Posted By Woody Pendleton
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http://townhall.com/columnists/larryelder/2012/06/07/the_four_lies_about_the_economy_that_obama_needs_voters_to_believe/page/full/
President
Barack Obama's re-election turns on his ability to convince voters that
1) Obama inherited a "Great Recession," 2) every "independent"
economist supported the "stimulus," 3) "bipartisan" economists agree
that Obama's stimulus worked, and 4) as actor Morgan Freeman puts it,
racist Republicans say, "Screw the country ... we're going to do
whatever we can to get this black man outta here" -- nothing to do with
deeply held policy differences.
That's a lot of merchandise to push.
1) Take this "Great Recession" business.
Remember
the "misery index"? The term, popularized by former President Jimmy
Carter, used to mean inflation plus unemployment. Unfortunately for John
Kerry, by the time he ran for president in 2004, the misery index stood
at 7.4 midway into the election year, the same as when George W. Bush
won the presidency in 2000. What to do? Change the definition. Kerry
invented a new misery index, one that included only high-rising costs
like college tuition, health care and gas prices.
Similarly,
"bad economic times" used to mean, above all, high unemployment. Within
a year of Obama's presidency, unemployment climbed to 10.2 percent.
Within three years of Reagan's presidency, unemployment reached 10.8
percent. Under Obama, inflation has been -- at least so far -- rather
modest. Early in Reagan's presidency, inflation reached 13.5 percent.
Rather than describe this era as the
"Great-Recession-turned-around-by-Reagan's-pro-growth-policies," many
pundits and scribes dismiss this period of extraordinary growth as the
"me decade" or the "decade of greed."
2)
"There is no disagreement," said then-President-elect Barack Obama,
"that we need action by our government, a recovery plan that will help
to jump-start the economy."
What?!
More than 200 economists, including several Nobel laureates, signed on
to a full-page ad placed in major newspapers by the libertarian Cato
Institute. Eventually, over 130 more economists became signatories to
the ad.
It
read: "With all due respect, Mr. President, that is not true.
Notwithstanding reports that all economists are now Keynesians and that
we all support a big increase in the burden of government, we the
undersigned do not believe that more government spending is a way to
improve economic performance.
"More
government spending by Hoover and Roosevelt did not pull the United
States economy out of the Great Depression in the 1930s. More government
spending did not solve Japan's 'lost decade' in the 1990s. As such, it
is a triumph of hope over experience to believe that more government
spending will help the U.S. today.
"To
improve the economy, policymakers should focus on reforms that remove
impediments to work, saving, investment and production. Lower tax rates
and a reduction in the burden of government are the best ways of using
fiscal policy to boost growth."
These
350 or so notable economists notwithstanding, Obama later doubled down:
"This is what independent economists have said -- not politicians, not
just people in my administration. Independent experts who do this for a
living have said this jobs bill will have a significant effect for our
economy and for middle-class families all across America. And what these
independent experts have also said is that if we don't act, the
opposite will be true. There will be fewer jobs; there will be weaker
growth."
3)
Obama surrogate Steve Rattner recently said that Obama's stimulus
worked -- as confirmed by "bipartisan" economists. As proof, Rattner
offered the findings of "bipartisan economists Mark Zandi and Alan
Blinder," who "agree that ... we would have had unemployment
substantially higher than what we've had over the last two years."
"Bipartisan"?
Blinder, a Democrat, served as a member of
the Clinton administration and later advised presidential candidates Al
Gore and John Kerry. As for Zandi, he did serve as a presidential
campaign advisor to John McCain. Like Blinder, Zandi is a self-described
Democrat.
Zandi
likes "maverick" McCain, a Republican who voted against the first
George W. Bush tax cuts using the same left-wing argument about the cuts
benefiting the rich. Zandi's man, summoning his inner Dennis Kucinich,
once said, "I cannot support a tax cut in which so many of the benefits
go to the most fortunate among us at the expense of middle-class
Americans who most need tax relief."
As
to the alleged unanimous expert opinion on the effectiveness of Obama's
stimulus, Stanford economist John Taylor debated this on NPR with
Zandi. Taylor's analysis, shared by many other economists: "I just don't
think there's any evidence. When you look at the numbers, when you see
what happened, when people reacted to the stimulus, it did very little
good."
4)
Democrats never tire of trotting out Senate Minority Leader Mitch
McConnell, who said his "single most important political goal" was to
make Obama "a one-term president." Horrors! Why, doesn't this just make
McConnell the very personification of sinister! Republican opposition
for the sole purpose of bringing down Obama, the first black president,
yada, blah, etc.
Apparently,
it is outside the brain capacity of people like Morgan Freeman to
understand something: One way to defeat bad, leftist Democrats' policies
is to defeat bad, leftist Democrats, who seek to implement those bad,
leftist policies. It's not complicated.
Nothing personal.
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