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Austan Goolsbee: No Economic Crisis

Austan Goolsbee Economic Crisis

First Posted: 06/08/11 09:03 PM ET Updated: 08/08/11 06:12 AM ET

WASHINGTON – Austan Goolsbee, still at this moment chairman of President Obama’s Council of Economic Advisers, is clearly tired of hearing talk about the supposedly desperate state of the American economy.

On the heels of the latest government snapshot of the labor market, which showed the economy gaining a paltry number of jobs in May while the unemployment rate climbed to 9.1 percent, Goolsbee pushed back with vehemence at the suggestion that the current state of play amounts to a crisis. He insisted that the economy is improving, even if there is still a slog to come.

"We do not have a sense of panic from one month’s jobs numbers, nor should we be having a sense of panic in general," Goolsbee said, speaking to a gathering of personal finance writers and editors at the White House on Wednesday. "Over the last six months, we have had added a million jobs in the private sector, which the president’s the first to say 'That’s not enough. We’ve got to do more, and get that higher.' But I really do not think that you take a variable series like the monthly job numbers, you don’t want to overreact to one month’s numbers that are different from what has been the trend."

Goolsbee looked and sounded much like a man eager to escape the torturous arguments of Washington for his old academic trappings at the University of Chicago –- a transition now set to happen in September. He betrayed impatience with the intersection of his profession and the policy arena, where fact and perception have a way of commingling.

Since the disappointing jobs report was released last week, the nature of the American conversation has changed. Major investment houses have downgraded their forecasts for economic growth, and some professional economists have begun prognosticating about the possibility of another recession.

The economist Dean Baker, critical of what he has portrayed as the Obama administration’s embrace of austerity as the cure-all for an economy that badly needs a jolt of government largess, recently authored a piece suggesting that something like a repeat of the Great Depression is now more than imaginable.

Stories of bankruptcy filings and foreclosed homes piling up, pulling housing prices down, fill the airwaves. The news serves up endless examples of the disconnect between the corporate realm, where profits and bonuses proliferate, and the reality of life for most working people, for whom economic anxiety is rarely far away.

In many houses, crisis remains a permanent state of affairs, each day bringing another impossible arithmetic test involving not enough dollars to pay the bills. But not at the White House, apparently, where the math focuses on how to trim the budget. For those who might have hoped the last jobs report would alter that mindset, Goolsbee had little but disdain.

"People were too quick to in my view, jump to the negative,”"he said, repeating the data that that the economy has gained a million net jobs over the past six months. "That's respectable. It's not stellar, but its definitely solid."

He sought refuge in a paperback book with a black cover, the administration’s official economic forecast, released early this year. It showed that the economy would average 9.3 percent unemployment this year. Here it is, only June, and we can celebrate the fact that we have already gotten below that number.

"Thus far, we have actually been somewhat significantly ahead of that forecast, when we made it," Goolsbee said.

On Wall Street, this is known as the bad news being priced in. The market expects company X’s earnings statement to show it has been hemorrhaging money, and then the number comes out awful indeed, yet a smidgen better than consensus. Investors buy the stock, pleased by the upside surprise.

But that standard, when applied to American joblessness, surely sounds ridiculous to most ordinary people, living proof that economists occupy a different sort of reality than the rest of us.

With one foot already back in academia, Goolsbee was content to let others try to fashion a view that might instill confidence; a frame that might inspire employers to hire, and consumers to spend anew, distributing dollars through a stagnant economy.

"I have a Ph.D. in economics," he said, referring to the discipline that, not for nothing, is known as the dismal science. "If you’re relying on me for your message, you’re making a terrible mistake."

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WASHINGTON – Austan Goolsbee, still at this moment chairman of President Obama’s Council of Economic Advisers, is clearly tired of hearing talk about the supposedly desperate state of the American...
WASHINGTON – Austan Goolsbee, still at this moment chairman of President Obama’s Council of Economic Advisers, is clearly tired of hearing talk about the supposedly desperate state of the American...
 
 
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07:38 AM on 06/15/2011
I've tested the waters out here. If you have progressive or liberal view your comments load up in a jiffy. If it leans on the conservative side there is a delay. I do believe that this whole comment fiasco is rigged
12:50 PM on 06/14/2011
Both sides don't care about anything but gaining power. This is sad. Ya know...I think this ship is sinking!
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guveqzero
Inventor and Innovator
02:51 AM on 06/14/2011
Denial is the reason he must leave. Desperation is rampant in many parts of the country, and he sees no impending crises. The slog he refers to are the people hiting the pavement and his degree means he has been improperly trained. He is being shown the door for a reason. At least, I can hope.
Freedom Lives
Do you wonder, watch, or make it happen?
02:15 PM on 06/12/2011
Clueless.

Spoken like a fella who's never created a private sector job-

in his life.

Goolsbee now departs-

and back to his ivory tower he goes.

Clueless.
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Alethea
Have the courage to use reason.
05:33 PM on 06/10/2011
OMG this is really easy folks. Tax the ultra wealthy. The top 5% own more than half the wealth in the US. By definition, that means they can afford to pay a little more.

There is a simple choice here: Either tax the wealthy to fund a massive jobs program which will stimulate the economy. Or don't and let people continue to suffer unnecessarily for lack of work.

Think about it! Why would a private business start hiring unless they thought they had enough demand for whatever they are selling? And if the private sector isn't going to do it, then who does that leave? The government. It's not as if there isn't PLENTY of work that needs to be done! Bridges, roads, sewer, dams, electrical grid, all of this infrastructure stuff needs serious updating. So why not kill 3 birds with one stone and just tax the wealthy already?

I would rather punish their "success" then let millions of families continue to suffer!

This is seriously frustrating....
07:32 PM on 06/10/2011
Aletha, Are you for real? The top 5% already pay 60% of ALL taxes paid in this country. They also pay higher rates than anyone else. You could tax them all 90% and not have enough to fix what Obama has broken. The reason businesses aren't hiring is because of stupid democrats overtaxing and over regulating everything they can get their hands on. There is no incentive for a business to expand and hire when all their profits are taken in taxes! The second problem is illegal immigration. The millions who are here illegally take all those jobs straight from others - and no, they aren't just jobs that others don't want. Get yourseld educated on the issues.
04:53 PM on 06/11/2011
Educated, you are right on brother. Folks like Althea are why Obama got elected and why we are in such a mess today. 2012 can't get here soon enough so we can vote O and the rest of them out of office.
05:50 PM on 06/12/2011
I get what both of you are saying, and there needs to be a little bit of both a little more tax on the rich and a little less regulation. Taxing the top a little more would help sustain those without a job. This taxing cannot be indefinite. There has to be a timeline for this. I was out of a job for about 1 year and 3 months. Didn't take a dime of unemployment, but some people haven't saved like me. Private business can't put people back to work, because they can't get money. The company I am working for has the sales orders to grow, yet they don't have the capital to fulfill those sales orders. Companies go under without available cash. Banks need regulation which keeps them from doing something stupid like things that happened in 08'. They need limited regulation because companies can't obtain the credit needed to fulfill a growing business.

FYI the top 5% did pay around 90% of the taxes when the U.S. was becoming a super power in the 40s 50s and 60s.

Somebody explain why people are so worried about taxing the rich, when they are far from being that rich?
06:58 AM on 06/15/2011
Spoken like a true socialist. Lets screw the productive and creative people who work so hard to get ahead. We should all be equal. Equally poor that is. Yup thats real easy
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
bmiller616
Live Music with Bernie Miller/FB
04:39 PM on 06/10/2011
Where is this man living? OMG dreamland?
11:56 PM on 06/09/2011
"Austan Goolsbee: No Economic Crisis"

One word: fool

Two words: spin doctor
11:37 PM on 06/09/2011
Have to wonder if Obama's failure to address the economy appears on his site tauting his fantastic achievements.
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
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zogimperator
is this microbiology?
07:45 PM on 06/09/2011
It's a pity the 'conservatives' can't understand how people can be liberals and yet not support Obama's 'socialis't policies.

Explaining that his policies are essentially similar to those of his predecessor doesn't work, because SOCIALISM CRYPTO-MARXIST WALL STREET BASHING DROWNING IN REGULATIONS ANTI BUSINESS etc.

It's like trying to explain what a sphere is to someone who has been convinced spheres have corners.
11:58 PM on 06/09/2011
Repug voters tend to be sheeple.
They listen to the Repug talking heads and believe what they are told.

Dem voters tend to be free thinkers.
We listen to the Dem AND Repug talking heads and then decide for ourselves what to believe and support.
02:38 AM on 06/10/2011
Man, you really nailed that one. Republicans = sheep. Democrats = insightful, intelligent, scholarly, progressive, pacifistic, humanitarian, giving, Green, Prius driving Atheists. Thanks for clearing that up for me.
07:01 AM on 06/15/2011
The typical dem voter will pull the lever for a chimp if he has a D next to his moniker.
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05:21 PM on 06/09/2011
Well if Dr. Goolsbee and the other doctors of economics who are in top positions as the President's economic advisors cannot advise him on how to get jobs for the jobless, then please tell me: Who is in charge of that?

Who's the Jobs for the Jobless guy in Washington?

Anybody?
07:04 AM on 06/15/2011
Good point. Have you ever noticed that ecnomic advisors, teachers etc make about 40k per year? If they are are so with it why aren't they all millionares?
02:31 PM on 06/09/2011
"Over the last six months, we have had added a million jobs in the private sector, which the president’s the first to say 'That’s not enough. We’ve got to do more, and get that higher.' ... you don’t want to overreact to one month’s numbers that are different from what has been the trend."

I do not have a PhD in economics, but I cannot figure out how the Federal Government pushes for Business to innovate and bring jobs back from China on the one-hand and State Governments are laying off thousands in the public sector on the other-hand... and Obama's administration is portrayed as "embracing austerity"!
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didyouseethat
UI's should get a clue
12:53 PM on 06/09/2011
When will the supporters of this administration admit that the current policies are a failure? Or they so blinded by the agenda, so dedicated to the cause, that they refuse to face reality? Is their ideology so strong that they will continue to fight for it till the bitter end, even if that end is the destruction of this great country?

Wake up. The country needs to be set back on course. It doesn't matter if it is done by Honorable Democrats or Republicans. But it needs to be done, and quickly. To not do the hard work necessary to make this country great again is a sin against its people and the world. If not America, then who?
02:34 PM on 06/09/2011
I’ll be the first to admit that Obama’s continuance of Bush’s agenda has been a disaster. I’ll be the first to admit that compromising with the Republicans whose policies destroyed the economy has been a disaster. I’ll be the first to admit that Obama in seeking timid, middle of the road solutions has solved nothing. Further I have been saying this for 2 years.
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didyouseethat
UI's should get a clue
03:01 PM on 06/09/2011
I fanned you a while ago. After reading your reply, I'm trying to figure out why.
So his policies are failing because it is more of the same from Bush? For the sake of argument, let's say you are correct.

Then what? More government spending, more government regulation? More pandering to public sector unions? More demonizing of Wall Street and Corporations? Higher Taxes? If those are the things you subscribe to, then how will those policies set the economic engine free? You are confusing. Are you a conservative and like me, was not a big fan of GWB? Help me out here.
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Robert SF
08:55 AM on 06/10/2011
This is like desperate family members screaming at doctors that they are failures because they can't do anything about 76-year-old granpa's lung cancer after 58 years of smoking 2 packs a day.

Our problems began in the mid 1970s, as a conservative narrative began pushing back at the New Deal. Our time of greatest prosperity was from 1945 to 1975. During those years, we had high taxes, a hands-on government, and strong unions. A man with a highschool diploma who worked 40 hours with his hands could support a family of four. Today, two college-educated people working 55 hours each have to add things up over and over to see if they can afford a baby or a house.

So yes, the current policies are a a failure, but ANY policies would be failures. We're in a death spiral we're not pulling out of any time soon, if ever. You can thank the conservatives. Finally, the rich have all the money. Are they happy now?
07:15 AM on 06/15/2011
Don't forget that progressive tricky Dick Nixon I believe he was in that time frame as well. So what happend in 1976? I believe we had double digit inflation under that mean old conservative Jimmy Carter. Guess again on your time frame sir
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bill smith jones
12:28 PM on 06/09/2011
before you baggers get all excited about 2012. so far, *alin,*omney, *awlenty, *ain, Yikes!
02:42 AM on 06/10/2011
+ork !!
12:21 PM on 06/09/2011
The economy is NOT improving and most of what we here is propaganda. A year ago I was a successful professional with an excellent credit rating. I knew things were getting bad so I attempted to refinance my current fixed rate mortgage in order to save $350 monthly on my mortgage payment. Because of the new screwed up mortgage rules/formulas I was not allowed to.
Now I've lost my job of 22 years (because of our improving economy....!) and may lose my home to foreclosure.
If the ignorant banks and mortgage companies would allow those with good credit, despite their debt/income ratios to refinance in order to save themselves then many of these foreclosure could be avoided. I'm enraged that the big guys in office cannot see clear of themselves to get what the middle class is dealing with.
Wake up!
12:10 AM on 06/10/2011
For most of us on Main Street, it is NOT getting better.
Actually, things are getting worse.

Those in power and the rich do NOT care.

As to (some) of the bankers....they have jobs, good wages, and they do NOT care either.
Pay up or go.

There are decent usually small potatoes local bankers, but what can they do?
They don't make the bank regulations.
Right now, mortgage money is tight and the banks don't want to lend.
Why is a a whole other discussion.
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bill smith jones
12:21 PM on 06/09/2011
accoprding to popll just out Dems are killing the rebags on the Medicare issue. 53 to 35 seniors

blame rebags.
12:26 PM on 06/09/2011
The article was about JOBS not Medicare
12:42 PM on 06/09/2011
It's the economy in general as arguably described as "no economic crisis."
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
05:25 PM on 06/09/2011
Obama and the Democrats have largely failed the unemployed.

That Bush and the Republicans did more than their fair share to get us into this mess does not diminish this fact.

Obama's had nothing to say to the 99ers -- he's never even said the word "99er" as far as I know.

The only plan is hope, yet what is the foundation for hope that even 10% of the 14 million unemployed will have jobs a year from now?