After seeing yesterday’s opinion piece at CNN from David Frum (See this blog post), I wasn’t quite as surprised to see another opinion piece today on the lack of jobs. Of course, today’s (Tuesday, April 26) from Eugene Robinson at the Washington Post probably won’t get much play because Robinson tends to be liberal and we all know liberals aren’t considered Very Serious People, so can easily be ignored. Nevertheless, Robinson does have a platform at the Washington Post, so he might get read and even acknowledged as having some right behind his words:
What is it about the word “jobs” that our nation’s leaders fail to understand? How has the most painful economic crisis in decades somehow escaped their notice? Why do they ignore the issues that Americans care most desperately about?
Listening to the debate in Washington, you’d think the nation was absorbed by the compelling saga of deficit reduction. You’d get the impression that in households across America, parents put their children to bed and then stay up half the night sifting through piles of think-tank reports on the kitchen table, trying to calculate whether there will be enough in the Social Security trust fund to pay benefits beyond 2037.
And you’d be wrong. Those parents are looking at a pile of bills on the kitchen table, trying to decide which ones have to be paid now and which can slide. The question isn’t how to manage health care or retirement costs two decades from now. It’s how the family can make it to the end of the month.
Unfortunately, Mr. Robinson will most likely continue to be drowned out by the drumbeat of the deficit hawks. Looking through the various news sites today, I found a couple of articles promoting deficit hawkery though in a rather subtle way. First up is this from USA Today:
Americans depended more on government assistance in 2010 than at any other time in the nation’s history, a USA TODAY analysis of federal data finds. The trend shows few signs of easing, even though the economic recovery is nearly 2 years old.
A record 18.3% of the nation’s total personal income was a payment from the government for Social Security, Medicare, food stamps, unemployment benefits and other programs in 2010. Wages accounted for the lowest share of income — 51.0% — since the government began keeping track in 1929.
The income data show how fragile and government-dependent the recovery is after a recession that officially ended in June 2009.
…snip…
Accounting for 80% of safety-net spending in 2010: Social Security, Medicare (health insurance for seniors), Medicaid (health insurance for the poor) and unemployment insurance.
The whole thrust of that article is the “drain on the government resources” theme – as I say, deficit hawkery without being quite as explicit as usual.
CNN takes a slightly different tack in this article on “tax credits.”
Today, there are dozens of tax credits, deductions and exclusions that cost federal coffers more than $1 trillion a year. That’s a little more than a third of all annual federal spending.
Sounds relatively innocuous doesn’t it? Yes it does. Until they start to list out the “Top 5″ tax credits, then it becomes a rather standard assault on the middle class. And what are those “Top 5?”
1. Health care and insurance
2. Retirement savings
3. Mortgage interest
4. Capital gains and dividends
5. Earned income tax credit
Notice how all but one of those tax credits are geared towards and most affect your average working people? Nothing about all the corporate tax credits. I’m a bit too lazy to go do all the research for this but I’d make a WAG that the reason the corporate tax credits aren’t showing is because they are all broken down to the lowest level possible, most likely by industry. Far easier to keep things looking smaller to say “Oil Industry Tax Credits” or “Technology Tax Credits” rather than just to say “Corporate Tax Credits” – makes them look far smaller than the dastardly Earned Income Tax Credit or Mortgage Interest deduction.
USA Today also had a jobs related cheerleader article here on jobs for 2011 college grads. The article starts with the good news but at least immediately follows with the bad news:
This year’s college graduates are finding a better job market than last year’s grads.
Employers plan to hire 19.3% more recent graduates this year, says a report by the National Association of Colleges and Employers. The association surveyed 174 schools from February through April.
The increase in open positions means employers have half as many applicants per job now than at this time last year: 21.1 applicants this year vs. 40.5 in 2010.
Wow! Only 21 applicants for every job! Any bets on how many of these new college grads wind up back at McDonald’s? Maybe not as many as McDonald’s was saying originally if this blog post is any indication of the reality. Oops.
And because I can:
Cross posted from Just A Small Town Country Boy




31 Comments

Does anyone even buy the notion that we are in a recovery?
It seems more like a controlled bleeding.
Remember the Dystopian 70′s B-sci fi movie ZARDOZ? The elite lived in actual glass bubble cities and were immortal. Outside these domes though evolution was still working among the peons and eventually it would find its way into their realm. This is what is now happening out here. It will take a few more generations before the elite bubble here is burst, but it will happen.
Well it is a technical term. It does not have anything to do with how it feels, if the economy is growing, that is a recovery. The job growth we’ve seen would be pretty average for any other recession, it is just when you had the economy losing 3/4 of a million jobs a month for a while, job growth like this hardly touches the surface.
heh… Sean Connery in a red bikini… what could go wrong? Zardoz had some interesting notions, I’ll give you that; some elements of the Morlock in the Time Machine but also the WiZARD of OZ. And yes, it does seem as if the upper 1% Elites appear to be as greedy, self-centered but ultimately as stifled & lacking in creativity as the Eternals.
I read this editorial today and admit to being a bit slack-jawed that *anyone* at least tangentially within the Village bubble was actually even cognizant of the JOBS situation out on Main St. ‘Course Robinson is a dreaded LIEbrul, so I’m sure that, if necessary (which it’s probably not bc who’s really paying any attention???), Robinson can be easily dismissed as a crabby crank by the PTB & tsk-tsked by the RushGlenn set.
Whatever… nice to see at least some recognition of what the real issues are, but I won’t hold my breath that it’ll make a damn bit of difference to any Politician much less to the upper 1%, who are really running the show.
Yes. Those proposed changes in the tax code reset the taxes for those who are already paying too much, even higher, by removing all of the deductions associated with health insurance and mortgages.
They control the message and the issues from DC. Even saw groups getting together to ask the Bernank questions about economy and jobs on the twitter this morning. He is to give an opinion sometime Wednesday afternoon and all eyes are expected to be on him and how he intends to handle his duty of creating jobs.
Yes, I agree that it’s a technical term. But the underlying statistics are crap.
Garbage in, garbage out.
Anecdotal story: I just returned from my semi-annual cruise on what we call the EXXON-MOBIL yacht ( the owner is a retired EXXON -MOBIL ex. VP and family friend) on this trip we cruised for a week in the Bahamas after coming over from West Palm Beach. While in the Bahamas he noticed how dead it was compared to before the bubble burst in 2008, he hadn’t been back since. I asked him why he thought it was so dead now and his answer was that, it was the fault of the Bahamian Gov’t because they’d laid on a heavy visitors tax of $350.00 per boat since 2008 & diesel prices were high. When I countered that I thought just maybe it was because they’d lost almost half their business since the US was still mired in a Recession he said, how’s that the market is soaring etc. et al. He cannot get his head out of the bubble, he watches Fox day and night and reads the Wall st. journal and resists any other explanation for why obviously things are still so depressed. He also whines about the fact that in his world-view half of the population doesn’t pay any taxes etc. ( which is of course BS.) As for the unemployed he says they are the real reason why things are depressed because they won’t work and want to live on welfare instead. No amount of countering each one of these Fox lies with the actual facts worked. Oh, he did sit up when I showed him a Bloomberg report on his lap top saying that the top 400 taxpayer paid less then then the next tier down ( of which he belongs). His answer was an exasperated, Hey they should pay more then me, that’s NOT FAIR!” I then said, well Bob I guess that makes you a Progressive then. He answered, why? I explained and he got a big smirk on his face. What I’ve learned in our ongoing dialog with my arch-conservative friend over the last 7 yrs. is that Conservative propaganda is self reinforcing at some very deep level. That Fox and reactionary talk radio know exactly who and what their doing to these folks and it’s friggin scary to witness. No matter how I countered their BS in the end my pal was back into their world-view within a few more mins. It reminded me of the famous Star Trek episode where Kirk’s pal is zapped by radiation of some strange alien sort and starts to morph into a demi-God complete with the powers of one and only jolting him with increasing amounts of intense energy weapons brought him back to the human level. Eventually though the character Gary would get even stronger and the period of normality were of less duration. Oh and the further Gary got away from being human the more demoniac he become. Kirk eventually had to KILL him before he killed the whole Enterprise’s crew. My pal Bob is like Gary except in some ways, fortunately for us he’s 83 and killing himself with alcohol so no jolting is necessary in this demi-Gods case. Still it makes me believe that Chris Hedges and Noam Chomsky are right ONLY a for real Revolution will unseat the present elite and in America that is IMO not even a remote possibility in the short.
If we are in a recovery I want someone to give us facts and figures because it surely doesn’t feel like good times to me. There are empty stores every where here and that’s not a recovery.
Another problem, and why more unemployed just take it on the chin without complaint, is that THEY also watch Fox and listen to right-wing radio. Conservative propaganda is not only ubiquitous, it’s everywhere.
Five or six percent of the jobs in the US have disappeared and show few signs of coming back.
One of every 20 workers in this country has been written off by the elites.
Of both parties.
A better headline for that USA Today piece would be Private Economy Fails Record Number of People.
The “recovery” is pretty much limited to the stock markets and corporate profits
You know, the only things that matter to the Beltway Village
IdiotsPundits and politiciansLet the jobless eat cake and if they can’t afford that catfood. The guillotine is too good for the A holes in DC.
Ask your friend the next time you see him if he values his head.
“35 Facts That Show Just How Much The Average American Has Been Destroyed By This Economy (BusinessInsider.Com, Apr. 24, 2011)
Good piece. Thanks.
I have to admit anytime I am driving around town and my radio finds its way to the local NPR station or the drive time AM station and I hear the reporters starting to talk about the stock market, I immediately turn it off.
It is as if some small subset of this country lives in its own delusional bubble and don’t understand that regardless of how well Wall St. is doing, it doesn’t translate into a vibrant domestic economy.
It is a shame that it is going to take until 2016 or whenever when the US loses its place as the largest economy for us to realize that the powers that be around hollowing us out.
It is sad that everyone (who can) goes out and buys crap like iPads and watches their purchase fly directly from China to their front door and they feel OK about it.
When is this going to stop?
An insurance premium is collected as a payroll tax and benefits that are paid out are less than the premium -
in any other world this would be called a good and safe system -
but our media goes deeper and deeper into the pocket of the GOP with this USAToday “analysis”
“the economic recovery is nearly 2 years old” ???? – and the rate of unemployment is back to 5% – ??? – I did not notice this because it has not happen.
“Americans depended more on government assistance in 2010 than at any other time in the nation’s history” – - and the we count benefit payments from the insurance plan above that is paid for via a payroll tax as “a payment from the government” – well, at least they did not use the word welfare.
Grover Norquist feed them the article and its analysis – and these folks that call themselves journalists feel no shame in giving the lie airtime.
May God forgive our media because I am having a hard time doing so.
As to “Wages accounted for the lowest share of income — 51.0% — since the government began keeping track in 1929″, perhaps massively increased investment income for the rich, together with no jobs, is the problem? But USAToday would rather imply that 49% of “income” is welfare. What a bunch of unethical and stupid and incompetent fools we have at USAToday.
I bet old Bob has always has had his hand out for higher wages more benifits and higher profits as long as Bob was climbing the letter of sucess.I’m sure old Bob has taken advanage of everything a USA worker should have and now with Bob’s security Bob wants more and if it takes deeper cuts in the USA’s worker’s Wages,Benifits,Health Care,Edication,ect.Bobs investments are doing ok.I would bet that Bob’s helping build China and supporting slave labor somewhere.Bob sounds like he’s ok with tearing down the stairs(services we all use for a better life)and digging up the fondation (Jobs and Benifits not at surviveal wages but at liveable wages)that is what was in place for Bob on the climb to sucess.Worse is when you see 60 and 65 year olds with Bob’s greed for Upper Middle Class in cash only.
from a recent email from Senator Hagan – Democrat from NC:
“Like you, I believe our expanding deficits and mounting debt are the most pressing issues facing our nation.”
+++++++++++++++
Of course, I wrote to her and said that I was concerned about the lack of jobs, and said the deficits and debt do not bother me.
Not for thinking, apparently.
The “Thank you, we knew we could count on you for your support” letter is on its way…
They don’t need to watch Fox. CNN is parroting it quite nicely, and it doesn’t have the bad reputation (yet).
We don’t have much choice about stuff made in China – what isn’t from here is from India or Thailand.
I think it is a mistake to include he mortgage interest deduction in this group. While it does help many of the middle class (including me) over 90% of its benefits go to those who earn more than $250,000 a year. It is a worthy candidate for tax reform.
must read: SEVEN DEADLY INNOCENT FRAUDS OF ECONOMIC POLICY by warren mosler.
…..
thanks for the diary. rec’ed
Stop shopping. It is that important. Buy what you need (blankets, backpacks, clothing)from thrift stores only. The goods there may be made in China and Thailand but your money isn’t going back there; it’s being used locally.
And start learning to grow as much of your own food as possible. You will be surprised what a difference it makes even just to grow chard and kale in tubs by a sunny window or on the front porch. Investigate who locally, and there will always be someone, has a few chickens and sells eggs. Locally.
And forget that garbage about the latest phone that does everything. Though I don’t now, I have lived without a phone – it can be done! Have a landline now for a slowpoke computer from the iceage, and for local calls (the computer does the rest.)
Think small – life will become the fun challenge it should be.
As I understand it, (and that is very little), the economy is “growing” because of Bernanke’s QE2, and not anything to do with jobs figures, which everyone knows are a manipulation and fancy dance project. Bernanke’s QE2 pumped up the stock market because he put or is putting $600 Billion into federal securities, which somehow (this is what I don’t completely understand but I’m not an economist) benefits the riskier investments like commodities and all the bad guys while it penalizes the general public by causing inflationary gas prices to rise and the like. And so, I have read, the economy will contract to reflect that we are still in a Depression after all.
Now, the QE2 business is due to end in June.
What I get from this is a vague understanding of why the stock market is ‘doing so well.’ It’s being propped up by that strange beast, QE2. Fitting I guess, with all the hoopla about the royal wedding.
Somehow the ‘we need more jobs’ has become a ‘bleeding heart’ argument rather than an economic argument.
It’s like ‘we’ need to do something for ‘them’ as if available paid work is some kind of charitable donation to the person who does the work to get a paycheck.
In fact, in a good economy people working in the private sector produce more than they get paid, or the company gets hurt. That is, the benefit to the economy from people doing the work exceeds their paychecks, or they don’t get jobs in the first place.
The economic argument is to suspend FICA, that regressive, punishing tax on people working for a living, and get sales up to where the private sector hires people for a net gain for all of us. And not to neglect the necessity of a first rate public infrastructure to keep it all running as smoothly and efficiently as possible.
Warren Mosler
http://www.moslereconomics.com