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Obama's Economic Policies 'Fair' Or 'Poor,' Economists Say

Obama Economic Policies

By PAUL WISEMAN and DEREK KRAVITZ   12/28/11 02:07 PM ET   AP

WASHINGTON -- President Barack Obama gets mediocre marks for his handling of the economy and Mitt Romney easily outpolls his Republican rivals in an Associated Press survey of economists.

The economy – and who bears responsibility for it – is likely to be a decisive issue when voters to go the polls next November.

The economy is still struggling to recover from the Great Recession of 2007-2009. The housing market remains weak and a debt crisis in Europe threatens growth in 2012. The unemployment rate is at a recession-level 8.6 percent, up from 7.8 percent when Obama took office in January 2009. That month, the recession was already more than a year old.

Half of the 36 economists who responded to the Dec. 14-20 AP survey rated Obama's economic policies "fair." And 13 called them "poor." Just five of the economists gave the president "good" marks. None rated him as "excellent."

The economists' criticisms vary. Some say Obama was distracted by his health care overhaul. Others say his $862 billion stimulus program was poorly designed. Still others fault him for not pushing for an even bigger stimulus when the economy proved weaker than expected.

The AP economists expect economic growth to pick up to 2.4 percent next year. That would be an improvement from the under-2 percent growth expected for 2011. But the economists foresee little improvement – a dip to 8.4 percent – in the unemployment rate by Election Day.

Asked which of the Republican presidential candidates would do the best job managing the economy, two thirds of the economists named Romney, one chose former House Speaker Newt Gingrich. The rest didn't pick anyone at all.

Allen Sinai, president of Decision Economics, says Romney, who ran a private equity firm before turning to politics, is the "hands down" choice among Republican presidential contenders squaring off in the Jan. 3 Iowa caucuses.

"Romney's a technocrat," Sinai says. "He's not an ideologue. He has a history in the real world of business."

The Iowa presidential caucuses, which kick the GOP nominating process into high gear, begin Tuesday and polls show Romney in a strong position. Romney has based his campaign on the notion that he has the best chance of beating Obama on the economy because of his private sector experience.

Here's more about what the economists, mostly from banks and other financial firms, independent consultancies and academia, had to say about:

_Obama.

Some economists say the Obama administration didn't push hard enough for more government spending or tax cuts to stimulate growth. "They've generally tried to take the right kinds of measures but have often failed to lead with enough vigor to overcome political obstacles," says William Cheney, chief economist at John Hancock Financial Services.

Others say the president tried to do too much, especially by pushing early for legislation to overhaul the nation's health care system instead of focusing on policies to promote growth and create jobs.

"Health care reform wasn't necessarily the most important thing to be dealing with when you're in the midst of the worst recession since the Great Depression," says Joel Naroff, president of Naroff Economics.

Some critics say Obama's 2009 stimulus program relied too much on public works projects that were slow to get going. Decision Economics' Sinai says the president should have favored more tax cuts that put money in Americans' pockets immediately.

Sinai notes that public works projects failed to pull Japan out of a long economic slump that began in the 1990s and continues today. After the money is spent, "you're left with deficits and debt. And someday if you need new government stimulus, you can't afford it. And that's where we are now," Sinai says.

Republican strategist Rich Galen says the GOP has successfully painted Obama as a reckless steward of taxpayer money: "In a Tea Party era where Big Government is the enemy, throwing money at problems is the enemy," he says.

An Associated Press-GfK poll of American adults earlier this month found that 60 percent of American adults disapprove of Obama's performance on economic issues.

Jamal Simmons, an adviser to the Obama campaign in 2008, said the president must remind voters how bad things were when he took office. The economy lost more than 820,000 jobs the month Obama was sworn in, the biggest drop since October 1949.

Since the job market hit bottom in February 2010, it has produced nearly 2.5 million jobs – 117,000 a month. "Is it enough? Absolutely not, but it certainly ain't what it used to be," Simmons says. Perhaps Obama can take heart from President Ronald Reagan's experience. The unemployment rate was 8.5 percent – a tick away from where it was last month – a year before Reagan was re-elected in a 1984 landslide.

"You have to look at where you would have been if he hadn't gotten the stimulus package through," says Maury Harris, chief economist at UBS Securities. "We might be a lot worse off."

_Romney.

Many of those who chose Romney couldn't cite any of the former Massachusetts governor's economic proposals. Nevertheless, his background won over the economists. Romney graduated from Harvard Business School and served as CEO of Bain & Company, a management consulting business in Boston, and Bain Capital, a spinoff investment firm, in the 1980s and 90s."He has the experience that the other candidates lack," says Harris of UBS Securities.

Some of his Republican rivals have taken unconventional positions. Texas Rep. Ron Paul advocates abolishing the Federal Reserve and returning to the gold standard. Texas Gov. Rick Perry has said it would be "almost treasonous" for Bernanke to try a third round of bond purchases to jolt the economy before November's election.

Among Romney's chief economic plans: repealing the Obama administration's health-care law; cutting the corporate tax rate from 35 percent to 25 percent; and making permanent tax cuts on dividends, interest and capital gains from President George W. Bush's administration.

"He thinks about the economy in a more global way" than his GOP rivals, Naroff says. "He's not a rigid ideologue."

But Romney's business experience is also vulnerable to criticism. His Republican rivals have blasted him for profiting from putting companies through bankruptcy and laying off workers.

"At a time when the American public is suspicious of corporate wealth and power, that could do real harm to Romney," Simmons says. The economists were not asked to evaluate Obama's economic policies against Romney's or any other Republican candidate.

The economists gave good marks to Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke: 13 rated Bernanke as excellent, 14 as good and nine as fair. He was praised for taking extraordinary steps to calm financial markets after the collapse of Lehman Bros. in 2008 and to jolt the weakest economy in 70 years.

"He's been dealt a tough hand, but played it as well as anybody could," says Scott Brown, chief economist at Raymond James & Associates.

The economists praise Bernanke for his aggressive response to the financial crisis in the fall of 2008. He slashed short-term interest rates to zero, made loans to cash-strapped banks and bought Treasury and mortgage bonds to push down interest rates and calm financial markets.

"The Fed's response (to) the financial crisis and recession was dramatic and swift," says Sean Snaith, an economist at the University of Central Florida.

When the economy stalled in the second half of 2010, Bernanke launched another round of bond purchases to push long-term rates lower.

He has sometimes had to overcome dissent from others on the Fed's rate-setting board. And Bernanke's Fed has had to take the lead in economic policymaking because Congress and the White House are so often ensnarled in partisan bickering.

Still, some economists say Bernanke's Fed has gone too far, that zero interest rates are hurting retirees and savers without delivering many economic benefits.

"Perhaps the greatest criticism might be that the Federal Reserve has tried to do too much – trying to offset the impact of necessary budget cuts, European debt problems and other factors out of its control," says Lynn Reaser, chief economist at Point Loma Nazarene University.

___

AP Business Writer Daniel Wagner contributed to this report.

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WASHINGTON -- President Barack Obama gets mediocre marks for his handling of the economy and Mitt Romney easily outpolls his Republican rivals in an Associated Press survey of economists. The economy...
WASHINGTON -- President Barack Obama gets mediocre marks for his handling of the economy and Mitt Romney easily outpolls his Republican rivals in an Associated Press survey of economists. The economy...
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02:48 PM on 01/03/2012
"Obama's Economic Policies 'Fair' Or 'Poor,' Economists Say".

Writing that "President Barack Obama gets mediocre marks for his handling of the economy", is being way overly kind I'd say.

For America "Fair' Or 'Poor" is disastrous!
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Benhor
We have done it together!
04:46 PM on 12/30/2011
Putting a side the "When do wrong no body forgets and when i do right no body remembers" attitude leveled against this president for reasons I can't name all, will AP release the names of all surveyed economist, then we will know both their credibility and credentials?.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Infiniti
Politics is a contact sport. Play to Win or Leave!
02:50 PM on 12/30/2011
The status quo rules in Washington until we hit the reset button. Not much has changed over the last 3 years. Here are some examples we should have seen…

1. Indict and charge the miscreants on Wall St., We next action today.
2. Fire Geithner – Everyone knows he’s in the pocket of Wall St and has failed to do anything about the housing crisis.
3. Fire his economic advisors – They represent the biggest corporations not Main St.
4. Nominate someone to the Consumer Financial Protection Agency, already
5. Stand behind Elizabeth Warren today and don’t let take her race for granted.
6. The Financial Reform Act is toothless and riddled with loopholes. Plug those holes immediately.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Marine Staff Sergeant
Combat Disabled For My Country....
02:22 PM on 12/30/2011
"The unemployment rate is at a recession-level 8.6 percent, up from 7.8 percent when Obama took office in January 2009."

Just a couple weeks ago someone was arguing with me that under Obama the unemployment rate has steadily gone down. I told him that was untrue. I'm glad I stuck to my guns. Also, I believe the 8.6 is not a real number, it has to do with new claims, etc., not actual unemployment.
01:50 PM on 05/17/2012
Actually, you lose that argument, too. The unemployment rate started rising in 2007, and then peaked in 2009. It has been going down since. But if we're going to say that none of the numbers are "real" numbers, then what's the point? In truth, the economy is bad worldwide and it is not an easy thing to recover from quickly.
08:31 AM on 12/30/2011
He would have done greater things (and he has done some great things while in office) but the obstructionist GOPers have stood in the way of progress and that is why in 2012 the Dems need to come out and vote as many Repubs out as possible so that real progress can be made. If you think Mitt or any of the other GOP can handle our country - you just remember GWB and the Repub policies that they want to put into place - take away our civil rights. They do not have a clue and don't forget it. Vote Obama 2012!!! MOST ADMIRED MAN IN THE WORLD!!!!
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Marine Staff Sergeant
Combat Disabled For My Country....
02:24 PM on 12/30/2011
Funny you people who say this, yet, his first two years he had a democratic Congress and everything they and he touched turned to mud.
03:31 PM on 12/30/2011
You're not supposed to point out that the dems were a failure.
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Benhor
We have done it together!
04:49 PM on 12/30/2011
Linda, don't be discouraged or swayed by the repub naysayers, we have a great president and a lousy congress and that is the sad fact.
Keep it up, F&F'ed.
02:53 PM on 01/03/2012
A great president?

You obviously live somewhere other than America.

More Than Eighty Reasons Why Obama Shouldn’t Be Reelected!

http://tinyurl.com/73yvmgg
03:02 PM on 01/03/2012
A great president?

You obviously live somewhere other than America.

More Than Eighty Reasons Why Obama Shouldn’t Be Reelected!

ourchangingglobe dot com/more-than-eighty-reasons-why-obama-shouldnt-be-reelected

Replace the word dot with a . and remove the two spaces.
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Pastori Balele
Graduate degree
03:46 AM on 12/30/2011
At least President Obama has economic policies which work if Congress votes for them. GOPers has only one economic policy - give the richest more tax breaks. When they are richer they may think giving left overs to workers and poor people. No. We are not going back to that policy in November 2012. That was Reagainomics or voodoo economics. Let's vote to re-elect President Obama.
08:30 AM on 12/30/2011
Yeah obamas gift to so lyn dra and pelosis brother in law were good for us. Take off the blinders.
01:09 PM on 12/30/2011
That was just a billion of taxpayers money to cronies.! You forgot the 1.4 billion to RFK's nephew for his so called energy project.!
01:58 AM on 12/30/2011
Convenient how the HP has this article tucked away in the middle of nowhere where hardly anyone reads. If this had been a republican to being blown up on the front page with a 20 x 17 photo and 30 size font! I'm still surprised they even had the courage to publish the article, minus the leftist spin.
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whythismess
01:21 AM on 12/30/2011
Eris23Skidoo
Dischordian Keynesian
690 Fans
Become a fan
2 hours ago(10:54 PM)
Nope. Whythismes­s thinks the system is perfect the way it is and that the only purpose of the First Amendment is to guarantee a corporatio­n's right to purchase an election. He just doesn't think that Americans should be giving money to a black man to run for president. Call me harsh for assuming a con-man is a racist. They're the ones who earned my opinion of them.

-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

actually the person that spoke before you was exactly dead on in their assessment of what i said and what i believe. i dont know where you get this stuff from. but its a rude and malicious attack.
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IndependentRule
There are two many Parties in Washington..
11:51 PM on 12/29/2011
Its pretty obvious when the unemployment rate is HIGHER than it was when Obama was inaugurated that all he can run on is "It could have been worse" and then instead of Hope and Chane his campaign slogan will be "fear (of) and loathing" of the GOP
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David Hundley
Deep In The Heart of Taxes
12:35 AM on 12/30/2011
What about the crimes against the government, for tax cheats and k street influence.
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whythismess
01:22 AM on 12/30/2011
what about the crimes perpetrated by the government? namely bailing out the banks.
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Scott Leland
11:21 AM on 12/30/2011
Several hundred economists have said that the unemployment rate would have been a lot higher without the Obama administration's economic policies. At the least it kept millions of Americans from becoming homeless.
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kamact
Market Observer
11:51 PM on 12/29/2011
And the GOP economic policies are destructive and conflict with real economic principles,...
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Deanna Woods
Learning, Caring, Truth
11:35 PM on 12/29/2011
It would be nice to know a little more about the survey itself. How were the economists selected? How balanced was the selection? What were the questions on the survey? Also, what recommendations would the economists give to Obama if they had an opportunity? -- One thing I would very much like to know is how much in agreement the economists themselves are on the solutions to America's economic situation. That would give us some valuable insights into the credibility of the survey -- what are the standards by which the economists are measuring the actions of the president?
12:30 AM on 12/30/2011
Quite right you are, DW. Those details you call for should -- and rather easily could -- have been provided by the AP authors themselves, with a link (or more) to them embedded in the "new" story here. But have you noticed: this (the lack of substantive background info) is a trend now among "newswriters" aiming their work at the blogapshere. Instead of "whole cloth" we are more often presented with summaries (or surveys, events, etc.) and are left to draw our own conclusions based on partial (and not always impartial) "facts" presented by the writers. Worse yet, some "readers" won't go beyond the eye-catching headline and read the whole story (such as it may be). Sigh. So go the ways of the New Journalism these days.
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Benhor
We have done it together!
04:53 PM on 12/30/2011
DW, thanks and you are right on the money.
F&F'ed.
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Peter Combs
Amused by the illogical..no, NOT a Republican
11:11 PM on 12/29/2011
Fair....Poor....

and who didn't already know this?
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authorized-user
macho macho man
10:23 PM on 12/29/2011
Half of the 36 economists who responded to the Dec. 14-20 AP survey rated Obama's economic policies "fair." And 13 called them "poor."

This proves that the opinions of a room full of economists is the same as hiring a roomful of monkeys to write the next War & Peace.
BigDaddyWow
This member is licensed to spank
10:20 PM on 12/29/2011
I really hope Americans are smart enough to see through this crap. This is just pre-election spin. Any economist who believes Obamas (and Congress) policies and agenda have been good for America is not a real economist.
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1dabut1
Power is not alluring to pure minds. Thomas Jeffer
11:31 PM on 12/29/2011
oh we can see through it alright, and we see that Obama's not the problem. mitt knows business. i'll bet he does, buy a company split it up, layoff all the Americans, and send the company to china or else were and pocket millions. mitt's good, you can bank on that.
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whythismess
01:30 AM on 12/30/2011
obama currently rewards such behavior with a job writing the policies that obama presents and that his supporters back. like his jobs bill. look at the guy whos helped shape the same policy that you support. 450 billion for a jobs program? you would be better off giving americans straight cash and thats no spin or distortion. for what weve paid into obama jobs we could support every citizen in america for a decade.
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Scott Leland
11:23 AM on 12/30/2011
Yes, you are right. Another MBA took-over the Polaris Snowmobile company and fired most of it's workers and built a new factory in Mexico recently.
Linda from Deerfield
Paying attention
10:19 PM on 12/29/2011
Put an article by any of these economists before the public, and I guarantee that the public will attempt to verbally cut the economist's position to shreds. It is unfair to publish their judgement but not a rating of the ethics of their performance in the paid opinion arena -- we are learning that there is very little in the way of ethics standards for economists, and many of them write paid opinions where the opinion is dictated to them up front. The "profession" gets far more respect than it deserves.
12:36 AM on 12/30/2011
Interesting points, Linda. Can you perhaps provide a link or two that support your claims about there being "...little in the way of ethics standards for economists"? I suspect you may be right about that, but I'd like to read more about it. Thanks.
Linda from Deerfield
Paying attention
09:41 AM on 12/30/2011
I don't remember specifics that I read, but here is an article with some good hints: http://www.economist.com/blogs/freeexchange/2011/01/economics_1