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Robert Kuttner

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Waiting for Lefty

Posted: 07/08/2012 7:44 pm

The economy is plainly stuck in second gear. For the third month in a row, new job creation in June, at just 80,000, was barely enough to keep the unemployment rate from rising, and not nearly sufficient to accommodate new entrants to the labor market and unemployed people looking for work.

Not only did the private sector fail to create enough jobs. With the crisis in state and local budgets and the absence of federal aid, the loss of public sector jobs continued. Ordinarily in a slump, public employment takes up some of the slack. In this recession, government has shed 627,000 jobs.

Here's the deeper worry. Not only could a weakening economy cost Barack Obama the election -- this slump could literally go on indefinitely.

In the aftermath of a financial collapse, the economy gets stuck in a downward spiral. Banks are too traumatized to lend, businesses see too few customers to invest, and there is too little purchasing power among consumers who are either out of work or who haven't seen a raise in a decade. The housing bust only adds to the downward drag.

Exports have been a bright spot, but as Europe succumbs to a similar vortex of recession compounded by austerity, Europe's even worse economic woes are likely add to America's.

Something similar happened in the late 1930s. Though economic growth returned, it wasn't strong enough to repair the damage of the Great Depression or create enough jobs. Despite the New Deal, unemployment remained stuck at around 12 percent.

World War II solved the problem -- it was the greatest accidental economic stimulus in economic history. It put people back to work, retrained the unemployed, and recapitalized industry. But today, there is nothing in the wings waiting to play the role of the Second World War.

During the war, federal deficits averaged more than 25 percent of GDP, nearly triple today's deficits. But that's what it took to blast out of the depression. After the war, high growth rates paid down the accumulated national debt.

What's needed today is a massive investment program, to shift the economy to a clean energy path, modernize infrastructure, increase productivity -- and along the way create millions of good jobs and restore consumer purchasing power. Then, the vicious circle could be reversed.

The problem is that neither party is proposing such a program. It is entirely outside mainstream debate.

President Obama is willing to have the federal government spend more money. But he has partly bought the story that deficit reduction has to come first. The Republicans would further gut the public sector.

Contrary to the conventional view that deficit reduction would somehow "restore confidence" and increase business investment, that's not how economies work. Businesses invest when they see customers with open wallets. Though the Congressional Budget Office projects higher growth returning around 2014, it bases these projections on a "return to trend." There is no plausible story about where the higher growth will come from.

If we don't get a drastic change in policy, we will be stuck in this rut for a generation or more.

The best case for November is that Obama is re-elected and somehow the Democrats take back the House and hold the Senate. If this happens, it will not be due to green economic shoots or a persuasive Democratic program but because Mitt Romney is such a dismal candidate.

However, with dozens of Senate Democrats senators committed to the folly of deficit reduction first, there is no prospect of an investment program on a scale that could make a difference.

I am an optimistic by temperament, but I don't see much to make me optimistic about either economics or politics. Though the recession nominally ended in June 2009 when weakly positive growth returned, there is little doubt that the economy is stuck in a long-term slump that could well deepen between now and November.

Frankly, the best hope is that whether Obama wins or loses, progressives take back the Democratic Party so that a candidate genuinely committed to full employment runs and wins in 2016. But that's an awfully long time to wait. And in the meantime, as government fails to improve things, more people are likely to give up on politics or to turn to demagogues.

It is also possible that Barack Obama in a second term, freed of the need to win re-election and looking to his legacy, could become more of the leader we thought we were electing in 2008, shaming Republicans and rallying Democrats to back a true recovery program. Nobody would be more surprised or pleased than your faithful writer.

Robert Kuttner is co-editor of The American Prospect and a senior fellow at Demos. His latest book is A Presidency in Peril.

 
 
 
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The economy is plainly stuck in second gear. For the third month in a row, new job creation in June, at just 80,000, was barely enough to keep the unemployment rate from rising, and not nearly suffici...
The economy is plainly stuck in second gear. For the third month in a row, new job creation in June, at just 80,000, was barely enough to keep the unemployment rate from rising, and not nearly suffici...
 
 
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05:33 PM on 07/11/2012
"If we don't get a drastic change in policy" The current problem is change in policy, business' do not know what is around the corner. it does not matter if you like Obama's healthcare plan or not, the uncertainty of the cost is what is holding back growth. This along with his other "fairness" threats are creating uncertainty for business growth. The unemployment rate has no barring on the economy.... its business investment that grows the economy... and its at half of what is should be ... or half of what it was under Clinton. This guy Obama needs to go... he has no ideas, no plan...
Genders
Love, Tolerance, Enlightenment
05:00 PM on 07/12/2012
Nonsense. Bankster robbed the world, becauswe we deregulated them, the Reagan ani Breast plan to destroy the USA so the rich can rule as they did efore the revolution.

but you want to go back.
09:22 PM on 07/16/2012
The unemployment rate has no barring on the economy? It's business investment that grows the economy? Fox news and the neo-cons have fried yourbrian. We libs should start setting up de-tox centers.
pup sydney
needs of regular folks, Italy; cancer;
10:14 PM on 07/10/2012
Great app for all the gvnmts of the world is being used to butcher nations is called:
ICut
In italy is called ITaglia ( playing with the name Italia)
This is what happens when NO ideas exist except the one that is of making money no matter what in bigger hoogenous and therefore already half dead nations conglomerates oligarchies NAFTAs EU China bunches"
Where are the thinkers? We need an idea to kill these old ideas. Ideas will take us out of the recession not the Romneys or a half baked democrat like pres Obama and his army of half republican democrats anf full fledged fascists on the other end of the isle.
Can you imagine a country run by a capitalist trained on bankrupting companies for a buck to stash that buck in switzerland with an IRA of 100 milions?.. He can have 100 millions in an IRA you know how much can you save instead?
01:22 PM on 07/10/2012
The best hope for ending the Depression if Obama wins is that he replaces Ben Bernanke as head of the Fed with someone who takes the Fed's mandate to achieve maximum employment seriously (for example, Christina Romer) and then fills any new openings on the Board of Governors of the Fed with people who also take this mandate seriously. We are not in a liquidity trap and the Fed has the ability to use expansionary monetary policy to restore the economy to full employment if it will only use it, which it will not under Bernanke.
Genders
Love, Tolerance, Enlightenment
05:02 PM on 07/12/2012
The FED can't give money away even at .004$ to the very bankster who crashed the economy.

The banksters still have a 0T$ slush fund to backup thier gambling.

As long as SWAPS are legal, the economy is dying.
MThomasNC
Retired, Sassy, Senior Citizen
01:06 PM on 07/10/2012
We don't have a party that speak for us - grassroots. What we have is a corporatist democratic party brought to us by Bill Clinton in the 1980s who re-built the party as republican-like that play footy with the 1%. Most new dems winning elections from 1980s on brought into that mindset. They called themselves DLCers - democratic leadership council. Mainly, their interest was getting a piece of the action, if they had to bed down with GOP, then so be it.

The dems controlling the party are DLCs or corporatist democrats. We may have to purge them out of party like tea party did to GOP. Most of the people in this country instinctively is 'left of center' wanting a fair, equal opportunity to have the best lives for all, believe in the common good as well as having a govt that works for everyone.

When democrats strongly message these points, fight for the 99%, and don't back down the people declare themselves democrats as they did when Howard Dean ran the national party in 2005 where dems went on to take back congress, then to win big time in 2008.

Come 2009, DLCers came back to power landing in the national party, controlling the senate, the president and his cabinet. Messages became muddled, unclear aimed at helping corporate America, bending over for GOP to take unprecedented aim at all they did.

That's a brief history of what happened to the modern democratic party. It's not FDR party anymore.
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parlimentMike
Terrorists keep you in fear
10:04 AM on 07/10/2012
How dumb would we have to be, to believe that Obama gave us Bush's 3rd term so he could switch to the guy he campaigned as in '08, in '13.

No Change is what the Dempublicans are offering us in '12. But an excellent choice of fears from previous campaigns, and old diversionary issues from the last half-century.

Not a peep about how we get from here to where the People are served.
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TheTightwireGuy
Attempting to balance reason and passion
09:31 AM on 07/10/2012
Mr. Kuttner, it is as if you read my thoughts when writing this article.
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BuckCarson
Life outside the ObamaSphere
08:09 AM on 07/10/2012
We need a message. It needs to be clear.

Here's one, and it can be rendered to a song, the democrat song!

Like nuns reciting a prayer:

"Oh, only government knows best for you and me! Can't we all just sing together?"

Bass:
"Fox news is all lies. Only the stupid watch Fox., Oh!"

Soprano:
"Let the conservatives have their slogan: QUESTION AUTHORITY and TRUST PEOPLE", for we know best, there's research that shows we are smarter!"

Tenor:
"All corporations are bad. Corporations are owned by all kinds of people, but they try to get profit, Oh." "Government seek to apply power!" "Government is more efficient than corporations"

All
"Can't we all just sing?"

"Oh!"
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dsws
No owning ideas. Limit only commercial use.
07:07 AM on 07/10/2012
Deficit reduction does need to come first, but "first" only in terms of when it gets passed, not in terms of when it takes effect. WWII was certain to be temporary, one way or another, and afterward we could expect to start paying off our war bonds. Our current fiscal imbalance is also guaranteed to be temporary, but only because we will collapse sometime before our debt reaches a thousand times our GDP.

Other than collapse, we have no politically-plausible path toward balance. Grover Norquist wants to borrow-and-spend until our government can be "drowned in a bathtub", the Republican Party is still solidly behind him, the Democratic party is still giving jellyfish a bad name, and third parties are still not on the map.
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Robert Frank
My last name is FRANK so thats what I am..
06:59 AM on 07/10/2012
Infrastructure improvement, repair, and building of new schools, bridges,etc.. is the most obvious and cost-effective way to get the economy back on track ..it's right in front of our faces and yet we are still being distracted by things like how we must stop the Taliban and AL-qeuda or they will invade the U.S. and kill everyone ..Iran must be stopped or they will start WW3..all nonsense designed to play to the fears of the idiot on the street
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TheTightwireGuy
Attempting to balance reason and passion
09:28 AM on 07/10/2012
I completely agree. Add the social conservative hot button issues to get many in the middle class to vote against their economic self-interest and you have the perfect political storm to gut the economic wellbieng and security of the middle class.
11:47 AM on 07/10/2012
Yeah, but we need WW3 so we have an excuse to destroy our competitions industrial capacity. Then we'll have the 1950's boom all over again! Woohooo!
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DHFabian
10:15 PM on 07/09/2012
This isn't the first time that the richest few have had such power over our politics and policies. Historically, the poor and middle classes would then unite to push back, to the benefit of both. Not this time. The poor and middle class were pitted against each other, and there will be no unified push-back. What the rich are doing to the middle class today, the middle class already did to the poor. I think this is the first time in the long history of US progressives that even they have utterly turned their backs on the post-middle class/poor. The media focus has been on pandering to the middle class, sans any discussion of the realities of US poverty. After spending decades exporting a massive number of jobs, the middle class looks at the poor with contempt and sneers, "Go get a job." It does appear that "the American masses" have finally been divided and conquered." Whatever ultimately happens will, indeed, be decided by the middle class.There is little reason for optimism.
10:06 PM on 07/09/2012
Seems that BO will say and do just about anything in order to get re-elected. I'm not at all sure what, if anything, he stands for.
11:48 AM on 07/10/2012
You have merely defined the word "politician".
05:33 PM on 07/10/2012
Indeed. 
12:11 PM on 07/10/2012
Here's one for you ....GOP = greed, stupidty and gullability...
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redsoxpagan
09:46 PM on 07/09/2012
But Obama has proven not to have the spine or vision needed to do what is necessary, and that he continues to surround himself by the has-been Clintonite advisers and their centralist cowardice ensures that he won't do what is needed anytime soon
10:39 PM on 07/09/2012
absolutely correct
05:06 PM on 07/10/2012
Who said anything about Obama or Clinton? I just want only legal citizens to vote. Very simple. Not left. Not right. Parties just have to win with citizens. May the best one prevail. Simple... got it?
07:15 AM on 07/11/2012
????? What??!
09:43 PM on 07/09/2012
One thing the Keynesians never recognize is that in WWII, the competition had their manufacturing bases blown to smithereens. We now face global competition. Keynesians think that if you dump massive amounts of money into the economy, that it will repeat the post-WWII miracle. Nothing can be further from the truth. Obama's 2009 stimulus is said to have been too small. Well even the forecasts that were based on what he got approved were grossly optimistic. Doing it bigger will just make it an even bigger failure.
12:12 PM on 07/10/2012
Your solution then is to hand over the Treasury to the rich who have proven time and time agian that they are the only people who matter in this country.....? Pretty stupid policy!
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09:43 PM on 07/09/2012
Great great article as always by Bob Kuttner. However, I have to acknowledge that most of the comments posted in response to this article are particularly not relevant to the point that Kuttner is making in his article. I must say that most Democrats on HP have so much cognitive dissonance that they will write irrelevant stuff (like how bad Romney is etc.) when in reality it is their own beloved Obama who turned out to be the most unreliable lefty in a generation.
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bkelly boulderit
thinking outside the litter box
08:46 PM on 07/09/2012
Obama is the only seat that matters to get re-elected. Every office is 2,4,6, years, except for judges.

The Supreme Court is 20-40 years. Can this country afford another Scalia or Thomas on the bench?

No, and Romney would definitely tack hard right, if not harder.
09:55 PM on 07/09/2012
I know we can't afford another Ginsberg on the bench.
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AdamWest1313
Hardcore Agnostic
01:30 AM on 07/10/2012
Yeah, we need more people like Scalia who thinks that the government should control citizens sex lives.