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Obama’s Economy: The Excuses Begin (Blame everything, except the government's policies.)
PJ Media ^ | January 30, 2013 | Tom Blumer

Posted on 01/30/2013 2:01:08 PM PST by Kaslin

Just days after the November presidential and congressional elections which gave President Barack Obama a non-mandate of 50.6% of the popular vote and the demonstrated supported of less than 27% of all U.S. adults, NBC’s Brian Williams actually told viewers:

With the election now over, it is once again safe to talk about the economy and jobs. Now that it is not a campaign issue, it’s back to reality.

Still in Democrat-supportive campaign mode, Williams then introduced a report by correspondent Harry Smith about how “the idea that manufacturing in America is dead … is an outright falsehood.” Mary Andringa, president and CEO of Iowa manufacturer Vermeer Corporation and then-board chair at the National Association of Manufacturers, told Smith:

What’s really outstanding is the fact that in 2010, the U.S. had an output of $4.8 trillion of manufactured goods. That was up from $4.1 (trillion) in 2000 — and we’ve been through two recessions in the past decade.

That is undoubtedly an impressive achievement which should not be discounted. But then Smith delivered the kicker:

Five million manufacturing jobs were lost in the U.S. in the last decade. But new jobs have been created too, and believe it or not, many manufacturers in the U.S. are looking for help.

This highlights two problems. The first, which is that our educational system and culture are not preparing enough people for the jobs which need to be filled, is self-evident to anyone with open eyes.

The second, despite the unfilled positions just noted, is even more important: unlike what occurred after every other post-World War II downturn, not enough new jobs are currently being created to make up for the ones being lost. The new companies and entire industries which have always emerged and generated enough new jobs to replace those lost as a result of increased productivity in existing industries aren’t appearing at a rate necessary to reduce unemployment to an acceptable level.

Why not?

At the Associated Press, aka the Administration’s Press, the post-election search for an explanation clearly had two important constraints. First: do not blame the Obama administration or the federal government for anything. Second: find something to blame which appears to be plausible and can’t be immediately refuted.

What resulted was a three-part series bemoaning the rapid advancements in technology and smart machines. It can be summarized in four words: “This time it’s different.” Well, it sadly is, and more than likely for the next four years, but not for the reasons AP cites. AP’s premise:

For decades, science fiction warned of a future when we would be architects of our own obsolescence, replaced by our machines. … [T]he future has arrived.

The team which produced the report believes that technology is advancing so quickly and on so many fronts that it’s simply unreasonable to expect new jobs to appear fast enough to replace the ones being destroyed.

While the pace and nature of tech advancements have been and continue to be phenomenal, the notion that they are unique to the point of causing insurmountable economic and employment problems should be absurd. As economist and George Mason University Professor Walter Williams pointed out in a 2011 column:

(In) 1900 … about 41 percent of our labor force was employed in agriculture. By 2008, fewer than 3 percent of Americans were employed in agriculture. … [O]ur farmers are the world’s most productive. As a result, Americans are better off.

In 1970, the telecommunications industry employed 421,000 workers as switchboard operators, annually handling 9.8 billion long-distance calls. Today the telecommunications industry employs only 78,000 operators … (processing) more than 100 billion long-distance calls a year.

Fifty years ago, a typical textile worker operated five machines capable of running thread through a loom 100 times a minute. Today machines run six times as fast, and one worker can oversee 100 of them.

You say, “Williams, certain jobs are destroyed by technology.” You’re right, but many more are created.

Defying Professor Williams’ optimism, AP’s team of reporters left readers with three unacceptable choices as to what will result:

  1. The best-case scenario is that “the economy returns to health after a wrenching transition.” AP quotes leftist economist Joseph Stiglitz as claiming that it will take at least “half a decade,” meaning after Obama’s time in the White House has (hopefully) ended. How convenient.
  2. “The economy continues to produce jobs, just not enough good ones.”
  3. “Technology leads to mass unemployment.”

If this “blame tech” mantra sounds mildly familiar, it’s because Obama himself has on a few unguarded occasions commented on how technology has destroyed jobs, indicting ATMs, airport kiosks, and the Internet for sending bank tellers, airline reservation agents, and others to the unemployment line. Apparently, never to return except perhaps as burger flippers or cashiers. I fear that the AP’s decision to identify tech as the scapegoat is no mere coincidence, and may foreshadow foolish attempts by the administration to slow down technological progress in the name of “saving jobs.”

Obamacare is already slated to do that very thing to the entire healthcare sector.

With all due respect to Professor Williams above, he would be right about enough replacement jobs being created if we were living in a genuine free-market economy. Unfortunately, that’s not where we are in this nation. Virtually all of the reasons why sufficient job growth isn’t occurring can be traced to the Obama administration’s market-hostile economic policies and postures.

Here are ten of the most obvious out of a list which could easily reach several dozen:

What the AP series really tells us is that the economy wasn’t performing as well as the government and the establishment press claimed it was during the presidential campaign — something I believe this week’s report on fourth-quarter gross domestic product will confirm — and that the White House really doesn’t expect the malaise to lift during most of Obama’s second term.


TOPICS: Business/Economy; Government
KEYWORDS:

1 posted on 01/30/2013 2:01:13 PM PST by Kaslin
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To: Kaslin

Brain Williams, Piers Morgan....they all come here to ruin the country they fled to, too succeed....


2 posted on 01/30/2013 2:04:35 PM PST by illiac (If we don't change directions soon, we'll get where we're going)
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To: Kaslin

Obama is desperately going to need someone to blame for the economic malaise.

Get ready for a weekly public berating of the Unpatriotic Parasite Employers.


3 posted on 01/30/2013 2:16:34 PM PST by Buckeye McFrog
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To: Kaslin

Hasn’t Jay Carney already blamed the economy on the republicans?

The only thing the republican party is goo for is taking the blame.

The Republican leadership never makes any effort to fight back

They are the sponge party, they just keep picking up the blame and absorbing it. Naver fight back.


4 posted on 01/30/2013 2:45:30 PM PST by Venturer
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To: Kaslin

Honestly, blaming the obama clown or the bush clown for everything that is wrong in this mess is like blaming Ronald McDonald when you get a bad cheeseburger. It’s not like he’s really running the company. The only things all 3 have in common is the clown thing and they do as the people paying them tell them to do.


5 posted on 01/30/2013 3:03:58 PM PST by Orangedog (An optimist is someone who tells you to 'cheer up' when things are going his way)
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To: Venturer

BO has been blaming President Bush for 6 years for the economy he “inherited” It was all Bush’s fault, not the dem controlled congress-oh no-never a word about Congress not doing it’s job. Now, suddenly, the President of the USA is no longer responsible for the state of the economy. It’s Congress’s fault. When will someone ask a liberal why that under Bush it was his fault but BO is never held accountable? BO has inherited his own mess. He’s running out of people to blame.


6 posted on 01/30/2013 3:28:03 PM PST by dandiegirl
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To: Buckeye McFrog

America could have handled four years of corruption, incompetence and stupidity but it can’t handle eight years. We are about to reap the destruction of our commie community organizers first four years of monumental screw ups. America will feel the pain from the hapless economic policy and deadly foreign policy of the worst administration in the history of the world.


7 posted on 01/30/2013 3:50:35 PM PST by peeps36 (America is being destroyed by filthy traitors in the political establishment)
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To: dandiegirl

He is still blaming other people ,but now it doesn’t matter any more, he has another 4 years to carry out his destruction.


8 posted on 01/31/2013 4:25:17 AM PST by Venturer
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