. Since 1945, there  have been 12 such downturns in the U.S., with 
the 
economy recovering sans Obama  pixie dust within 16 months at the longest.  
By this standard, the recovery was overdue a year ago. Moreover, the  
sharper the downturn, the stronger the recovery. But compared to the last  
downturn of similar magnitude, the 1981-1982 recession, the renewed economic  
growth today President Obama has been so vigorously trumpeting has been less  
than half what it should be. The positive economic results Obama can and does  
point to are way too little, way too late.  
Two Christmases ago, I feared that by now Obama and his socialist  policies 
would be riding the wave of inevitable recovery, before his policies  
crashed the economy in what I later called The Coming Crash of 2011. But  
politically as well as economically, it is all disintegrating faster even than  
during the Carter Administration, where 1978 was a hopeful year for  
conservatives that mostly didn't pan out. President Obama is on the same  
trajectory 
as President Carter, times some multiplier of Keynesian  foolishness.  
With the most productive now scrambling to produce as much as they can  
before next year's sweeping tax rate hikes, the double dip will probably be  
delayed until 2011. I privately told some major political players at the  
beginning of this year that the unemployment rate in November would be 9%. That 
 
may turn out to be right on the money. But if the unemployment rate does 
turn  north again before then, which can well happen just from workers 
returning to  the labor force to search for work, you can turn out the lights 
for 
the Democrat  party.  
The stock market, which tends to look 6 months ahead, seems to be  
predicting that Coming Crash of 2011. There is not enough upside compared to 
the  
double dip downside to be playing the stock market now even for short-term  
gains. That will change, however, the moment the market comes to believe in 
the  regime change scenario. The great 1990s stock market boom began on 
Election Day,  1994.  
The Perversity of Obamanomics  
Over and over in Racine, Wisconsin, last week, President Obama made  clear 
that he thinks it is government spending that creates economic growth.  
Besides touting the brilliance of his stimulus spending, and the growth  
opportunity in government subsidies for home weatherization, he said:  
And that's why I've been fighting, in addition to everything else we  have 
done, for additional steps to speed up this recovery and keep the economy  
growing. We want an extension of unemployment benefits for workers who lost  
their job through no fault of their own. We want to help small business 
owners  get the loans they need to keep their doors open and hire more workers. 
We  want relief for struggling states so they don't have to lay off 
thousands of  teachers and firefighters and police officers.  
The only thing standing in the way of all this government spending  
salvation is those mean, nasty Republicans. Obama explains:  
[L]ately we've been having to wrangle around what used to be pretty  
noncontroversial things -- providing loans for small businesses, extending  
unemployment insurance when 8 million people lost their jobs during the  
recession. But lately there's a minority of Senators from the other party  
who've had 
a different idea. As we speak, they are using their power to stop  this 
relief from going to the American people. And they won't even let these  
measures come up for a vote. They block it through all kinds of procedural  
maneuvering in the Senate. 
On February 13, 2010, in celebrating the signing of a Pay-As-You-Go  budget 
rule into law, the President was saying something quite different:  
But what also made these large deficits possible was the end of a  common 
sense rule called "pay-as-you-go." It's pretty simple. It says to  Congress, 
you have to pay as you go. You can't spend a dollar unless you cut a  dollar 
elsewhere. This is how a responsible family or business manages a  budget. 
And it is how a responsible government manages a budget, as well….  Last 
night, I signed the "pay-as-you-go" rule into law. Now, Congress will  have to 
pay for what it spends, just like everybody else. 
But this "PayGo" charade was all about playing the voters for fools.  
Whenever the Democrats bring up more spending they want, they include a  
provision to exempt it from this PayGo rule. When the Republicans insist on  
enforcing the PayGo rules, President Obama and Congressional Democrats lambaste 
 
them for opposing essential spending "relief," as Obama did in Racine. 
Democrat  party controlled media outlets then dutifully echo these charges with 
 
disapproval for those nasty Republicans.  
President Obama also made clear in Racine that the thinks that cutting  tax 
rates causes recessions and economic crisis. He said about the  
Republicans:  
They think we should keep doing what we did for most of the last  decade 
leading up to the recession. So their prescription for every challenge  is 
pretty much the same… basically cut taxes for the wealthy…. nearly a decade  
of tax breaks for millionaires and billionaires…. We've already tried these  
ideas. Remember we tried them for eight years. We tried them for a good part 
 of the last decade. We know where they led us. 
This explains the so predictable failure of Obamanomics. The President  
thinks federal spending is what causes economic recovery and growth. It was  
cutting tax rates that caused the recession and the financial crisis. This is  
what President Obama is saying in these and other passages of his Racine 
speech.  If you try to explain to him that cutting tax rates creates 
essential, highly  effective incentives for producing more by allowing 
producers to 
keep more of  what they produce, his inner, neo-Marxist replies:  
So I just want everybody to remember, we've tried the other sides'  
theories. We know what their ideas are. We know where they led us. So now  
we've 
got a choice. We can return to what we know did not work, or we can  build a 
stronger future. We can go backwards, or we can go forward. And I  don't know 
about you, but I want to move this country forward." 
Professor Meltzer, grounded in reality, said something quite different  in 
the Wall Street Journal that same day, "The Obama economic team  ignored 
past history. The two most successful fiscal stimulus programs since  World War 
II -- under Kennedy-Johnson and Reagan -- took the form of permanent  
reductions in corporate and marginal tax rates."  
But President Obama is not interested in history since World War II.  The 
future he is taking us to is the 1930s, enacting the same economic policies  
of that era, which will only produce the same results. To see our Obama 
future,  look to Greece. For if we fall into a double dip recession, what will 
that do to  his $1.6 trillion deficit?  
A Democrat Problem  
But the problem isn't only President Obama. The problem is endemic to  the 
entire Democrat arty, which is today, heart and soul, a neo-Marxist party.  
Witness Hillary Clinton, another self-styled "progressive," who in recently  
speaking at the Brookings Institution in Washington, said, "The rich are 
not  paying their fair share in any nation that is facing the kind of 
employment  issues (as the United States) -- whether it's individual, 
corporate, or 
whatever  the taxation forms are." Look at Brazil, she suggested. "Brazil h
as the highest  tax-to-GDP ratio in the Western Hemisphere, and guess what -- 
they're growing  like crazy."  
So let's take a look at Brazil. The highest income tax rate there is  
27.5%, 21% less than our top income tax rate of 35%, soon to shoot up under  
Obamanomics to nearly 43%, 56% higher than Brazil's. Brazil's 27.5% rate is 
even 
 lower than President Reagan's 28% top rate. The top corporate tax rate in 
Brazil  is 34%, compared to the combined federal and state corporate tax 
rate of 39.1%  in the U.S., now highest in the industrialized world given that 
Japan has  recently come to its senses (unlike the rapidly declining U.S.).  
The top 1% of income earners in the U.S. pay more in income taxes than  the 
bottom 95% combined. That is official IRS data, as accurately reported by  
the Tax Foundation. Look it up. But Hillary Clinton continues to mindlessly  
repeat the brain dead, neo-Marxist, Democrat party mantra that "the rich 
are not  paying their fair share." What would a fair share look  like?   
.........

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