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The Real Bush Economy (DNC Press Release)
Democrats.org ^

Posted on 10/24/2006 12:04:18 PM PDT by Sub-Driver

The Real Bush Economy

Today, President Bush will make remarks on the economy while visiting the Urban Trust Bank in Washington, DC. The President continues to deceive Americans when he says that the economy is growing stronger, as he fails to mention that the Bush Economy continues to benefit only the wealthiest Americans. By citing growth in the stock market, he ignores the fact that 10 percent of Americans own 80 percent of all stocks. [Economic Policy Institute, 10/11/06]

Under President Bush’s misguided leadership, median household income for American workers has decreased by $1,300, with full-time workers suffering the most from these failed policies. Millions more Americans have also joined the ranks of the uninsured during the Bush Presidency. In 2000, 39.8 million Americans were uninsured, while that number rose to 46.6 million in 2005. [U.S. Census; Kaiser Family Foundation] Bush and his Republican allies have also refused to raise the minimum wage while voting to increase their own salaries. President Bush’s handling of America’s finances is not any better, having turned record surpluses into record deficits.

“The Bush Economy continues to help only those at the top of the economic ladder while ignoring the millions of hard-working Americans who are holding the ladder steady,” said Democratic National Committee Press Secretary Stacie Paxton. “From declining incomes and record deficits, to the millions of Americans who have become uninsured, the Republican economic record is one of deficits, deceit and divisiveness. Democrats remain committed to middle class tax fairness and pro-growth policies that create good jobs here in America. America’s working families cannot afford more failed Republican leadership on the economy.”

Household Income Declined By Nearly $1,300 Under Bush; Wage And Salary Increases Don't Cover Inflation. Although median household income increased by $509 last year, median household income has declined by $1,273 under the Bush Administration. And the failure of wage and salary increases to cover inflation has meant a real reduction of median income between 2000 and 2005 of 2.7 percent for households. [U.S. Census Bureau, 8/29/06; Table A-1; Center for American Progress, 8/29/06]

* Full-Time Workers Suffer The Most. The decline in workers' real income was especially pronounced for full-time, year-round workers. For men, median incomes fell by $774 from 2004-2005, and they have seen their incomes drop by $842 during the Bush Administration. For women, median incomes fell by $427 in the last year alone. Incomes in this group fell to their lowest levels since 1997 for men, and lowest level since 2000 for women. [U.S. Census Bureau, 8/30/05; Table A-2; Center for American Progress, 8/29/06]

The Bush Record: Record Surpluses To Record Deficits. Republicans have turned President Clinton's projected 10-year $5.6 trillion surplus into a nearly $3 trillion deficit. When this Administration took office, it inherited a projected ten-year surplus (2002-2011) of $5.6 trillion. Based on a realistic estimate of the President's policies, that surplus has now become a $3.3 trillion deficit over the same period of time, a dramatic fiscal reversal of $8.9 trillion. [House Budget Committee, 2/06]

Senate GOP Blocked Minimum Wage Vote For 9th Time; Congressional Pay Up $30,000 During Same Period. "The Republican-controlled Senate smothered a proposed election-year increase in the minimum wage Wednesday, rejecting Democratic claims it was past time to boost the $5.15 hourly pay floor that has been in effect for nearly a decade. ... The Senate vote marked the ninth time since 1997 that Democrats there have proposed -- and Republicans have blocked -- an increase in the minimum wage. ... Kennedy also said lawmakers' annual pay has risen by roughly $30,000 since the last increase in the minimum wage." [AP, 6/22/06]

Source URL: http://www.democrats.org/a/2006/10/the_real_bush_e.php


TOPICS: Business/Economy; News/Current Events; Politics/Elections
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To: Sub-Driver

How Democrats see our economy

21 posted on 10/24/2006 12:16:24 PM PDT by Reaganesque
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To: Sub-Driver

I have no doubt that the median income is pretty flat -- the modern economy gives great returns to education and risk. There's a reason they didn't use the mean for this press release; the long tail out to the right would raise the needle in the middle. This long tail extension will continue happening under a Democratic president too. Raising the minimum wage won't do much for someone earning around the median of $30,000 per year (approx $15/hour or three times the minimum wage), and these people tend not to get too much in the way of transfer payments under Dems or Republicans (they earn too much).


22 posted on 10/24/2006 12:17:21 PM PDT by laurav
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To: Jeff Chandler

Which, to be honest, President Bush does bear some responsibility for...


23 posted on 10/24/2006 12:17:43 PM PDT by Little Ray (If you want to be a martyr, we want to martyr you.)
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To: Sub-Driver

failedpoliciesfailedpoliciesfailedpoliciesfailedpoliciesfailedpoliciesfailedpoliciesfailedpoliciesfailedpoliciesfailedpoliciesfailedpoliciesfailedpoliciesfailedpoliciesfailedpoliciesfailedpoliciesfailedpoliciesfailedpoliciesfailedpoliciesfailedpolicies

Cripes! I want to put a boot through the TV every time I hear that. And I don't even wear boots!


24 posted on 10/24/2006 12:18:24 PM PDT by SlowBoat407 (A living insult to islam since 1959)
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To: tobyhill
If the stock market isn't such a good barometer, then why were they referring to 401Ks as 201Ks before this current boom?
25 posted on 10/24/2006 12:18:26 PM PDT by MarkeyD (The tree of liberty must from time to time be watered with the blood of tyrants and patriots.)
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To: Sub-Driver

I thought the Democrats were against "Talking Down the Economy."


26 posted on 10/24/2006 12:19:08 PM PDT by Maceman (This is America. Why must we press "1" for English?)
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To: Sub-Driver

27 posted on 10/24/2006 12:20:04 PM PDT by Names Ash Housewares
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To: BenLurkin
Photobucket - Video and Image Hosting
28 posted on 10/24/2006 12:24:50 PM PDT by MarkeyD (The tree of liberty must from time to time be watered with the blood of tyrants and patriots.)
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To: tobyhill

What percentage of Americans have 401ks, IRAs, etc...


29 posted on 10/24/2006 12:26:00 PM PDT by Holicheese (Beerfest could be the greatest movie ever made!)
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To: Holicheese
It's a lot but apparently the RATS don't think of that as an investment because it's not free.
30 posted on 10/24/2006 12:28:41 PM PDT by tobyhill (The War on Terrorism is not for the weak.)
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To: Sub-Driver

I think I'll go with this guy's take on the economy, an economic and finance expert, over the partisan extremist opinions of DNC hacks:

COMMENTARY
It's a Faith Thing

By BRIAN S. WESBURY
October 17, 2006; Page A14

With equity markets steadily gaining ground and the Dow Jones Industrial Average reaching record highs, it is getting harder for cynics and pessimists to argue that the U.S. economy is doing poorly. But this does not stop them from trying. Lately, the old class-warrior standby, that "Wall Street may be doing fine, but Main Street suffers," is echoing down the alleyways.

Fortunately, no matter how many times this theory bounces off the walls, there is little in the way of facts to back it up. The so-called "jobless recovery" was dealt a severe blow when the Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS) reported that its annual recalibration of employment statistics will add 810,000 jobs to its previously calculated total. This is one of the largest revisions in history, exceeding the combined payrolls of GM, Ford, United and American Airlines.

In an additional blow to those who find things to worry about everywhere, the Treasury released its latest estimate of the budget deficit -- now expected to be $248 billion in FY 2006. Just eight months ago, the CBO guesstimated a $337 billion shortfall and the White House forecast a $423 billion deficit.


While cynicism and pessimism are part of human nature, handwringing based on out-of-date models and inaccurate data is unnecessary. Bad data and bad models are a dangerous combination that can bias political views and impact policy decisions. Recent revisions reflect the problem; the very data that caused so much indigestion previously now reveals a strong and resilient economy.

The driving force behind the good news is productivity growth fueled by innovation. If the 1980s and 1990s saw the invention and proliferation of new technology, the early 21st century is witnessing its implementation. The impact is immense, and it changes everything. The 2003 tax cuts have also played a major role. Before those tax cuts, the economy, job growth and the stock market were sluggish and stagnant. After them -- because they increased the incentives for risk-taking -- the economy and markets improved dramatically.

Business investment has boomed and nonfinancial corporate sector productivity has grown an annualized 4.3% over the past three years -- its most rapid growth in 45 years. Pre-tax corporate profits have doubled in just five years. Still, fears about growth and geopolitics have kept stocks cheap. A simple capitalized profits model (corporate profits divided by interest rates) suggests that even after recent strength, the broad U.S. equity market is 35% undervalued.

Part of this undervaluation reflects a view that the U.S. economy is fundamentally fragile, especially the consumer sector. But as long as tax rates are low, the economy will do just fine. It's a faith thing. Those who lack faith in free markets fret constantly about weak job growth, problems at old-line manufacturing firms and some signs of weakness in incomes. But this pessimistic view is heavily reliant on the BLS Establishment Survey, which was designed in a paternalistic age of large businesses and time-clock punching. It has difficulty capturing small business employment, the self-employed, independent contractors and many limited liability corporations. As a result, I have argued for at least a decade that it misses a great deal of our New Era Economy.

It is easier than ever to start and manage a new business and harder for the government to track those new businesses. Software programmers can work anywhere, any time. So can those who buy and sell on eBay. Masseuses, manicurists, landscapers, realtors, painters, dry-wallers and many other professions are naturals for small partnerships that avoid paying unemployment insurance, which means they escape the BLS establishment survey.

They do show up in a second BLS jobs survey -- the household survey, which is done in person or over the phone, and asks people, not employers, if they are working. A perfect example of these forces at work surfaced two weeks ago when the assets of Tower Records were sold off, including the flagship store on Hollywood's Sunset Boulevard, putting 3,000 employees out of work. Technology -- in this case, digital music downloading -- is boosting productivity rapidly. This type of creative destruction is both real and widespread. If former Tower Records employees use their intimate knowledge of the music business to make a living on eBay or consult to online music providers, they would disappear from the establishment survey, but remain in the household survey.

During the 12 months ending in September 2006, the household survey reported 2.54 million new jobs. Going back 24 months shows 5.5 million new jobs, an annual average of 2.75 million. This exceeds the booming 1995-2000 average of 2.34 million new jobs per year. The household survey, in contrast with the establishment survey, has consistently signaled a resilient economy. And it continues. In the past two months, the household survey has expanded by 261,000 per month, while the establishment survey rose by an average of just 120,000.

But that's not all. Because the payroll survey is the major source for both average hourly earnings and wage and salary estimates, these measures of income have also underestimated potential consumer strength. But like job growth, recent revisions found $160 billion of personal income that was previously uncounted.

This helps to explain the awesome tidal wave of tax revenues flowing into federal government coffers. Tax revenues grew 12% in 2005 and are up by 11.8% this year. Despite lower tax rates, total federal revenues are $410 billion higher this year than they were at their previous high water mark in 2000.

The problem is on the spending side. Federal government spending this past fiscal year was $907 billion higher than it was in 2000 -- the equivalent of adding both the Australia and Ireland GDPs to annual spending. If ranked, total annual U.S. government outlays of $2.7 trillion in 2006 would be the world's fourth largest GDP: Just below Germany, but 10% larger than China's entire economy. These spending increases make it even more amazing that the U.S. economy has been able to grow at a 3.7% annual average rate in the past three years. While pessimists fret about global competition, they rarely think about the fact that U.S. entrepreneurs must compete while carrying a government larger than China on their backs.

My estimates suggest that every percentage point increase in government spending as a share of GDP subtracts roughly 0.2% from real GDP growth. Between 2000 and 2006, spending jumped from 18.4% of GDP to a 20.3% share, a 1.9% increase. Whether this spending is financed by borrowing or taxation, it still crowds out the private sector and reduces potential real GDP growth by roughly 0.4%.

Nonetheless, tax cuts and productivity growth have overcome the negative impact of this spending splurge. Looking back, despite a dozen Fed rate cuts, the stock market did not bottom until the early months of 2003, when the pro-investment tax cut was finally on its way to passage. Since then, the Dow industrials is up 51%, the S&P 500 63%, and the Nasdaq 80%.

The lesson of all this is that when tax cuts and technology work together to encourage productivity growth, the economy and markets perform well. Massive positive revisions to employment and incomes, rising stock prices and a flood of new tax revenues paint a much different picture than conventional wisdom had expected. But history is clear. As long as government policies do not hinder entrepreneurship, the U.S. economy can overcome even the most daunting of challenges. Have faith.

Mr. Wesbury is the chief economist at First Trust Advisors L.P. in Lisle, Ill.


31 posted on 10/24/2006 12:30:36 PM PDT by MikeA (Not voting Nov. 7 because you're pouting is PRECISELY what Speaker Wannabe Pelosi wants you to do!)
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To: Sub-Driver
My God. So many lies, so little time. I could spend hours on this horseflop, but here's a little sample:

Let's take the canard about 10% of Americans owning 80% of all stock. First of all, this little donkey nugget ignores the fact that stock ownership is at an all-time high (over 70% of Americans own at least some stock). In addition, many Americans have other valuable holdings in fixed assets (bonds, CD's, cash value insurance policies) and real estate (home ownership is also at a record). Reading this screed, you'd think we were in another Great Depression.

Now, consider how Democrat (let's be honest - Socialist) spinners come up with the 10/80 whopper: they count outstanding shares of common and preferred class stock and then note that 80% of these shares are held by only 10% of investors. Now we all know of course, these investors never, ever sell their shares, they just hoard them and stuff 'em under their mattresses as heirlooms, and then greedily hold all this stock for themselves year after year as they grow into big fat Plutocratic Republicans, all nasty and evil and greedy and .... ok, ok: enough sarcasm. The point is that today's 10% of anything is not tomorrow's 10% in a dynamic Capitalist society. To put it bluntly, static assumptions suck, and the only greed in evidence here is that of Democrats for wealth they could never have created themselves.

Hey, idiots: do you know what the STOCK MARKET is? Yeah, it's a big building in New York, but that's not important right now. It's a collection of world-wide electronic trading platforms where tens of billions of stock shares are exchanged on a daily basis by tens of millions of people and institutions, in order to invest in companies - large, medium and small, so that they may have capital with which to grow and provide jobs and financial security for a vast number of people across the planet. Because that's what businesses do - unlike government, which taxes and spends but does not create. And who benefits from this creation, risk-taking, and investment? Everyone.

32 posted on 10/24/2006 12:31:30 PM PDT by andy58-in-nh
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To: All

I think I'll go with this guy's take on the economy, an economic and finance expert, over the partisan extremist opinions of DNC hacks:

COMMENTARY
It's a Faith Thing

By BRIAN S. WESBURY
October 17, 2006; Page A14

With equity markets steadily gaining ground and the Dow Jones Industrial Average reaching record highs, it is getting harder for cynics and pessimists to argue that the U.S. economy is doing poorly. But this does not stop them from trying. Lately, the old class-warrior standby, that "Wall Street may be doing fine, but Main Street suffers," is echoing down the alleyways.

Fortunately, no matter how many times this theory bounces off the walls, there is little in the way of facts to back it up. The so-called "jobless recovery" was dealt a severe blow when the Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS) reported that its annual recalibration of employment statistics will add 810,000 jobs to its previously calculated total. This is one of the largest revisions in history, exceeding the combined payrolls of GM, Ford, United and American Airlines.

In an additional blow to those who find things to worry about everywhere, the Treasury released its latest estimate of the budget deficit -- now expected to be $248 billion in FY 2006. Just eight months ago, the CBO guesstimated a $337 billion shortfall and the White House forecast a $423 billion deficit.


While cynicism and pessimism are part of human nature, handwringing based on out-of-date models and inaccurate data is unnecessary. Bad data and bad models are a dangerous combination that can bias political views and impact policy decisions. Recent revisions reflect the problem; the very data that caused so much indigestion previously now reveals a strong and resilient economy.

The driving force behind the good news is productivity growth fueled by innovation. If the 1980s and 1990s saw the invention and proliferation of new technology, the early 21st century is witnessing its implementation. The impact is immense, and it changes everything. The 2003 tax cuts have also played a major role. Before those tax cuts, the economy, job growth and the stock market were sluggish and stagnant. After them -- because they increased the incentives for risk-taking -- the economy and markets improved dramatically.

Business investment has boomed and nonfinancial corporate sector productivity has grown an annualized 4.3% over the past three years -- its most rapid growth in 45 years. Pre-tax corporate profits have doubled in just five years. Still, fears about growth and geopolitics have kept stocks cheap. A simple capitalized profits model (corporate profits divided by interest rates) suggests that even after recent strength, the broad U.S. equity market is 35% undervalued.

Part of this undervaluation reflects a view that the U.S. economy is fundamentally fragile, especially the consumer sector. But as long as tax rates are low, the economy will do just fine. It's a faith thing. Those who lack faith in free markets fret constantly about weak job growth, problems at old-line manufacturing firms and some signs of weakness in incomes. But this pessimistic view is heavily reliant on the BLS Establishment Survey, which was designed in a paternalistic age of large businesses and time-clock punching. It has difficulty capturing small business employment, the self-employed, independent contractors and many limited liability corporations. As a result, I have argued for at least a decade that it misses a great deal of our New Era Economy.

It is easier than ever to start and manage a new business and harder for the government to track those new businesses. Software programmers can work anywhere, any time. So can those who buy and sell on eBay. Masseuses, manicurists, landscapers, realtors, painters, dry-wallers and many other professions are naturals for small partnerships that avoid paying unemployment insurance, which means they escape the BLS establishment survey.

They do show up in a second BLS jobs survey -- the household survey, which is done in person or over the phone, and asks people, not employers, if they are working. A perfect example of these forces at work surfaced two weeks ago when the assets of Tower Records were sold off, including the flagship store on Hollywood's Sunset Boulevard, putting 3,000 employees out of work. Technology -- in this case, digital music downloading -- is boosting productivity rapidly. This type of creative destruction is both real and widespread. If former Tower Records employees use their intimate knowledge of the music business to make a living on eBay or consult to online music providers, they would disappear from the establishment survey, but remain in the household survey.

During the 12 months ending in September 2006, the household survey reported 2.54 million new jobs. Going back 24 months shows 5.5 million new jobs, an annual average of 2.75 million. This exceeds the booming 1995-2000 average of 2.34 million new jobs per year. The household survey, in contrast with the establishment survey, has consistently signaled a resilient economy. And it continues. In the past two months, the household survey has expanded by 261,000 per month, while the establishment survey rose by an average of just 120,000.

But that's not all. Because the payroll survey is the major source for both average hourly earnings and wage and salary estimates, these measures of income have also underestimated potential consumer strength. But like job growth, recent revisions found $160 billion of personal income that was previously uncounted.

This helps to explain the awesome tidal wave of tax revenues flowing into federal government coffers. Tax revenues grew 12% in 2005 and are up by 11.8% this year. Despite lower tax rates, total federal revenues are $410 billion higher this year than they were at their previous high water mark in 2000.

The problem is on the spending side. Federal government spending this past fiscal year was $907 billion higher than it was in 2000 -- the equivalent of adding both the Australia and Ireland GDPs to annual spending. If ranked, total annual U.S. government outlays of $2.7 trillion in 2006 would be the world's fourth largest GDP: Just below Germany, but 10% larger than China's entire economy. These spending increases make it even more amazing that the U.S. economy has been able to grow at a 3.7% annual average rate in the past three years. While pessimists fret about global competition, they rarely think about the fact that U.S. entrepreneurs must compete while carrying a government larger than China on their backs.

My estimates suggest that every percentage point increase in government spending as a share of GDP subtracts roughly 0.2% from real GDP growth. Between 2000 and 2006, spending jumped from 18.4% of GDP to a 20.3% share, a 1.9% increase. Whether this spending is financed by borrowing or taxation, it still crowds out the private sector and reduces potential real GDP growth by roughly 0.4%.

Nonetheless, tax cuts and productivity growth have overcome the negative impact of this spending splurge. Looking back, despite a dozen Fed rate cuts, the stock market did not bottom until the early months of 2003, when the pro-investment tax cut was finally on its way to passage. Since then, the Dow industrials is up 51%, the S&P 500 63%, and the Nasdaq 80%.

The lesson of all this is that when tax cuts and technology work together to encourage productivity growth, the economy and markets perform well. Massive positive revisions to employment and incomes, rising stock prices and a flood of new tax revenues paint a much different picture than conventional wisdom had expected. But history is clear. As long as government policies do not hinder entrepreneurship, the U.S. economy can overcome even the most daunting of challenges. Have faith.

Mr. Wesbury is the chief economist at First Trust Advisors L.P. in Lisle, Ill.


33 posted on 10/24/2006 12:31:31 PM PDT by MikeA (Not voting Nov. 7 because you're pouting is PRECISELY what Speaker Wannabe Pelosi wants you to do!)
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To: Sub-Driver
Totally garbage! The worst area of our economy is the real estate market in some states. California and NY to mention a couple. But this has nothing to do with the current Administration, but rather a greedy real estate industry.
34 posted on 10/24/2006 12:34:38 PM PDT by Logical me (Oh, well!!!)
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To: Sub-Driver

Ever notice how the "hard working" Americans remain at the bottom of the economic ladder. maybe they should become lazy and shiftless, and they'll get rich.


35 posted on 10/24/2006 12:35:42 PM PDT by almcbean
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To: laurav
No the claim on Median Income is just another Democrat lie.

Figure for 2005: $46,326

Figure for 2003: $43,318

36 posted on 10/24/2006 12:44:16 PM PDT by MNJohnnie (EeevilCon, Snowflake, Conservative Fundamentalist Gun Owning Bush Bot Dittohead reporting for duty!)
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To: Sub-Driver
By citing growth in the stock market, he ignores the fact that 10 percent of Americans own 80 percent of all stocks. [Economic Policy Institute, 10/11/06]

ROFL. As opposed to the old Bill Clinton Pets.com inflated stock market, when most of the stock was held by the homeless instead of by CEOs.

37 posted on 10/24/2006 12:47:24 PM PDT by jpl (Victorious warriors win first, then go to war; defeated warriors go to war first, then seek to win.)
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To: Sub-Driver
Compare and Contrast:



"It's the economy, Stupid."

* * *




"It's the economy, Voter."



Pick who best personifies arrogance (circle one).




Why Vote Republican?



38 posted on 10/24/2006 12:49:07 PM PDT by OESY
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To: Toidylop
"When this Administration took office, it inherited a projected ten-year surplus (2002-2011) of $5.6 trillion..."

Projected by the House Budget Committee which has NEVER once been anywhere near correct! The last real surplus was under a President named Nixon!
39 posted on 10/24/2006 12:51:54 PM PDT by JLGALT (Get ready - Lock and Load!)
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To: Holicheese

Good question!


40 posted on 10/24/2006 12:57:50 PM PDT by BenLurkin ("The entire remedy is with the people." - W. H. Harrison)
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