From my buddy's blog: The Intellectual Conservative
(By Gary Hancock)
* * *
The Bureau of Labor Statistics recently released the
national employment situation showing the unemployment rate to be 4.9% as of
January 2016, a drop of .1% from December 2015. For the same one-month period,
non-farm payroll employment increased by 151,000.
* U6 IS CURRENTLY RUNNING 9.9% - AND THAT'S UNDERSTATED -
NOT TRULY REFLECTIVE OF WHAT THE REALITY REALLY MEANS TO FAR TOO MANY OF OUR
FELLOW CITIZENS.
After six years of sluggish recovery from the severe
recession of 2007-09, Obama immediately trumpeted the latest BLS release and
spoke of the causal success of his policies.
On the surface those statistics seem laudable. But how do
those statistics square with reality and, in contrast, how do they compare to
the recovery after the last severe recession; that of 1980-82?
* WELL... FIRST OF ALL... ALMOST ALL OF THE
"GROWTH" IN EMPLOYMENT WENT TO LEGAL/ILLEGAL IMMIGRANTS/INVADERS.
(*SMIRK*)
Ronald Reagan became president in 1981 and faced a bad
recession early in his presidency. Barack Obama became president in 2009 during
a bad recession which continued through the early part of his presidency (even
though many feel that the 2007-09 recession continued to linger for years after
it was officially declared over).
* IT NEVER ENDED! (THANK GOD FOR THE CURRENT RELATIVELY
LOW FUEL PRICES!)
Reagan’s approach to countering economic recessions and
helping create an environment for job growth was very different from that of
Barack Obama.
Reagan re-initiated basic capitalist principles by cutting
taxes and easing regulations; while Obama advanced progressive doctrines and
instigated stealthy taxes (like the twenty new or higher taxes imbedded in the
healthcare legislation, aka ObamaCare), and continued adding hundreds of
thousands of pages in new regulations.
We are now at a time roughly six years after the 2007-09
recession officially ended. Let’s take the job growth data during the past six
years and that of the same six-year period following the 1980-82 recession and
see how they compare:
Reagan’s job growth for the 73 months after the 1980-82
recession showed an increase in absolute numbers of 18.4 million. That was very
near 5 million more jobs than Obama in terms of absolute numbers.
However, it is important to acknowledge that the Reagan
cumulative number occurred during a time when the total work force was much
smaller – some 25% smaller than now. That means... Reagan’s job growth was much
more significant than even the greater 5 million raw number would indicate!
* YEP!
After "normalizing" for the size of the work
force, the Reagan 73 month recovery, then, shows a whopping increase of 23
million equivalent jobs.
The Obama "job recovery" barely kept up with
the number of new entrants into the work force, and was below it for the first
three years after the recession.
Contrast Obama’s line to that of Reagan’s. Reagan’s job
recovery was strong almost immediately. In fact, just a few months after the
recession ended, 1.1 million jobs (absolute number) were added for a single
month in September 1983. That eclipsed anything Obama could claim during the
comparable recovery period even with Obama’s much larger total population and
available labor force with which to work.
Subsequent to any economic recession it’s no stretch to
expect that job growth should exceed the bare minimum needed to keep pace with
new entrants. In fact, we might define ‘real’ growth as anything greater than
that minimum. Obama’s six year cumulative growth resulted in a relatively small
number of jobs created beyond that needed to satisfy the number of new
entrants.
In contrast, the Reagan job recovery was a huge 550%
stronger than the Obama job recovery in terms of numbers greater than the
minimum needed to keep pace with new entrants. We can call that the ‘real’ job
growth story; Obama’s growth barely kept pace, while Reagan’s growth blew away
the numbers.
As mentioned above, the BLS reported the much heralded
4.9% unemployment rate (known as U-3) in its latest release. That is the
‘official’ rate and the rate repeated by Obama and the media, even though the
BLS also tallies another number known as U-6 that many regard as a truer
picture of unemployment. The U-6 percentage, which began being kept in 1994,
includes ‘marginally attached’ and those persons working part time because a
full time job is not available. More than double the official unemployment
percentage, the U-6 percentage was reported at 9.9% in January 2016.
* YEP. JUST AS I NOTED ABOVE INITIALLY.
That’s a large number of people still unemployed or
underemployed.
(Also... that percentage was based on ‘seasonal
adjustments’ while the unmassaged or raw percentage for January 2016 was 10.5%.)
Other than the U-6 being at times a politically pesky,
yet more accurate, job statistic, there is another statistic that frustrates
the singular unemployment number touted by Obama (and politicians generally).
That statistic is the labor participation rate. That rate captures the number
of persons employed and unemployed (the labor force) relative to the total
population (civilian non-institutional, 16 years of age and older). A rising
percentage indicates a larger labor force relative to the population; a
declining percentage indicates a smaller labor force.
Following an economic recession, a declining unemployment
rate with a simultaneously increasing participation rate would indicate a
stronger job-growth recovery. So, let’s consider and contrast the two
recoveries we’re reviewing:
During Obama’s job recovery, the labor participation rate
had a declining trend: about 66% immediately before the 2007-09 recession, to
about 62.7% about six years after the recession officially ended. That occurred
while the unemployment rate was also dropping.
(While some suggest that the declining participation rate
is attributable to larger numbers of retirees dropping out of the labor market,
the actual statistical impact of that age group is minute as it affects the
participation rate overall as reported by Forbes.)
The declining participation rate was more indicative of
large numbers of people not entering the labor market and/or leaving the labor
market altogether (both likely due to lackluster job prospects overall). The
combination of the decreasing labor participation rate and the simultaneously
decreasing unemployment rate is not what is identified above as being a strong
job-growth recovery. In fact, it could indicate a nullification of any job
growth at all; while, at best, it indicates a very lethargic job recovery.
* YEP...
During Reagan’s job recovery the labor participation rate
had an upward trend: about 64% right before the 1980-82 recession, to about
66.5% about six years after the recession ended.
(*STANDING OVATION*)
That upward trending participation rate occurred while
the unemployment rate was declining.
(That is exactly the right combination indicative of a
strong job recovery!)
Job growth after the recent recession is a testament to
the strength and resilience of American businessmen and businesswomen, and to
the capitalistic will of the American people in general, not to Obama’s
policies as he would have us believe.
Those businesspersons managed to overcome the Obama
excesses of big government, high taxes and mountains of regulations to add
sufficient jobs to keep pace with the growth in population (new entrants into
the job market) and eke out small additional growth, according to the
government’s monthly data for non-farm payroll employment.
* AGAIN... FOLKS... JOBS GOING NOT TO AMERICAN CITIZENS
BUT TO LEGAL AND ILLEGAL ALIENS...
(*SIGH*)
...AIN'T NOTHING TO BRAG ABOUT.
(*PURSED LIPS*)
What we term real growth during that recovery period,
however, was held to extremely mediocre gains because of Obama’s progressive,
oppressive policies. In doing the math, Obama’s six-year cumulative job growth
greater than what kept pace with new entrants was a puny .27% average annual
rate.
* AND THAT'S THE "HAPPY VIEW."
Why should Americans settle for the new paradigm of such
trivial growth that the policies of Obama and his progressive/Keynesian
economists will continue to induce?
Reagan proved that the capitalistic combination of lower
taxes and modest regulations is the spark needed to generate an environment for
robust job growth. We need that Reagan-capitalist spark now.
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