Weekly Standard
Clueless About Job Creation 
Obama’s invincible economic ignorance. 
Fred Barnes
Apr 23,  2012

 
Does President Obama have the foggiest idea how jobs are created in 
America?  There’s not much evidence he does, beyond lip service to the 
helpfulness 
of the  private sector.
 
When the president begins a speech these days with praise for free markets, 
 look out! What comes next are proposals for more government intervention 
in the  economy and higher taxes. That’s the recipe, Obama says, to “
encourage our  long-term economic growth and stabilize our budget.”  
He said so in his Republicans-are-Social-Darwinists speech in Washington 
two  weeks ago to newspaper editors. Near the outset, Obama declared: “I know 
that  the true engine of job creation in this country is the private sector, 
not  Washington, which is why I’ve cut taxes for small-business owners 17 
times over  the last three years.” 
Those cuts have had minimal effect, and not surprisingly. They were tiny 
and  temporary, and few small-business owners bothered to claim them, if 
indeed they  were eligible to do so. Meanwhile, the president has persistently 
sought to  raise their income taxes. 
In Washington, Obama didn’t suggest, much less propose, a single incentive 
or  spur to private investment, yet he insisted “we continue to make 
investments in  growth today.” These consist solely of government-funded jobs, 
such 
as “putting  some of our construction workers back to work” and “helping 
states to rehire  teachers.” 
Obama yearns for a hefty increase in hiring by state and local governments. 
 If hiring were “on par to past recoveries, the unemployment rate would 
probably  be about a point lower than it is right now.” Restoring “huge cuts 
in state and  local government” is “part of the challenge we have in terms 
of  growth.”
 
The lesson here is that Obama has learned no lesson from what Edward Lazear 
 of the Hoover Institution has called the “worst economic recovery in  
history”—that is, the Obama recovery. The economy has grown at a rate of 2.4  
percent since the recession ended in June 2009, a full percentage point below 
 average long-term growth. But the president is sticking with his plan for 
a  government-led economic boom. This is Obamanomics: If it doesn’t work, 
then  double down. 
Obama once told a group of investors that the private sector didn’t need  
incentives to invest because his administration’s massive subsidies of green  
technology would lead the way. Now the mention of “green jobs” has become 
a  laugh line. The main news from the green sector is another company 
bankrolled by  Obama going belly-up. 
In The Escape Artists: How Obama’s Team Fumbled the Recovery,  Noam 
Scheiber describes the president’s “obsession” with green jobs. Eco-nomic  
adviser 
Christina Romer “would march in with an estimate of the jobs all the  
investments in clean energy would produce; week after week, Obama would send 
her  
back to check the numbers. ‘I don’t get it,’ he’d say. ‘We make these  
large-scale investments in infrastructure. What do you mean there are no jobs?’
  But the numbers rarely budged.” 
Obama’s latest fixation is the Buffett Rule, named after billionaire Warren 
 Buffett. “We can’t afford to keep spending more money on tax cuts for 
wealthy  Americans,” the president said last week. (Note: Under Obamanomics, 
untaxed  earnings of private citizens are “spending.”) The new rule would 
force those  earning more than $1 million to pay at least 30 percent of their 
annual income,  whether earnings (already taxed at a marginal rate of 35 
percent) or capital  gains (now taxed at 15 percent), in income tax. “This is 
not just about  fairness,” the president said. “This is also about growth.” 
And thus about jobs,  and more. 
But not deficit reduction, according to Jason Furman, the deputy director 
of  the White House National Economic Council. He said the 30 percent tax was 
 “never our plan to bring the deficit down and get the debt under control.”
 It  would raise only $4 billion to $5 billion a year, a peewee bite out of 
Obama’s  $1.3 trillion deficit for fiscal year 2012. 
Obama and Vice President Biden claim deficit reductions anyway. The new tax 
 floor is “about we as a country being willing to pay for those 
[government]  investments and closing our deficits,” Obama said. “That’s what 
this is 
about.”  Biden defended the tax hike with a question. “Do we pay down those 
deficits,  cutting wherever we can, as we’ve been doing, while at the same 
time investing  in things we know we must invest in, in order for the 
economy to grow and create  good middle-class jobs?” 
One response to the Buffett Rule has been to dismiss it as a campaign  
gimmick. Yes, it is that, but it’s much more. Obama, Biden, and their allies  
believe raising taxes will boost the economy by paying for increased 
government  spending. They believe the investor class of millionaires and 
billionaires will  invest as robustly as ever, producing growth and jobs, even 
if 
subjected to  higher income tax rates and a doubled rate on capital gains. They’
re wrong on  both counts. 
Obama has taken recently to quoting Ronald Reagan, while ignoring Reagan’s  
formula for recovering from the deep recession in 1981 and 1982. It 
consisted of  tax and spending cuts, the exact opposite of Obama’s policy. By 
mid-1984, Reagan  noted happily in a letter that job growth had exceeded 
300,000 
a month for more  than a year. The Obama economy, which the president says 
is “gaining speed” and  “getting strong,” hasn’t come close to that. 
Obama has his excuses. State and local governments are supposedly at fault  
for not hiring more. And if the construction industry were functioning 
normally,  that would shave another percentage point off the jobless rate, he 
claims. In  March, the rate of unemployment was 8.2 percent. But by Obama’s 
figuring, it  should be 6.2 percent. 
The president doesn’t realize how lucky he is. There have been twice as 
many  dropouts from the economy as jobs added since he became president. Were 
the  dropouts counted as unemployed, the jobless rate would be well above 11 
percent.  And Obama would be hard put to come up with an  excuse

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