Wednesday’s Presidential Debate and Friday’s Jobs Report
The biggest election news this week won’t be who wins the presidential debate Wednesday night. It will be how many new jobs were created in September, announced Friday morning by the Bureau of Labor Statistics.
Rarely in the history has the monthly employment carried so much political significance. If the payroll survey is significantly more than 96,000 –- the number of new jobs created in August — President Obama can credibly claim the job situation is improving. If significantly fewer than 96,000, Mitt Romney has the more credible claim that the economy isn’t improving.
August’s household survey showed the overall rate of unemployment to be 8.1 percent in August – not bad, relative to previous rates – but that was mainly because so many Americans had stopped looking for work. (You’re deemed “unemployed” only if you don’t have a full-time job and you’re looking for work; if you’ve given up looking, you’re not counted.)
What happened to jobs in August or September – and what will happen in October (announced November 2, just days before Election Day) – have very little to do with what Obama did or didn’t do. Presidents have little to do with month-to-month changes in employment.
What’s more, the rest of the world isn’t cooperating: Much of Europe is in recession because it’s swallowed the “austerity” cool-aide. Japan is still a basket case. And China is slowing considerably.
In addition, Obama has had to grapple with a recalcitrant Republican congress, whose “number one goal,” according to Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell, hasn’t been to create more jobs but to make sure Obama doesn’t get a second term.
Still, evidence is accumulating that the U.S. economy has stalled. According to Commerce Department data released late last week, the economy grew at an annualized rate of only 1.3 percent between April and June. That’s down from 2 percent in the first quarter of the year. Consumer spending rose in August just .1 percent, after adjusting for inflation. Orders for durable goods (cars, TVs, other long-lasting manufactured products) dropped 13 percent, the biggest monthly drop in three years. And because incomes grew less than spending, the savings rate dropped to 3.7 percent — the lowest since April.
Consumers say they’re more confident about the future – and that’s a key measure for how they’re likely to vote. But the disturbing reality is paychecks continue to shrink. Disposable income (the money left over after taxes) dropped 0.3 percent after adjusting for inflation. That’s the weakest reading since November.
America is still in the gravitational pull of the Great Recession. That’s because consumer spending is 70 percent of economic activity, and the nation’s vast middle class doesn’t have enough money to get the economy back on track. (The rich spend a much smaller proportion of their incomes, and their savings go around the world to wherever they can summon the highest return.)
Republicans have no answers. To the contrary, Romney’s reverse-Robin Hood economics would shrink the middle class even further, and put a huge burden on the poor.
But the economic policies Obama says he’d like to pursue in his second term aren’t nearly large or bold enough to do the job.
The median wage has been stuck in neutral for decades. Since the 1980s, almost all the gains from economic growth have gone to the top. The stagnation of middle-class wages was first masked by millions of women moving into paid work, thereby propping up household incomes. Then it was masked by massive household borrowing against rising home values.
But the bubble that burst in 2008 has removed both masks. The economy can’t fully recover until the middle class and the poor who aspire to join it have enough income to get it moving. For this to happen, they will need a larger share of the gains from economic growth.
Perhaps the President will be asked Wednesday night for his plan to accomplish this.
This article was originally posted on Robert Reich's blog.
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4 comments on "Wednesday’s Presidential Debate and Friday’s Jobs Report"
October 01, 2012 8:25pm
As we use less fuel and more info, our economy will seem to 'contract' even as our actual well-being may increase. Commenter Greg has identified one likely principal feature of such an economy: mass urban ag. Even for a no-growth economy Reich's main point (suitably amended) still holds: the fruits of beneficial economic innovation need to be shared more widely.
October 01, 2012 1:55pm
Perhaps the notion that we always have to grow, expand, keep climbing the latter, progress, as we continuously live towards reaching the future, is a dead road.
Look at all the things we are loosing in this endless quest: the death of our planet, the disintegration of the social fabric (the family), the unending infringement of technology in our lives as we live in a future oriented society that hardly has time to reflect.
How are we living the present?
Are we fully aware of our actions and how they affect others?
Why do we need have to have more and more?
The new normal is this unending struggle to move towards the future.
What happened to today and enjoying the simple things.
Americans will remain wanting and lonely as they continue to repeat the same mistakes over and over.
October 01, 2012 12:44pm
Economic growth is dead. Ecological collapse is too far along and we have no rural population to urbanize (except immigrants from Latin America) What we need is more employment with less dollars sloshing around. That means a return to urban agriculture is about the only way to support our communities.
October 01, 2012 10:55am
Interesting that the "job creators" are the ones love to take credit for rising employment, but the downside numbers all belong to the president. The president actually has very little impact on the rate of hiring, and I think we can safely dismiss the notion that regulatory and tax uncertainty is causing those poor, poor job creators from doing what it is that they do so well..... I think we can also dismiss the idea hat the 1% are the same as the entrepreneur class. They by and large are not. If there is money to be made, I suspect someone will try and make it, taxes or regulatory structures be damned.
If the presumption that business is IN business to serve the needs of people, and that is the model that led us to our burgeoning middle class after WW II, It is reasonable for "the people" to set reasonable limits and rules on the conduct of that business. If businessmen (and women) are true to their creed, they can and will serve the needs of their clients and customers within the confines of the laws that "the people" have instituted BECAUSE they are reasonable and necessary. Read some history. The reason that we instituted regulatory regimes in the first place is because of the historic excesses of capital. That this "news" seems to fall into a memory hole every generation, condemning us to repeating idiocy like the 2008 meltdown, (There are still alive amongst us that can remember the great depression AND THE REASONS FOR IT), would almost be baffling were it not for the evidence of concerted efforts to drag us back to the Gilded age and all the lovely excess that was afforded to the moneyed class.
When you hear some mook like tom delay say that he thinks that the regimented sweatshop and privatized everything model in Saipan is the model he would love to see in the US mainland, (and that is what he indeed said), believe him.