From Hope ‘n Change to ‘Catastrophe’

by Crocker on February 15, 2009, 9:09 pm

in Politics

I’m getting sick of our new president’s unrelenting rhetoric of catastrophe. It’s cheap, cynical and low. It’s the stuff of slick demagogues, of street agitators and bullies. I’m beginning to think that he learned everything he knows about statesmanship at ACORN.

And now Bradley Schiller comes up with the hard data to refute O’s catastrophe-mongering. As I’ve been nattering for months, what we’re experiencing is no Great Depression (although it could be if the current Washington ineptitude continues). The closest parallel to the current distress is the Recession of 1981-82 and Schiller provides the stats to back it up:

This fearmongering may be good politics, but it is bad history and bad economics. It is bad history because our current economic woes don’t come close to those of the 1930s. At worst, a comparison to the 1981-82 recession might be appropriate. Consider the job losses that Mr. Obama always cites. In the last year, the U.S. economy shed 3.4 million jobs. That’s a grim statistic for sure, but represents just 2.2% of the labor force. From November 1981 to October 1982, 2.4 million jobs were lost — fewer in number than today, but the labor force was smaller. So 1981-82 job losses totaled 2.2% of the labor force, the same as now.

Job losses in the Great Depression were of an entirely different magnitude. In 1930, the economy shed 4.8% of the labor force. In 1931, 6.5%. And then in 1932, another 7.1%. Jobs were being lost at double or triple the rate of 2008-09 or 1981-82.

This was reflected in unemployment rates. The latest survey pegs U.S. unemployment at 7.6%. That’s more than three percentage points below the 1982 peak (10.8%) and not even a third of the peak in 1932 (25.2%). You simply can’t equate 7.6% unemployment with the Great Depression.

Other economic statistics also dispel any analogy between today’s economic woes and the Great Depression. Real gross domestic product (GDP) rose in 2008, despite a bad fourth quarter. The Congressional Budget Office projects a GDP decline of 2% in 2009. That’s comparable to 1982, when GDP contracted by 1.9%. It is nothing like 1930, when GDP fell by 9%, or 1931, when GDP contracted by another 8%, or 1932, when it fell yet another 13%.

So, Mr. President, enough already. You’re scaring the horses.

Related posts:

  1. Hope ‘n Change’s Bad Week – Protectionism
  2. Hope ‘n Change’s Bad Week – The ‘Stimulus’ Bill
  3. Hope ‘n Change’s Bad Week – The ‘Cracker Line’ to Afghanistan
  4. Change You Can Believe In

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