Saturday, January 10, 2009

As the Recession Deepens the Need for Jobs! Jobs! Jobs! and an Economic Stimulus Gain Greater Importance Every Day

Writing in the New York Times, Bob Herbert comments on an increasingly worrisome problem for our nation: "Another month, another half-million Americans out of work. The ranks of the unemployed have now stretched beyond 11 million, and millions more are underemployed — working part time, for example, because they can’t find full-time jobs." And Mr. Herbert continues with some depressing statistics: "As bad as this sounds, the reality confronting working men and women is actually significantly worse. Some 2.6 million jobs have been lost since December 2007, and as the Economic Policy Institute tells us: “Just to keep up with the ever-expanding labor force, the economy would have needed to create 1.5 million jobs over the last 12 months. This means that the 2.6 million jobs lost leaves us over 4 million jobs short of what the economy required to provide employment for the American work force.” It's an obvious statement of fact; America needs to much better with job creation than just keeping up with the jobs that have been lost! The nation's listless job growth figures show unemployment at 7.2 percent. But those numbers, as bad as they are; just expose the tip of the iceberg when Herbert points out the even more depressing information that: "...more than one in every eight workers in America is jobless or underemployed. That’s 21 million people. And it’s not even counting the so-called discouraged workers, who have given up looking for a job." When it can be expected that jobs will generally increase in November and December in response to the holiday season, the statisticians tell us that over a million jobs were lost! And the trend of job loss will continue through 2009 unless something is done -- immediately! David Leonard tracks job information in Economix, one of the blogs published by The New York Times, which recently confirmed the nation's job crisis when Leonard wrote: “The share of all men ages 16 and over who are working is now at its lowest level since the government began keeping statistics in the 1940s. The share of women with jobs has fallen almost two percentage points from the peak it reached in 2000. At no other point in the past 50 years has the share of employed women fallen so much from its peak.” David Leonard gets it, and so does Bob Herbert! They're not overstating what the unemployment figures show; Herbert explains: "This is an emergency. There is one overriding mission for the incoming Obama administration when it comes to dealing with the economy, and that’s putting Americans back to work. Forget the G.O.P.’s mania for tax cuts. Forget, for the time being (but not forever), the ballooning budget deficits. Forget the feel-good but doomed-to-fail effort to play nice-nice with the rabid partisans of the right who were the ones most responsible for ruining the economy in the first place." Herbert understands the need for the federal government to take quick action: "Put the people back to work!" It's the nations top priority! Herbert recognizes: "To do that, Democrats will have to overcome their natural timidity. They will have to fend off the Republican opposition in Congress and set in motion an enormous surge of public spending aimed at creating jobs, jobs, jobs. Each new surge of job losses is an additional violent assault on the already profoundly damaged economy. Idle workers do not pay taxes and that ratchets up budget deficits at the federal, state and local levels. They draw down unemployment benefits and further strain the Medicaid rolls. In many cases, they are forced to turn to food stamps for their families’ daily bread. And, of course, they stop purchasing cars and homes, goods and services." And as for those Republican proposals to use stimulus rebate checks to put 'money directly into the hands of the American people.' That's nothing more than a trick directly out of the GOP playbook that is an overused 'feel good' ploy intended to simply spread around some instant gratification, that in reality will be spent by the poor to momentarily keep their heads above water; or saved by the more affluent who don't need it as badly for everyday expenses and will more than likely just drop it in their savings account or stock portfolio because they are more secure financially. Herbert elaborates on my point: "The economy will not be saved by putting a pitiful $500 into the hands of the average taxpayer. And it won’t be saved by gift-wrapped concessions to the G.O.P. in the form of business tax cuts that the president-elect is said to be considering. With credit tight, savings depleted, the stock market in the tank and home prices in a state of collapse, the only way to get real money into the hands of ordinary Americans (and thus back into the economy) is through employment. The way to truly stimulate the economy and save the jobs of anxiety-ridden workers who are still employed is to get the unemployed back to work as soon as possible." Hebert's call "to create jobs is through infrastructure investments (building and repairing roads, bridges, tunnels and water and sewer systems); and by investing in 21st-century clean energy initiatives, in public transportation systems, and in school construction; and by providing access to health care for the millions who don’t have it. In other words," Herbert argues: "by investing in the people and the enormous productive capacity of the United States." Someone else who gets it is "Senator Tom Harkin of Iowa" a self-professed liberal who "was blunt this week after he and other Senate Democrats met with Obama aides to discuss the president-elect’s stimulus package. “There is only one thing we have got to do in the stimulus, and that is how can we create jobs,” he said. Referring to Mr. Obama’s national economic adviser, Lawrence Summers, Mr. Harkin added: “I am a little concerned by the way that Mr. Summers and others are going at this in that, to me, it still looks like a little more of this trickle down. If we just put it in at the top, it’s going to trickle down.” Obama needs to be true to his campaign promise of restoring and creating jobs that flow upwards from the bottom rungs of the economy. 'Jobs from the bottom up' Obama liked to say while he campaigned. Obama must create lots of good paying jobs for the neediest Americans stuck at the bottom of the economy! Don't be fooled by the decades of propaganda that the Republicans have dished out since Reagan declared that "government is the problem!" Reagan is dead. And the self serving, deceitful propaganda that he spread about how the 'free market' can be counted on to bring prosperity to all Americans must be buried deep below the 'great communicator.' Don't believe any Republican, any Conservative or any other right wing ideologue that claims that government cannot create jobs because it only gets in the way of free enterprise. Right now, the government is the only entity with access to capital that can be used to create jobs. Americans need to remember that half of the $700 billion bailout that was appropriated for the Wall Street bailout that Bush and his cronies in the Treasury Department pushed down the American people's throats sits without any oversight rules or terms of accountability in bank vaults across the country paying executive bonuses and being used to send those same executives on pleasure trips to luxurious locations. And whats left of the $700 billion is being fought over by Bush officials and by Obama's economic team and Democrats in Congress who are hurriedly working around the clock to bring about the reallocation of the remaining $350 billion of financial aid that they intend to use to prevent foreclosures faced by homeowners; bring stability to the economy; and stimulate the credit markets to spur consumer and business loans. The importance of creating an abundance of good paying jobs that helps to rebuild the lower and middle classes while rebuilding the American economy cannot be overstated. Jobs! Jobs! Jobs! That's the only way that Obama can fulfill the promise of change he campaigned on. It's the only way we can fix our country's recession and prevent the coming of a second Great Depression. Meanwhile, David Cho and Lon Montgomery, staff writers for the Washington Post, report that: "Senior Bush administration officials, consulting with the Obama transition team, have prepared a plan to ask lawmakers for the second half of the $700 billion financial rescue package despite intense opposition in Congress, sources familiar with the discussions said." The remaining $350 billion would be used by the Bush Administration to complete funding of the administration's original plan that has garnered such intense opposition by the public and the Congress. The Washington Post reporters explain that: "Under the emergency rescue legislation approved by Congress in October, the administration must inform lawmakers that it wants access to the second installment of $350 billion. Unless Congress passes a resolution rejecting the request within 15 days, the Treasury can begin to tap the funds. If Congress turns down the request, the president could veto the resolution and then the Treasury could proceed. The money would be blocked only if Congress overrides the veto, which would require a two-thirds majority in both chambers." Which many House members believes to exist. A noteworthy development of events would ensue if Bush decided to seek the funds which: "could create an unusual political scenario straddling the Bush and Obama administrations. If Congress were to vote down the measure, either President Bush or Obama would have to exercise a veto to get the money. "Obama officials would prefer that Bush exercise any veto rather than leave the new president with the unsavory task of rebuffing his fellow Democrats in Congress to advance a widely unpopular program, sources said. The White House has declined to say publicly whether Bush would be willing to issue the veto." The Bush administration explained that: "There have been discussions between the administration and the transition team on how to proceed should the president-elect determine that he would like President Bush to notify Congress on his behalf of the intent to use the remaining $350 billion so that it will be available early in the new administration," White House press secretary Dana Perino said. "No final decisions have been made." Cho and Montgomery report that: "Democratic Senate aides were notified in a meeting yesterday afternoon that the request could come as soon as this weekend and that a vote could be held as early as next week, said congressional sources, who spoke on the condition of anonymity because no decisions have been made." Without the existence of an agreed to plan by the incoming and outgoing administrations no decisions on the $350 billion can be easily executed and the monies represent an important means for aiding the economy. Congress is taking proactive steps: "Even as senior Bush and Obama officials consulted about how to access the rest of the money, Rep. Barney Frank (D-Mass.), chairman of the House Financial Services Committee, unveiled a bill on Capitol Hill aimed at forcing the Treasury to use the money in accordance with lawmakers' wishes." And the Post reports that: "Many of the measure's provisions are being coordinated with Treasury Secretary nominee Timothy F. Geithner, who is planning to expand the scope of the rescue program well beyond the financial system to help ordinary consumers and homeowners, as well small businesses and municipalities. Frank said in a news conference yesterday that his bill might not be needed if the Obama administration promised to abide by its principles. "It doesn't have to be enacted. It would be helpful if it was," Frank said. "We have smart and cooperative people in this [incoming] administration, I'm willing to accept their word that they will act as if it were the law. Frank's bill would mandate that the Treasury allocate at least $40 billion for foreclosure prevention. Banks and other institutions that receive funds from the Troubled Asset Relief Program, or TARP, would be required to account for the use of the money. Clear limits on executive compensation would be imposed on all firms that take federal aid, including those that already received money." If Congressman Frank's bill passes, he hopes to convince fellow House members to release the TARP monies. Cho and Montgomery speculate that: "Without Frank's bill, House leaders are convinced that lawmakers would block release of additional funds to the Treasury, which is widely viewed by lawmakers as having rushed the bailout through Congress and then badly mismanaged the program." It has been common knowledge, explain the Post reporters, that: "A majority of lawmakers in both parties are strongly resistant to giving more money to continue the program, Democratic leaders say, adding that a request from either administration is likely to be rejected, making a veto almost unavoidable." And whether it is Bush, who, in his final days would find it easier to veto Frank's Democratic legislation; or if it is left to Obama to strike the veto against his own party, the results will hold extreme importance to the future course of the nation's economy.

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