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The Republican’s Double-Dip, and What Must Be Done
John Boehner said Tuesday the Republicans got “90 percent of what we wanted” from the budget deal. So presumably he and his colleagues are willing to take responsibility for some 450 points of today’s mammoth 513-point drop in the Dow Jones Industrial Average.
House Majority Leader Eric Cantor and Speaker of the House John Boehner. Republicans repeatedly assured the nation that once the debt-limit deal was done – capping spending, cutting the budget deficit, and getting “90 percent” of what they wanted — the economy would bounce back. Just the opposite seems to be happening. (Getty Images)
I’m being a bit facetious – but only a bit. It’s always dangerous to read too much into one day’s move in the stock market.
Yet the stock sell-off – not just today’s, but that of the last days – cannot be easily dismissed. It marks Wall Street’s largest losing streak since 2008.
Republicans repeatedly assured the nation that once the debt-limit deal was done – capping spending, cutting the budget deficit, and getting “90 percent” of what they wanted — the economy would bounce back.
Just the opposite seems to be happening.
Call it the Republican’s double-dip recession.
Wall Street investors aren’t ideologues. They don’t obsess about budget deficits ten years from now, or the size of the government. One day doesn’t make a trend, but a giant sell-off like this is motivated by hard, cold realities.
Here are the two hard, cold realities investors are most worried about:
First, the economy looks like it’s dead in the water. The Commerce Department reports almost no growth in the first half of the year. And job growth is just about at a standstill. Far fewer jobs were generated in May and June than necessary just to keep up with the growth in the potential labor force – meaning the employment picture is actually worsening. Investors fear tomorrow’s (Friday’s) jobs report for July will show more of the same.
Secondly, investors now know the federal government’s hands are tied. The original stimulus is over; the Fed’s “quantitative easing” is over.
This week’s deal over the debt ceiling cinches it. The market is now on its own — without enough rocket power get out of the continuing gravitational pull of the Great Recession.
Now that the deal is done, Obama and the Democrats will have a much harder time passing anything close to the stimulus necessary to breach the gap between what consumers (who are 70 percent of the economy) are willing to spend and what the economy can produce at or near full-employment.
Not incidentally, the Commerce Department’s revised data for what happened to the economy in 2008 and 2009 shows the drop to have been far greater than had been supposed. The economy plunged 8.9 percent in the fourth quarter of 2008 – the steepest quarterly decline in more than half a century. And in 2009 household buying declined almost 2 percent (compared with a previous estimate of 1.2 percent). That’s the biggest contraction in almost sixty years.
This means the original stimulus should have been much larger in order to offset the drop. With cash-starved state and local governments simultaneously scaling back their own spending, the federal stimulus needed to be even bigger.
So much for Republican claims that the original stimulus “didn’t work.” Of course it didn’t, given the size of the slide.
It was never a debt crisis. The debt crisis was manufactured. It’s been a jobs, wages, and growth crisis all along. And that reality has finally caught up with us.
Now that we’re slouching toward a double-dip recession, the only hope is voters will tell their members of Congress – who are now on recess back home – to stop obsessing about future budget deficits and get to work on the real crisis of unemployment, falling wages, and no growth.
We need a bold jobs bill to restart the economy. Eliminate payroll taxes on the first $20,000 of income for two years. Recreate the WPA and the Civilian Conservation Corps. The federal government should lend money to cash-strapped states and local governments. Give employers tax credits for net new jobs. Amend the bankruptcy laws to allow distressed homeowners to declare bankruptcy on their primary residence. Extend unemployment insurance. Provide partial unemployment benefits to people who have lost part-time jobs. Start an infrastructure bank.
And more.
The jobs bill should be number one on the nation’s agenda. It should have been all along.
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34 Comments so far
Show AllMore of the same from Reich... Blame only Republicans and don't mention the Democrats' complicity.
Progressive101, your reality needs to be learned by all!
Welcome to Obama's Depression "at home".
It's not so much that Obama singly created Great Depression II, as that stage was set over the last three decades by every faux-Emperor/president: Reagan, Bush I, Clinton, and Bush II before Obama, but rather that Obama, the "anti-FDR", folded like a cheap suit-case and missed the best chance ever in 2008 to expose and rally the naive American public "Against Empire" [Michael Parenti].
Obama missed leveraging the financial crisis caused by the Empire's Ponzi crash of 2007 and missed turning the public against the global corporate/financial/militarist Empire because he was always the paid slave of this Empire --- who said slavery was dead in America ---- based on the sure bet that he was chosen to be the gutless complicit pawn of the Empire.
Now, in a brief and drastically condensed time-frame, average, honest, middle/working-class Americans, in the heart and temporary headquarters of this global corporate/financial/militarist Empire which controls the US, UK, Israel, et al will have a last chance to quickly recognize, understand, confront, and excise the first, last, and only truly effective global Empire.
This opportunity is breath-taking but fleeting. The odds are certainly against a positive and progressive outcome, but the effort must be made both for the destruction that the global Empire causes"abroad", but also for the now highly visible "tyranny" that this Empire is imposing "at home".
Hannah Arendt's prescient warning based on her lifelong study of Empire, not to mention her direct painful experience with the Nazi Empire, never rand so painfully true ---- "Empire abroad entails tyranny at home."
Alan MacDonald
Sanford, Maine
Liberty & democracy
over
violent
empire
New America Peoples' Party 2012 --- (our last chance "Against Empire")
He's a loyal party guy isn't he?
Exactly right.
It's 1937 all over again. The country was (barely) coming out of the Great Depression when the deficit hawks in the GOP managed to convince FDR that balancing the budget was more important than continuing to support the recovery. Unfortunately, he fell for it. A retreat into recession was the price the country paid, officially for 13 months, but effectively until the bombs dropped on Pearl Harbor. Well, those who fail to heed the lessons of history are doomed to repeat the mistakes, so here we are. There is no doubt that deficits matter in the long term, and they will need to be dealt with, but timing is everything, and today's deficit hawks have blown it again. Cuts can be useful up to a point, but this country also needs revenue. People who work pay taxes; people who don't work don't pay taxes. Apparently the right wing "cut, cut, cut" types don't understand this basic principle, which means they are essentially incapable of accepting reality.
The double dip is here / it will last a lot longer than 13 months ....
FDR's real problem occured when he tried to expand the Supreme Court up to 13 members because the SCOTUS shot down many of his New Deal Industrial Policies.
That hammered his Approval Ratings and his political power.
The stimulus worked fine. It bought the brains of people that think there is a smidgen hope that someone in government isn't corrupt. Death and destruction is the u.s.'s biggest export and pretty soon there will be contaminated chicken feathers in every pot.
The corporations don't need the u.s. commoners any longer. The jobs were shipped to other lands and now those new workers are the corporations' new consumers. The u.s. citizens are a fiscal liability now and the powers have no intention of helping anyone, quite the opposite. They wish to thin the ranks, cull the losers, and keep part of the comfortably numb so-called middle class to vote, buy i pods and wave flags.
Hunger is a great motivator. Maybe, when enough are starving and homeless action will be taken.
Ahhh, the smell of burning Walmart Stores in the morning...smells like VICTORY!!!
Reisch is the master of the Rainbow Stew posts. Too bad with the current crop of both dems and rethugs none of it is possible. They want to destroy the economy in order to pillage the last remaining social safety nets - MAYBE America will wake up then - But will we vote for the next FDR or Hitler?
"But will we vote for the next FDR or Hitler?"
We'll vote for the next FDR and get Hitler
Good picture of a Boner and a Prick.
By the way which one is the Republican Double Dip?
There is no way this right wing president will present a bold jobs creation proposal because he shares the republican obsession with austerity as he has made clear by his willingness to cut yje social safety net while fighting defense cuts and promoting imperialism abroad.
Across from the White House in Lafayette Square banners stream out from the US Chamber of Commerce building. The banners exclaim in Story high letters, "JOBS." The premise is that they know better than anyone else how to create jobs. The challenge they present is that the Keynsian economics of Obama's stimulus and public sector spending is that if the money spent on this had been given to them as tax cuts the country would be better off.. The Keynsian economics of Reich, Kutner, Krugman is dismissed as failed economic policy.. On the other side of the square the White House response is "Well, maybe you're right--we'll give you most of what you want but please let us keep Social Security." Most likely THE PUBLIC WILL AGREE WITH THE CHAMBER BECAUSE AT LEAST THEY BOLDLY AND UNASHAMEDLY MAKE THEIR CASE. The democrats whimper in response. People like Reich and Krugman are outside the gate barking an alternative view and it only seems like noise to the establishment.
NO, NO, NO, Mr. Reich! As Yahoo! News blares in a headline today, "Unemployment rate dips, economy adds 117K jobs!" Of course, next month, when the impact of the debt ceiling measure begins to at least psychologically hit, public employees will be laid off in increased numbers, laying off others who support the laid off public employees, etc., and Yahoo! news will inform us "unemployment rate increases," this without either capital letters or exclamation points. Fascinating how the financial "economist" talking heads first assert yesterday's stock market drop is unrelated to the 2008 stock market drop, because "We've pulled out of the 2008 recession," and then observe how yesterday's drop was less than the worst one day drop in 2008. This is followed by blaming yesterday's drop on the EU situation, with nary a remark on the deficit ceiling vote. These vampires can never accept the business world they so strongly propound to adore can perceive the deficit vote as portending disaster.
The unemployment rate dropped because of people dropping out of the Labor Pool. Also known as the Labor Force Participation Rate - it has dropped to a 25+ year low of less than 64% of those able to work who actually are. Granted some don't want to work BUT the true Unemployment Rate is at 20% or higher proving once again that the easiest way to Lower the Unemployment rate is to change the way the rate is defined.
Also, if someone works as little as 1 hour per day, they are considered as employed. In the light of the trend towards part time and temporary jobs. the old way of calculating unemployment does not suffice as a descriptor under today's conditions.
We're being intentionally turned into a citizenry of walking skeletons.
Proposal -- Give corporations a voluntary 2 percent tax cut if they'll pass that amount plus a matching 2 percent from their obscene cash holdings on to the rank and file in the form of wage increases. If spending is the key (which is another argument altogether...) then people need more to spend. We're in a self-feeding feedback loop and if we choose to stick to the growth economy instead of a sustainable economy, then it's the wages, stupid.
"Proposal -- Give corporations a voluntary 2 percent tax cut if they'll pass that amount plus a matching 2 percent from their obscene cash holdings on to the rank and file in the form of wage increases." Fat chance of that happening any time soon. The Corps. DO NOT want Americans on their payrolls unless they have extraordinary skill levels in some rare specialty or are f*cking the bosses daughter or both.
It's not the policies that are failing, it's capitalism that's failing.
Let's start by nationalising all the banks.
Read and heed.
Mr. NAFTA tells us how to fix the economy. Precious!
Obama got 90 percent of what he wanted--more WS graft.
Direct democracy
Dick Cheney said "Deficits don't matter." This was "the way" just last administration. The sharp shooter VP was parroting an idea put forward years ago by Irving Kristol, the Godfather of the neoconservatives. Kristol wrote then, and still believes, that "We should figure out what we want before we calculate what we can afford, not the reverse."
On the political level, treating deficits as a non-issue also proved a successful strategy for Bushie. After all, despite the red ink that splashed across the national budgets during his first term, Dubya was reelected by a substantial margin.
Which brings us to the economic level. The deficits that Dubya ran up in the years in which the country was teetering on the verge of a serious recession had the beneficial effect of righting the economy. In that sense, deficits not only didn't matter, but were a force for economic good.
Why do the Republicans want to stall recovery and revert so quickly to a balancing act, when just years ago they adhered to "Deficits don't matter"?
I suggested in a blog post just today some of the things a new WPA might do, viz:
"But I suppose that's just too radical an idea for now. I mean, there's nothing like that we could do at present - except maybe for hiring heath care workers from doctors to nurses to pharmacists to home health aides to med techs, hiring people to work on infrastructure repair and maintenance, having people set up public wi-fi systems, expanding the library system even further, working on ensuring affordable housing, helping with recycling of everything from paper to plastics to electronics, doing actual research journalism, supporting small publishers, independent filmmakers, and independent music labels, working as outreach to the elderly (who after all will be increasing in number as the Boomers continue to gray), working to reclaim areas scarred by mountaintop-removal mining, working on small-tech projects like A Liter Of Light, organizing public archives for libraries and museums, working with seeing-eye dogs and other assistance animals, helping to rescue dogs and cats and spay/neuter them and find 'em homes, repairing flood/hurricane/tornado damage, building levees that don't leak, helping to ensure coastal communities can deal with erosion and rising water levels, acting as tutors/home school teachers/counselors, helping to put public records and old books/newspapers/magazines into accessible digital form, proofreading manuscripts and OCR scans, working with cities to promote and create green spaces and public parks...
and that's all just off the top of my head."
It'd never get past the Teabaggers and the go-along-to-get-along Wall Street Democrats, but we can always hope.
Robert Reich will soon suffocate from consuming his own crap if he doesn't get his head out of his ASS.
>
Reich, cut out the partisan duopolistic crap. The Democrats suck and you know it. This B.S. about our economy is not a "Republican Problem". BOTH party's ONLY care about Capital, not Labor. Stop being an elite academic, Democratic hack!
Both parties talk JOBS but have No Program to put people to work. I remember the WPA of my youth. Not only did it put millions back to work it built bridges, repaired roads, create art.
The wealthy have gotten used to getting 90% of everything. For example, for every dollar of "growth", the top 1% in income get 88¢ while the rest of us, 99%, get to share the other 12¢. That means about a tenth of a cent apiece, on average. I venture a guess that the average is meaningless and that most of the 12¢ goes to the top few percentage of the population, leaving the majority out in the cold, getting nothing but higher prices and more insecurity.
Growth without economic justice and jobs means next to nothing for most of us.
As long as the Chinese and others in emerging economies are willing to work for $35 per week, the top one percent will continue to rake in all the money while the western economies crash.
"Call it the Republican’s double-dip recession."
No, Professor Reich, I'll call it the tri-partisan, neo-liberal, "free trade" class-split-level Recession/DEPRESSION--aided as much by the continual betrayals of DLC arch-traitors to the working-class like Bill Clinton, Nancy Pelosi, Harry Reid and Barrack Obama as by GOP John Boner and the file-toothed pygmy cannibals of the Koch Piss Party.
Wealth Spread
Jobs are gone but the needs abound
Rutted roads and the bridges downed;
Even the states are now so broke
They too are forced to fire folk.
Even our teachers fear the axe
And politicians fear to tax.
But private bucks in coffers grow
And CEOs won’t let them go;
The banks are flush but risk averse
New ideas are denied the purse:
Startups that could hire many
Can’t find the help to hire any.
Let’s move the wealth from he who hoards
And give a grant to budding Fords.
They’re the folks who need some aid
To make the jobs and wages paid.
The big guys must know sure enough
We all need jobs to buy their stuff.
What is the answer to our woe?
I think that I know where to go:
Cayman cash has immunity
With thanks to lobbies goes scot-free;
Subsidies to make fuel from grain
And the low taxed capital gain;
A cent or so for sale of stock
Would never put Chuck Schwab in hock.
There is no need for war of class
All will gain when the wealth can pass.
For zero-sum sums not the game
Expanding pie’s the better name.