June 6, 2011 / 4 Sivan, 5771 

Obama tunes out, and business goes on hiring strike 

By Michael Barone 

 

http://www.JewishWorldReview.com | Last week I noted that various forms of
the word "unexpected" almost inevitably appeared in news stories about
unfavorable economic developments. 

You can find them again in stories about Friday's shocking news, that only
54,000 net new jobs were created in the month of May and that unemployment
rose to 9.1 percent. 

But with news that bad, maybe bad economic numbers will no longer be
"unexpected." You can only expect a robust economic recovery for so long
before you figure out, as Herbert Hoover eventually did, that it is not
around the corner.

Exogenous factors explain some part of the current economic stagnation. The
earthquake and tsunami in Japan caused a slowdown in manufacturing.
Horrendous tornadoes did not help. Nor did bad weather, though only a few
still bitterly cling to the theory that it's caused by man-made global
warming.

But poor public policy is surely one reason why the American economy has not
rebounded from recession as it has in the past. And political posturing has
also played a major role. 

Barack Obama and the Democratic congressional supermajorities of 2009-10
raised federal spending from 21 to 25 percent of gross domestic product.
Their stimulus package stopped layoffs of public employees for a while, even
as private sector payrolls plummeted.

And the Obama Democrats piled further burdens on would-be employers in the
private sector. Obamacare and the Dodd-Frank financial regulation bill are
scheduled to be followed by thousands of regulations that will impose
impossible-to-estimate costs on the economy.

That seems to have led to a hiring freeze. The Obama Democrats can
reasonably claim not to be responsible for the huge number of layoffs that
occurred in the months following the financial crisis of fall 2008. And
Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner and Federal Reserve Chairman Ben
Bernanke did manage to help stabilize financial markets. 

But while the number of layoffs is now vastly less than in the first half of
2009, the number of new hires has not increased appreciably. Many more
people have been unemployed for longer periods than in previous recessions,
and many more have stopped looking for work altogether.

It's hard to avoid the conclusion that the threat of tax increases and
increased regulatory burdens have produced something in the nature of a
hiring strike. 

And then there is the political posturing. On April 13 Obama delivered a
ballyhooed speech at George Washington University. The man who conservatives
as well as liberal pundits told us was a combination of Edmund Burke and
Reinhold Niebuhr was widely expected to present a serious plan to address
the budget deficits and entitlement spending.

Instead the man who can call on talented career professionals at the Office
of Management and Budget to produce detailed blueprints gave us something in
the nature of a few numbers scrawled on a paper napkin. 

The man depicted as pragmatic and free of ideological cant indulged in cheap
political rhetoric, accusing Republicans, including House Budget Committee
Chairman Paul Ryan who was in the audience, of pushing old ladies in
wheelchairs down the hill and starving autistic children.

The signal was clear. Obama had already ignored his own deficit reduction
commission in preparing his annual budget, which was later rejected 97-0 in
the Senate. Now he was signaling that the time for governing was over and
that he was entering campaign mode 19 months before the November 2012
election. People took notice, especially those people who decide whether to
hire or not. Goldman Sachs's Current Activity Indicator stood at 4.2 percent
in March. In April -- in the middle of which came Obama's GW speech -- it
was 1.6 percent. For May it is 1 percent. 

"That is a major drop in no time at all," wrote Business Insider's Joe
Weisenthal. 

After April 13 Obama Democrats went into campaign mode. They staged a
poll-driven Senate vote to increase taxes on oil companies. 

They began a Mediscare campaign against Ryan's budget resolution that all
but four House Republicans had voted for. That seemed to pay off with a
special election victory in New York's 26th Congressional District.

The message to job creators was clear. Hire at your own risk. Higher taxes,
more burdensome regulation and crony capitalism may be here for some time to
come. 

One possible upside is that economic bad news may no longer be "unexpected."
Another is that voters may figure out what is going on. 

 



[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]



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