Seeking Alpha

Peter Morici


About this author:

Despite Administration claims, the stimulus package has created or saved few jobs. This is best seen in the absolute absence of growth in state and local government employment.

From December 2007 to February 2009, or the first 14 months of the recession, state and local government employment increased 128,000. From February through May 2009, which closely approximates President Obama’s first 100 days of stimulus spending, state and local employment decreased 2,000. I simply can’t find progress in those numbers. Private construction employment, of all kinds, continued to fall.

The employment situation is improving in the sense that the rate of loss in the private sector, overall, is slowing. But that is the natural process of the economy correcting and bracing for a recovering. GDP will bottom out sometime this summer but unemployment will continue to rise into 2010.

Simply, the economy will not grow fast enough to absorb all the new entrants into the labor force—jobs creation will not equal the natural increase in the number of workers

The stimulus package will help raise growth in 2010 and 2011 and add 2.5 to 3 million jobs. Those will hardly offset the 7 or 8 million that will be lost once the carnage is over, and those jobs will be temporary, only lasting an average of two years each.

The stimulus package was poorly conceived. Not enough is devoted to hard projects, and little of the spending will stimulate permanent growth.

The Obama administration would do well to stop the wild claims of having created or saved 150,000 jobs in the first 100 days and promising another 600,000 over the next 100 days.

This is not a campaign any more. At some point, the promise must turn into prosperity. Campaign slogans, polemics and political spending that rewards supporters won’t resurrect growth or prosperity.

Quarterly Forecasts

Here are my quarterly forecasts. Growth in 2010 and 2011 will hardly be stellar given the recent steep decline.


Print this article with comments

This article has 4 comments:

  •  
    "Here are my quarterly forecasts. Growth in 2010 and 2011 will hardly be stellar given the recent steep decline."

    I'll be surprised if there is any growth at all by any reliable measure, not that we really have one.
    Jun 10 04:32 AM | Link | Reply
  •  
    if you tell the lie loud enough, often enough for long enough the sheeple will come to believe it. the deception is the game of political parasites aided by their lapdog pundits. politicians follow the directions given by those that pay for them while decieving those that vote.
    they are the incarnation of the paradox, "everything i say is a lie."
    Jun 10 08:31 AM | Link | Reply
  •  
    It would be a jobless recovery, uemployment staying above 9% till 2011.

    Obama's first promise was with stimulus unemployment would stay below 8%. Very (very) quickly we are at 9.4% likley to reach 10% in a couple of months.

    So much for promises and forecasts, just hunker down, or get a grab bag and go to DC - plenty of money being thrown around there.
    Jun 10 08:34 PM | Link | Reply
  •  
    see www.shadowstats.com.
    Jun 11 02:27 AM | Link | Reply