Bush Promises the Moon,
But Where are the Jobs?

 
Washington - Sunday, January 18, 2003 - by: Mark Weisbrot

 

 

base on
the moon

Will there be jobs on the moon? Or will American workers have to wait until we get to Mars? These kinds of questions were inevitable as the White House announced a bold new initiative to establish a base on the moon, as a first step towards sending people to Mars. On the same day, the Labour Department surprised everyone by reporting that only 1,000 new jobs had been gained for the month of December.

 

 

job
loss

It was far below expectations (the experts predicted 150,000) and shocked the financial markets. More importantly, it was a pointed reminder that we were still living with a "job loss" recovery: 25 months after the official end of our last recession, the economy is still down 776,000 jobs.

 

 

70 years

It's an unprecedented failure, for an economic recovery. Normally the economy gains millions of new jobs in the years following a recession. It now seems very likely that George W. Bush will become the first president since Herbert Hoover more than 70 years ago to rack up a net loss of jobs during his presidency.

 

 

quit
looking

There was plenty of other bad news in the employment report, some of which Mr. Bush mistakenly interpreted as good news. He called the decline in the unemployment rate from 5.9 to 5.7 percent "a positive sign that the economy is getting better" apparently not realising that the opposite was true. The drop in the unemployment rate was due to 309,000 people leaving (or not entering) the labour force.
 
In other words, you have to be actively looking for work in order to be counted as unemployed. If enough people give up looking for work, the number of unemployed drops and so does the unemployment rate. That is what got us to 5.7 percent unemployment in December, according to the Labour Department's monthly household survey.

 

 

employed
62.2%

Not a good sign at all. If we look at employment instead of unemployment, the picture is even bleaker. The percentage of people employed in December was a low 62.2, about 2.5 percentage points below its high of April 2000. This is a huge difference: it means there were 5.5 million fewer people working. Ben Bernanke, the Vice Chairman of the Federal Reserve called attention to this recently, as showing that the labour market is much weaker than it looks.

 

 

41
months

Economists were also surprised that the manufacturing sector lost 26,000 jobs in December, extending its losing streak to 41 consecutive months.

 

 

spending
borrowed
money

What does all this mean for the state of the economy? Mainly, it means the current economic recovery is weaker and more fragile than most of the experts thought it was before the latest employment report. The main sources of spending that have been sustaining the "job-loss" recovery are running out of steam. The biggest was a wave of mortgage refinancing that, prior to the past summer, had allowed consumers to borrow and spend hundreds of billions of dollars.

 

 

cuts for
the rich

The Bush tax cut provided some stimulus -- although it was poorly targeted and would have given more of a boost to the economy if it had not been so skewed toward the rich. The increase in military spending was also significant.

 

 

behind
in payments

But all of these sources of increased demand have run their course. Consumers are hard pressed to borrow and spend more: the percentage of credit card holders behind on their payments hit a record last month. Without a major turnaround in the job market, it's hard to imagine how even this feeble recovery can be sustained.

 

 

housing
bubble

There remains a big cloud on the horizon, even if the job market should start to recover: the housing bubble. Like the stock market bubble that caused the 2001 recession, this $3 trillion bubble in housing prices is fully capable of throwing the U.S. economy into reverse when it bursts.

 

 

invade
Mars

All that said, I wouldn't want to discourage President Bush from taking over the moon, or invading Mars -- especially as an alternative to invading other countries. We won't have to kill anyone, get our soldiers killed, or make the rest of the world hate us. It will cost a lot less than the war in Iraq. But it might take a while for the jobs to trickle down to Planet Earth.
   

Mark Weisbrot

 

Co-Directors
Center for Economic and Policy Research
1621 Connecticut Ave NW, Suite 500
Washington, DC
20009-1052

 

distributed to newspapers by Knight-Ridder/Tribune Information

References:  
  White House, A Renewed spirit of discovery, January 16, 2004
   

   

 

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