Job Creation Will Be Administration's Main Focus In The Coming Months

TOM RAUM   01/23/10 07:25 PM ET   AP

Obama

WASHINGTON — One year in, President Barack Obama faces a perilous economic choice. He can't pull back the stimulus too quickly, despite the public's concerns about rising deficits, because that could kill a fragile recovery. If he steps too hard on the accelerator to create more jobs, responding to another voter imperative, he risks feeding inflation and restarting the dangerous cycle.

The GOP Senate upset in Massachusetts shows that the political risks of any bold move are enormous.

Either way, the road ahead probably means painfully slow job creation accompanied by more government debt and higher taxes.

"Without significant changes to tax and government spending policies, the budget outlook will deteriorate rapidly even after the costs associated with the financial crisis abate," said Mark Zandi of Moody's Economy.com, a former adviser to Republican Sen. John McCain who now counsels congressional Democrats.

When Obama took office in January 2009, financial markets were teetering, jobs were evaporating and global economic activity was tanking faster than in the 1930s. A depression seemed imminent.

Now the economy is back from the brink, thanks largely to the most aggressive global government intervention in history.

"The economy is growing, albeit at an unsatisfactory rate," said Lawrence Summers, director of the White House National Economic Council. While chances of a depression are "remote," there is still "a long, long, long way to go," Summers acknowledged.

He said job creation will be the prime emphasis in the coming months, a priority to be reflected in the president's State of the Union address on Wednesday night and in his budget proposal released next month.

Even before Democrats lost the Senate seat long held by the late Edward Kennedy, the emphasis was beginning to shift from health care to jobs. The election race is accelerating the process.

"I think that is a wake-up call for everybody in this town," White House spokesman Robert Gibbs said.

He said Obama will press for doing "everything possible to create an environment where the private sector is hiring again." Ambitious health overhaul plans are being scaled back, at least for now.

While White House officials still insist they inherited a broken economy from President George W. Bush, there's little doubt that people now fully see it as Obama's economy – and expect him to lead the way in fixing it.

More than half of the 7 million-plus jobs lost since the recession began in December 2007 vanished since Obama signed the $787 billion stimulus package last Feb. 17. That aid was intended to help reverse job losses.

The unemployment rate then was 7.6 percent. Now it's 10 percent.

"If we as a country are not successful in establishing job growth and economic growth soundly, we will not achieve any of our objectives," Summers said.

Obama and the Federal Reserve must get their exit strategies just right. They must unwind the low-interest rates and multibillion-dollar stimulus spending that have propped up the economy. Otherwise inflation could return with a vengeance and deficits become unsustainable.

Pulling back too quickly could plunge the economy into a "double-dip" recession.

President Franklin D. Roosevelt made that mistake in 1937 when he thought the Depression was over and decided to cut spending while the Fed tightened monetary policy. That only made things worse.

Few economists see a solid way ahead without higher taxes, and not just for the wealthy.

"Taxes are going to have to go up," said William Galston, a domestic policy aide to President Bill Clinton and now a scholar with the Brookings Institution. To suggest otherwise is "a denial not only of reality, but of necessity."

Obama faces rising public fury toward bankers and bailouts at a time of double-digit unemployment along with pressure to rein in spending. This populist anger helped sweep little-known Republican Scott Brown to victory in the Massachusetts Senate race.

Taking a harder line that some Democrats say was late in coming, Obama has proposed a special tax on large banks to recover "every last dime" of bailout money and wants to let regulators break up banks deemed too big to fail.

Beating up on banks and bankers is one of the few causes in town embraced by Democrats and Republicans alike.

Obama is expected to make spending restraint a theme of his State of the Union address, although aides say that significant belt-tightening will have to wait until after the recovery gains more steam.

He plans to create a bipartisan commission to make recommendations by the end of 2010 on how to reduce the budget deficit. This year's projected $1.4 trillion deficit would add to a $12-trillion-plus national debt.

The commission also would make recommendations on taxes and spending on "entitlement" programs such as Social Security, Medicare and Medicaid. Its plan would go to Congress for up-and-down votes.

Obama must steer the economy through a darkening political storm for Democrats. In addition to dropping the Senate contest in Massachusetts on Tuesday, the party lost governors' races last fall in New Jersey and Virginia. Coming this fall are congressional elections, where the Democrats' majority in Congress could be threatened.

Despite improvements in manufacturing and a strong 10-month stock market rally, housing prices are still depressed, mortgage foreclosures increasing and bank loans tight for all but the biggest businesses. Factor in those people who have stopped looking for work or who are unable to find full-time jobs, and the "underemployment" rate swells to over 17 percent.

Gone at the White House is talk about "stimulus," a word the public seems to associate more with bank bailouts and wasteful spending than new jobs. Instead, White House officials now talk about "target ideas" that "will have a positive impact on private sector hiring."

"The road to recovery is never straight. We have to work every single day to get our economy moving again. For most Americans, and for me, that means jobs," Obama said recently.

It won't be easy.

Forecasters say it could be years before the employment rate drops below 8 percent, let alone to pre-recession levels of 5 percent to 6 percent. It took four full years for employment to regain its peak after the mild 2001 recession.

Economists cite a rule-of-thumb that suggests it takes a 2 percentage point rise in the gross domestic product to lower the unemployment rate by 1 percentage point. Government and private economists expect GDP growth of no more than about 2.5 percent to 3 percent this year.

"Where are the jobs?" House Minority Leader John Boehner, R-Ohio, asks in news release after another, as the GOP lashes out at Obama's policies and basks in the Massachusetts victory.

___

On the Net:

Federal Reserve: http://www.federalreserve.gov/

White House: http://www.recovery.gov

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WASHINGTON — One year in, President Barack Obama faces a perilous economic choice. He can't pull back the stimulus too quickly, despite the public's concerns about rising deficits, because that ...
WASHINGTON — One year in, President Barack Obama faces a perilous economic choice. He can't pull back the stimulus too quickly, despite the public's concerns about rising deficits, because that ...
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Chopin
Multiply the truth. Speak truth through power.
06:52 PM on 01/26/2010
President Obama now has choice between creating illusory temporary work that would disappear after the election, or hit a home run, think "out of the box", and honor his pledge to create green technology jobs in the millions.

President John Kennedy said: "We choose to go to the moon in this decade, not because it is easy, but because it is hard, because that goal will serve to organize and measure the best of our energies and skills, because that challenge is one that we are willing to accept, one we are unwilling to postpone, and one which we intend to win."
Apollo11 was first manned mission to land on Moon on July20, 1969.

Here're some of the "out of the box" bold ideas for green technology jobs.
Obama has already discussed some of them:---

1)Solarize the Mojave Desert. Cover it with millions of solar panels.
The ambitious size of the project will be like FDR's HooverDam Project, or Manhattan Project, or Eisenhower's InterstateHighway Project. The goal is to turn this economic + political crisis into golden opportunity to take bold giant step forward that would not otherwise be taken in normal complacent times.
http://digital-desert.com/regions/
http://www.google.com/search?hl=en&source=hp&q=mojave+desert+map&aq=0&aql=&aqi=g10&oq=mojave+desert

2)Take the same approach with windfarms (onshore, offshore, Texas, Midwest). Learn from successful European initiatives (in UK and Denmark)
http://www.guardian.co.uk/environment/2008/oct/21/windpower-renewableenergy1
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HUFFPOST BLOGGER
Joe The Nerd Ferraro
Group IQ is inversely proportional to group size.
02:28 PM on 01/25/2010
I posted this about 4,000 comments ago...

want to kill 2 birds with one stone?

go single payer.

that removes the spending business has to do for supplying healthcare to the country.

it also removes the requirements of internal personnel to manage these benefits within a company.

new jobs are created in the government sector to manage the medical system.

employees hanging around jobs just because they need healthcare can move out and start their own businesses.

unions / management will have one less thing to argue about.
06:59 PM on 01/25/2010
Single payer is impossible in this country. It won't happen. Americans hate logic and simplicity.
01:14 PM on 01/25/2010
In response (late response) to Republitarian.
The basic of my statement – “We have one of the LOWEST net tax rate for corporations of ANY major country.”
His (Republitarian’s) statement: “Nonsense. Why do corporations locate in Ireland instead if the tax rate is so low here? Why are IPOs no longer being launched in the US?

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Income_Taxes_By_Country.svg”

My response:
Again, you are COMPLETELY incorrectly stating the problem and do NOT understand your OWN source.

Your OWN source states, "The 'Corporate rate' is the mean combined corporate income tax rate which includes central and sub-central rates."

Note, this is NOT the same as NET tax rate. Net tax rate is AFTER various deductions, allowances, tax breaks, etc.

Why do you even bother to comment if you do NOT understand the subject.
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
graceland9
...and talk in the past and not the present tense.
10:00 AM on 01/25/2010
Excellent comment from JaCar last night, and I wanted to make sure it didn't stay buried in an old thread:

I asked how the president could bring down the capitalist system and also do Absolutely Nothing, all at the same time. His response;

"Experiencing cognitive dissonance is not a problem when you surrender yourself to the collective mind of Fox. Let's look at some of their paradoxes:

Patriotism? vs. Threats of secession

Fiscal Conservative? vs. Monster debts and deficits from Reagan/Bush/Bush, unfunded war, corporate give aways, and bridges to nowhere

Love our Troops? vs. Smear veterans John Kerry and Max Cleland, underfund the VA

Big Government out of our lives? - Wiretapping, federal funding of religious "charities", fight to put a ban on Gay marriage in the constitution.

Family Values? - Larry Craig, Mark Vitter, John Ensign, Mark Foley, Carrie Prejean, Ted Haggard, Mark Sanford. Higher divorce and child neglect rates in southern "red" states

Activist Judges? - Supreme Court rules to allow corporations to spend as much on political donations as they like, overturning years of court precedent and laws past by Congress.

There's more, but I'm out of space. No the "right" has no problem with hypocrisy. Democracy? Well that's another story."
07:46 AM on 01/25/2010
Cut off H1B and L1 visas right now to recover millions of jobs Americans used to do. This is an immediate, cost-free solution to the jobs problem. Americans are qualified to do each and every one of those millions of jobs the Indian lobbyists set aside for Indians-only. Wipro, Infosys, and the rest of the Indian mafia are eating our lunch. (Did I hear Obama is now thinking about letting them run NASA -- even after their space mission failed???) C'mon Obama! We voted for change; let's have it!
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07:18 AM on 01/25/2010
I was watching some program on PBS with Bill Moyers.

He was pointing out that Walmart hires companies in Haiti that use 11 CENTS an hour employees.

Walmart was not the only one, but it's the only one I remember.

That is the goal of BOTH major parties, BOTH of which are OWNED by global corporations.

The economy is going to recover as soon as workers (other than political cronies of whichever party is in power) agree to work for 11 cents an hour like our competition in Haiti (and other places).

Moyers was focusing on why Haitians live in poverty, but he inadvertently pointed out why Americans are losing our jobs.

Hard to compete with 11 cents an hour sanctioned by the US gov't. . .. BOTH parties.
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07:44 AM on 01/25/2010
Always the low prices! ALWAYS!
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Chopin
Multiply the truth. Speak truth through power.
04:43 PM on 01/26/2010
11cents per hour is just an INTERIM step down the NAFTA and WTO path of "race to the bottom" wages.
Free outsourced prison labor will be the next logical step. It's unstoppable it the logic is not discredited and destroyed. When free prison labor is widely used, most people won't even hear about it, in the same way that most people don't hear and don't want to hear about secret SeeEyeAid prisons scattered around the world.
07:00 AM on 01/25/2010
President Obama and his advisers and the Congress still don't get it, or pretend that they don't. The people are fed up with the entire agenda of this government. Stop the wars, close the torture prisons, quit giving money to banks, pass public sponsored healthcare, start building up US education facilities,
Fixing our roads, cities, and public facilities, quit meddling in the affairs of other countries, etc, etc.
ENOUGH IS ENOUGH!!
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HUFFPOST PUNDIT
kobrock1
Clever only seems easy
06:59 AM on 01/25/2010
Across the board tax increases? And to think of all those poor pundits who were needlessly excoriated during the 2008 presidential campaign, for having the temerity to suggest that a President Obama would do more than merely soak the rich. Read my lips; if you make less than $250,000, $200,000, $125,000,...... $17..........
HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
confuseddemocrat
06:53 AM on 01/25/2010
Dear POTUS

Wanna jump start jobs creation?

How about renegotiating those so called "free trade agreements" which are siphoning American jobs overseas?
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
MekhongKurt
06:23 AM on 01/25/2010
Although I'm retired (and live abroad anyway), I am becoming increasingly concerned by the employment situation, for two reasons: (1.) the plain fact of people out of work (or working less than they want and probably need to work), some having to depend on the public dole, private charities, friends and relatives, etc.; and, (2.) the fewer people working has terrible implications for the economy generally, and for the recovery and tax base in particular, both of which affect us all, me included.

In the immediate term, the first is by far the larger on my own radar. What are people who are out of unemployment benefits, out of savings, out of loan value (their homes, cars, and other big-ticket items), and maybe whose friends and family are out of patience, out of money, or both??? Will private charities alone be able to take up the slack? I don't know, but it's an awful burden to expect the private sector to carry alone, especially should the situation continue only oozing with almost unbearable slowness towards recovery -- and that's assuming we avoid a "W" double-dip.

I hope the voters, demand that our representatives in Washington reduce public spending. Change the way our government purchases goods and services -- ESPECIALLY no-bid contracts, or sweetheart deals, and with a very baleful eye on every cost-plus contract, preferably avoiding those when at *all* possible -- since they, too, turn into sweetheart boondoggles for the companies.

Time to cut.
06:16 AM on 01/25/2010
nothing will change on the jobs front until we place tariffs on all imports communist china
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06:14 AM on 01/25/2010
Have you heard the latest?

GWB has written a book (well, written is rather a loose term given that he can't write) entitled "I Was Wrong About Everything and I'm Really Sorry....and by the way, I really am a d*ouche".
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Belisarius
Republicans are destroying the middle class.
06:04 AM on 01/25/2010
blah blah blah jobs blah blah blah

Both parties are shopping malls for lobbyists. What's for sale today? Bank regulation, Health care reform, Consumer protection agency. Whatever you want, just bring money.

Payback in November.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
rougebaisers
05:34 AM on 01/25/2010
The Job Agenda should have been all of 2009, minus the waste of a year on health care disaster. But no, the dem party decided to go about it all backwards, and now, with the tragedy they have in hand to stick to the American people, they lose something if they do not pass it, and the lose something if they do pass it. They are literally going insane wondering which door to choose, when all they have to do is listen to the American people rather than all of those lobbyists. Do not pass this bill unless you plan on passing only the handful of good in it, removing all the gifts and corruption and lies and double talk and mandates and taxes on the middle class. Do that and less of you will feel the political axe fall on your careers. Pass this farce, and none of your political careers will survive it.
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Donald Fannin
05:28 AM on 01/25/2010
Jobs, Jobs, Jobs Is all you think the rest of us care about. Yes, I was laid off a long time ago I would like to be able to find a job, hopefully with health insurance.

That being said, I will tell you what I am really worried about. That is a total lack of leadership in Washington. No one, not Republicans nor Democrats have convinced me they have the answers. The ones that will work on Jobs, the Economy, Public Safety, Public Health, Energy, Environment any of the problems we are looking to government to cure thru the public sector or encouraging the private sector. No one is leading. Washington is just a game of oneupmanship.