-Caveat Lector-

THE WASHINGTON POST

For Bush, Time to Mend Economy Is Running Out

By Dana Milbank
Washington Post Staff Writer
Saturday, April 5, 2003; Page A01

The Labor Department's report yesterday that the U.S. economy shed 108,000 jobs
in March underscored an emerging threat to President Bush's reelection
prospects: He is running out of time to restore jobs and economic growth.

The job losses in March, more than double the number analysts had expected, mean
nearly 2.1 million jobs have been lost since Bush took office. Though the
unemployment rate held steady at 5.8 percent in March, the private sector has
lost more than 2.6 million jobs during Bush's term -- a drop that has been
offset only by increased government hiring.

For Bush, this is not a short-term problem. He enjoys broad popularity as a war
leader, and victory in Iraq would likely give him another boost. But, as
happened to President George H.W. Bush in 1992, such support can diminish fast
in a sluggish economy. Although the election is 19 months away, it can take a
long time to restore growth and jobs.

Administration economists, and many outside of government, had hoped that a
quick victory in Iraq would give a boost to the stock market and to consumer
confidence, reigniting the economy. Some still expect this scenario. But
increasingly, they are describing the economic problems as broader and more
difficult to solve, regardless of how soon the war ends.

"The problem is not with the concern about the Iraq war. The problem is the
underlying weakness with the economy," Treasury Secretary John W. Snow said in
Orlando on Thursday. Asked about the possibility of a return to recession, he
said that "we need to guard against it" because of a "clear weakness."

As a general rule, administration officials and private economists say, the
economy needs to be growing by more than 3 percent -- and possibly well above --
for jobs to be added. Economists and political strategists also assume that such
growth must be firmly in place by the second quarter of an election year for
voters to feel the effects by Election Day. And, Bush aides say, because it
takes nine months for the full benefit of a new economic stimulus plan to be
felt, policymakers have little time to spare.

"The rule of thumb is second-quarter GDP [gross domestic product] growth in the
presidential election year has to be above 3 percent," said Kenneth M.
Duberstein, who was a chief of staff to President Ronald Reagan. "That's why
everything this year is driven toward next year's second-quarter GDP."

If Bush's $726 billion tax cut is enacted in June, it will come just in time for
the all-important 2004 second quarter.

"Given where the economy is and where it looks like the economy is going to be
in the near future, our instructions are to get this growing as soon as
possible," a senior administration official said yesterday.

Some believe the time has passed to influence the 2004 economy. "If you're
talking about boosting the economy in a year, it's too late for that," said the
Urban Institute's Rudolph G. Penner, director of the Congressional Budget Office
during the Reagan administration. By historical measures, it takes two quarters
of growth of about 3 percent to produce a large increase in jobs. That means
Bush would need the economy to be humming by the fourth quarter of this year.

There is still a chance that could happen. The firm Macroeconomic Advisers wrote
in a report last week that it expects 4.4 percent growth in the second half of
this year because "a favorable outcome in Iraq . . . will be followed by
improvements in business, investor and consumer confidence."

But that notion is much disputed. "I have no evidence that the start or finish
of the war with Iraq has anything to do with the economy," said John H. Makin, a
conservative economist with the American Enterprise Institute. As a result,
Makin said, "there really is some urgency for this White House."

The cost of the war in Iraq has led to an effort to halve Bush's $726 billion
tax cut, but even if he gets all of it, Makin said, it will inject only about
$70 billion into the economy. Deduct from that cutbacks in state and local
government spending, and the stimulus to the economy "will be well below half
one percent" of the gross domestic product. "That's not a magical elixir, and
people aren't in a mood to spend it, anyway," he said.

Some say Bush should restructure his tax cut to drop the dividend tax
elimination, which accounts for half of the package but provides a negligible
economic boost in the short term. "Rather than shoehorning the dividend plan in,
they should be trying to shoehorn in the most amount of economic stimulus," said
Bill Dudley, chief U.S. economist for Goldman Sachs.

Still, Dudley said, "I don't see any sign that they're changing their approach.
The policies don't change even when circumstances change, and the economy is a
good bit weaker than many people thought three or six months ago."

Although the White House has not made any adjustment to its tax plan since Bush
unveiled it at the start of the year, the president and his aides have
acknowledged a change in economic conditions. They have largely dropped talk
about a fundamentally "sound" and "strong" economy in favor of gloomier
language.

The same day the Treasury secretary was talking about the "underlying weakness
with the economy," White House press secretary Ari Fleischer spoke of "bad
reports" and "bad news": declining business activity and rising unemployment.

Democrats are hoping to exploit the economic weakness. After yesterday's jobs
report, House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.) said it was evidence that
Bush's "misguided economic plan has simply not worked" and blamed him for "the
worst record on job creation of any president in nearly 60 years." Democrats
point to disproportionately high job losses in "swing" electoral states such as
Colorado, Michigan, Missouri, North Carolina and Ohio.

The administration's calculations show that the tax cut Bush is proposing would
add 450,000 jobs this year -- slightly fewer than the number lost in the past
two months -- and 1.4 million next year, just more than two-thirds of the number
lost since he took office. A senior administration official yesterday called
that a conservative forecast, arguing that the dividend tax cut would give a
short-term boost to stocks, raising confidence.

But there are many problems outside of Bush's control. On Monday, the closely
watched Blue Chip compilation of economists' forecasts will be released, and
"people have had to mark down forecasts," said Randell E. Moore, the survey's
editor.

First came the bad winter weather in February, then what Moore calls the "CNN
effect" of the war in March. "Maybe the second-half [of 2003] excuse is going to
be SARS," Moore said, referring to the contagious lung disease that first
appeared in Asia and has hurt travel and commerce. "It could have an incredible
effect," he said.

The end of heavy fighting in Iraq will help somewhat. "There's still the
expectation among private-sector economists that a good part of what's holding
back the economy is uncertainty about the war," Moore said. But even then, he
added, a number of economists believe "there will be a sharp headwind."

The nation is using only 75 percent of its industrial capacity, the lowest level
in 20 years. Working through that excess capacity -- and adding the jobs to do
so -- "will take some time," he said.


© 2003 The Washington Post Company

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