Wednesday, August 19, 2009

Jobs numbers don't vindicate Obama policies

From Burton Folsom via NRO: "What do we make of the latest job numbers? The unemployment rate dropped from 9.5 percent in June to 9.4 percent in July — the first monthly drop during the Obama presidency. Supporters of the administration will crow that their spending programs may at last be taking hold; critics will cite the overall unemployment jump from roughly 8 percent to 9.4 percent during 2009.

"Two points need to be made. First, unemployment numbers fluctuate from month to month. During FDR’s reign, for example, unemployment dropped from 18.7 percent in January 1936 (an election year) to 18.0 percent in February. It was 16 percent in July and 14 percent in November, when voters stampeded to the ballot box to give FDR a triumphant reelection, carrying 46 out of 48 states. But what happened later?

"In January 1939, unemployment was back up to 18.7 percent; it rose to 19.3 percent in February and 20.7 percent in April. The next month, Henry Morgenthau, the secretary of treasury, announced, “We are spending more than we have ever spent before and it does not work.” The so-called job creation of 1936 was a mirage. Massive government spending did not — and could not — create jobs or prosperity in the long run.

"Second, even if unemployment does start to decline steadily this year, the larger point is that the growth of government means a lessening of individual liberty. You have less control of your life, and bureaucrats have more."

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