Growing Unemployment Lines May Threaten Obama’s Economic Success

June 22nd, 2009 (13) Posted By Erik Wong.

unemployment-line2

The Washington Times:

Despite signs that the recession gripping the nation’s economy may be easing, the unemployment rate is projected to continue rising for another year before topping out in double digits, a prospect that threatens to slow growth, increase poverty and further complicate the Obama administration’s message of optimism about the economic outlook.

The likelihood of severe unemployment extending into the 2010 midterm elections and beyond poses a significant political hurdle to President Obama and congressional Democrats, who are already under fire for what critics label profligate spending. Continuing high unemployment rates would undercut the fundamental argument behind much of that spending: the promise that it will create new jobs and improve the prospects of working Americans, which Obama has called the ultimate measure of a healthy economy.

“Our hope would be to actually create some jobs this year,” Obama said in an interview with The Washington Post in the days before taking office.

Obama has defended his economic approach — which includes the $787 billion economic stimulus plan and record investments in health care, alternative energy, education and job training — as necessary to stabilize the shaky economy and point the way to job growth.

So far, the White House has counseled patience even as the political debate surrounding its economic policies grows more urgent. Officials point out that job growth will not come until robust economic expansion takes hold, which they expect will happen as stimulus funding works its way through the economy. Still, the flagging job market is likely to stir calls for further stimulus efforts as polls show voters growing increasingly wary of federal spending in the wake of a costly series of financial- and auto-industry bailouts and amid current efforts to expand health-care coverage to the uninsured, which is estimated to cost at least $1 trillion over the next decade.

With many forecasters projecting unemployment to remain above 10 percent next year and not return to pre-recession levels of roughly 5 percent for years after that, Obama is likely to be confronted with defending the effectiveness of his economic policies as the nation endures its worst employment situation in a generation.

Analysts say the high levels of joblessness would be accompanied by increases in child poverty, strained government budgets, and black and Latino unemployment rates approaching 20 percent.

“I find it unfathomable that people are not horrified about what is going to happen,” said Lawrence Mishel, president of the Economic Policy Institute. “I regard all this talk about how the recession is maybe going to end, all the talk about deficits and inflation, to be the equivalent of telling Americans, ‘You are just going to have to tough it out.’ But we’re looking at persistent unemployment that is going to be extraordinarily damaging to many communities. There is a ton of pain in the pipeline.”

Christina Romer, chairman of the Council of Economic Advisers, said that while the president is “very concerned” about the unemployment forecasts, the White House has assumed “a posture of watchful waiting,” adding: “There will be big increases in stimulus spending in the fall and early next year. We have to wait to see what happens with that. If you get to the end of this year or early next year and employment is still limping back, then we have to do some serious thinking about whether there might be special problems in the labor market that require targeted interventions.”

Before passage of the stimulus bill, the Obama administration had predicted that unemployment would peak at 8 percent before beginning to abate this fall. But unemployment has already reached 9.4 percent, the highest level in a quarter-century, and the situation is not projected to start improving until long after the White House had predicted.

Many economists agree that the job market would be in much worse shape had the stimulus package not been enacted. And some say more stimulus measures may be needed, even as the federal government grapples with a huge budget deficit.

“There is a good economic argument to be made that the government has not done enough stimulus,” said Niko Karvounis, a policy analyst at the New America Foundation who recently wrote a report warning that the economic recovery is likely to be tepid and accompanied by unusually high unemployment.

But with polls showing increasing public opposition to government spending and with no significant constituency mobilized to push for more government investment in jobs, the political prospects for any further stimulus legislation seem slim. Meanwhile, the continued rise in unemployment is creating an opening for Republican critics, who have criticized the level of spending Obama has pursued to try to fix the economy.

“They even predicted that if we passed it quickly, unemployment wouldn’t go higher than 8 percent. Well, here we are just a few months later and the unemployment rate is approaching 10 percent,” said Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.). “The administration admits that their earlier predictions were a guess — and that they guessed wrong.”

Obama tersely acknowledged in an interview with Bloomberg Television last week that unemployment is likely to peak above 10 percent. That prediction is in line with a growing number of respected economic forecasts, including those of private economists and the Congressional Budget Office, which projects that the unemployment rate will continue to rise into the second half of next year.

“Unemployment won’t peak until this time next year, and then it will remain very high through next year,” said Mark Zandi, chief economist for Moody’s Economy.com. “It won’t get back to full employment until 2013 or 2014. This really speaks to the severity of the job losses that have been absorbed by the economy. They were massive.”

Since the recession took hold in December 2007, the U.S. economy has lost 5.7 million jobs, a rapid decline that caught administration and other economists off guard. In recent months, the velocity of job losses has slowed substantially, which, combined with a rising stock market and increases in consumer spending, has offered hope that a recovery is beginning to take hold.

But employers still cut 345,000 jobs last month, while the nation’s growing working-age population requires the job market to expand by 125,000 to 150,000 a month just to keep the unemployment rate stable.

The dynamics of the modern economy further dim the employment picture. Job growth was weak for years after the past two recessions, in 1991 and 2001. Employers have grown increasingly slow to rehire workers, and steady advances in technology have allowed businesses to do more with fewer workers.

While the recession has touched workers across the spectrum, “many of the job losses are in manufacturing and construction, affecting less-educated workers and immigrants,” Zandi said. “It is going to be hard for them to find their way back into the workforce quickly.”

Meanwhile, the current recession has been characterized by the implosion of the housing market and the near collapse of the financial sector and automobile industry. Despite huge federal interventions, many of the jobs in those industries are gone for good.

High unemployment also does not bode well for consumer spending, which accounts for about 70 percent of the nation’s economic activity, putting further pressure on the job market.

“We have not seen the highest unemployment rate, and this is going to go on for a long time,” Mishel said. “The political conversation seems to be that we have already dealt with the recession. But we need to have a conversation about how we are going to get to the other side, where employment is growing again.”

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  • Trialdog

    Pretty surreal article. It’s almost as if some of the people are feigning surprise at Obama’s success. His plans are working as they are supposed to. Unemployment will continue to rise, the dollar will become weaker, energy will become very expensive, more people will lose their homes.
    Obama is succeeding with his plan to destroy free market capitalism. We are experiencing the result. This is what he promised and what people voted for. Why are articles like this being written? Why would anyone express concern over what the people voted for? The media tells us his plans are wildly popular.
    If there is a surprise with Obama, it is the extent to which he has gutted our foreign policy. We don’t have one at all.
    One caveat. Tomorrow Obama will come out in support of freedom in Iran. He’s waited long enough now that it looks like the kids will win so Obama wants to be on the winning side, take credit, and bask in his glory.

    • USNA1985

      Amen brother!! :beer: :beer:

  • Xavier

    “He’s waited long enough now that it looks like the kids will win so Obama wants to be on the winning side, take credit, and bask in his glory.”

    What do you expect from someone who has voted “Present” all his life.

  • http://www.Dissent-From-Day-One.com DissentFromDayOneDOTcom

    The plan is to destroy America … there won’t be any economic rebound.

    And the sheeple will go baaaaa baaaaa for their messiah.

    What a disgrace.

    God, Gold, Guns, Grain, and…….Girls. :)

  • Sully

    Man that Romer is a fucking idiot… “…special problems in the labor market that may require targeted intervention…”.
    WTF?
    IT’S CALLED UNEMPLOYMENT DUMBASS!!

    These fucks will make Jimmah Cahtah look like a fucking genius.

  • ji

    This is just a way to make ob look good when things are actually going to hell.
    This isnt reporting, this is propaganda.

  • Fred

    If you were a business, entrepreneur, or a project manager looking at an environment with new taxes, new regulations, cap and trade, and so much more (Card Check anyone?) what do you suppose your Hurdle Rate would be on your spreadsheets?

    I work as a securities’ analyst for a small firm. I can tell you authoritatively that it was Obonga’s economy two weeks before the election. The recession actually started in December of ’07, and by the time of the Fall of last year it was being exacerbated by what was being anticipated.

    Obonga is doing everything that FDR did to prolong the Depression that Herbert Hoover (another statist and protectionist)got going in earnest.

    You don’t get an economy growing by taking money out of the economy and then inefficiently recycling it back into the economy. Some targeted fiscal stimulus, applied in a timely and efficient manner, can help. But you need to pare back taxes. Obonga is doing everything that will make things worse.

  • billy_bonney

    ‘ECONOMIC SUCCESS’????? :shock: :shock: :shock:

    Exactly what the hell is the author of this article talking about “economic success” is it the 9% unemployment rate, the stock market again below the 8,500 mark, rising gas prices or the train load of debt this idiot in the WH and the capitol hill commies put us into?

    Billy

  • Mark Gibbons

    Know is the time for all good men to come to the aid of their party. More ammo please.

  • Mark Gibbons

    Now not know. It was 2:30 A.M. could not sleep. Sorry for all my poor spelling. I should have stayed in a Holiday Inn Express last night.

  • JCD

    “Despite signs that the recession gripping the nation’s economy may be easing”

    I stopped reading there. Complete and utter BS.

  • vivi libero o muori

    This isn’t looking good. I’ve been unemployed now for 11 weeks, the longest I’ve gone without a job since I was 14 years old. Unemployment offices are too slow and too ineffective to deal with the influx of applicants. Still haven’t seen a penny. almost 3 months later. I send out resume’s daily, 3 a day, check craigslist, drive around the city knocking on doors, nothing. Obama is ruining this country. If I could, I would stockpile a few XD’s and Sig’s, as well as some canned goods, but money talks, and my wallet is mute. go figure.

  • Xavier

    vivi libero o muori

    I figured I’d mention a service I used when I was having a hard time finding a job in IT after the Dot Com bubble burst.

    http://www.jobsbyfax.com/

    I’m not affiliated with the business but upon using their services businesses were calling me with job offers instead of me wasting what little money I had to travel to Career fairs where no one was hiring.

    Note: I did not accept any of the jobs offered to me (because I was young, naive and held the bar high on what job I would accept instead of accepting a job which would have paid my bills :roll: ). I returned to school and got a degree in a career field with jobs, which I was subsequently hired into.

    Good luck, I know being unemployed can be a very difficult time.