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A Boom with a View (Bush Economic Policies Starting to Pay Off)
National Review Online ^ | 10/16/03 | Jerry Bowyer/Donald Luskin

Posted on 10/17/2003 9:50:12 AM PDT by NYC Republican

Ever wonder why all the doom-and-gloom economic pronouncements you hear in the media, and from liberal politicians, don't square up with the America you see around you — an America in which the economy has turned the corner and is growing again? The answer is that most of what you hear about economics is a lie, usually papered over with impressive-sounding jargon and statistics designed to intimidate you.

Jerry Bowyer's new book, The Bush Boom, is a sorely needed dose of simple economic truth. And in this case, the truth happens to be very good news indeed.

Read through a couple of this book's short, digestible single-topic chapters — most built around a compelling chart or table — and you'll quickly discover a couple of amazing things. First, you'll realize that you really can understand economics. Bowyer makes it simple — and fun. Second, you'll realize that things are nowhere near as bad as the media and the liberal politicians are telling you. In fact, Bowyer's work shows that we could be on the verge of an historic boom.

Here's a simple example. How often have you heard the media wail about America's "record trade deficit"? Do the talking heads fretting about it even know what a trade deficit is? Probably not, but it's called a "deficit," so it must be bad. Or is it? With one simple, devastating chart and just a couple-hundred words, Bowyer shows that a trade deficit isn't bad news at all — in fact, a growing trade deficit is a good sign, something that has historically been associated with periods of rapid GDP growth. Narrowing trade deficits, on the other hand, have been associated with slower growth.

How about payroll statistics showing that even though GDP is growing this economic recovery isn't generating any new employment? Bowyer tells the dirty little secrets of how the Department of Labor calculates jobs numbers, and shows that they fundamentally don't make any sense: Some of the numbers show that employment has been increasing, while others show that unemployment has been increasing.

Which numbers should you trust? Maybe neither. Indeed, one of the lessons of The Bush Boom is that most economic statistics are so imperfect and subjective as to be nearly worthless. But in this case, if you had to choose between one DOL jobs survey that canvases large corporations and government agencies, and another DOL survey that canvases real people (capturing self-employment and traditional employment in small and new businesses), wouldn't you choose the latter? Of course you would. Any sane person would. Yet the media persistently quote only the former.

Bowyer also reveals how simple economic reasoning can be used as an antidote to liberal political arguments — even when those arguments don't seem to have anything to do with economics. How often have you heard the smear that the invasion of Iraq was "all about oil," that it was staged by the Bush administration for the benefit of Texas crony capitalists? Bowyer dispatches that fantasy with a simple economic truth:

... the Dow Jones Energy Index (which is well represented by oil and natural gas companies) significantly underperformed the S&P. In the past year, the energy index has fallen 22 percent, which is equal to a $122.6 billion loss in market capitalization. What can one say? If Bush really is in the pocket of the Texas oil interests, this makes him about the worst crony capitalist in history. Or maybe, just maybe, the war in Iraq was about something else.

Bowyer's arguments about federal budget deficits are not as sharply focused nor as persuasive. He offers some empirical evidence against the familiar "Rubinomics" theory that federal borrowing crowds out private borrowing and raises interest rates, but he misses the more compelling argument: higher taxes, the alternative to borrowing, obviously have worse and more immediate anti-growth effects. And while Bowyer argues that high deficits are necessary and historically precedented in times of war, he doesn't point out that today's deficits are not caused primarily by war spending, but rather by a slowdown in economic growth.

But those quibbles aside, the good news is that the very boom that Bowyer predicts and argues for so persuasively will be the thing that cures the deficits.

When you've had your fill of jargonized econo-dogma designed to make you suicidal (and vote Democratic just before you slit your wrists), treat yourself to a helping of Bowyer's plain-speaking optimism. And here's the best part: The more people who read The Bush Boom, the quicker the boom will arrive. Optimism and truth work that way, you know.


TOPICS: Business/Economy; Constitution/Conservatism; Government; News/Current Events; Politics/Elections
KEYWORDS: bushrecovery
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To: IMRight
the unemployment number doesn't tell the story. when oracle send 1000 $70K jobs to India, and 1000 north carolina furniture workers lose their jobs to china, and then walmart creates 2000 jobs at their new stores, what is the net result?
21 posted on 10/18/2003 7:59:27 AM PDT by oceanview
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To: oceanview
Sorry. Every time someone loses a job there is a sad story behind it. You could say the nembers "didn't tell the whole story" when unemployement was 3%, because there were still millions of people who wanted a job who didn't have one. What about all those technically skilled workers who gave up higher salary for stock options in tech companies they helped build... and then watched go under? They lost their jobs and their life savings.

There's always a story behind the numbers, the question is whether the story is worse than what people expect. And given 9/11 and the direction of the economy when he took over? Bush has done a fine job and things are getting better.

I live in NC now (near most of those workers). Why do you suppose they lost their jobs? Was it the "evil corporations" trying to make an extra buck?

22 posted on 10/18/2003 9:40:42 AM PDT by IMRight
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To: Jumper
by the time the election season is upon us, the media will have surpressed the economy so long that it will look like a hugh economic volcano spewing cash

Wonderful image. Thanks.

And of course I agree with you. The growth is already accelerating and the news of that growth is being completely censored by the national press. By next summer, the growth will be so spectacular that the censorship will suddenly fail, and not only will the economy look good, but it will look spectacularly good.

The censorship is going to backfire. Like a shot heard round the world.

What on earth are the RATS going to do?

23 posted on 10/19/2003 4:35:43 AM PDT by samtheman
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