Wednesday, November 25, 2009

Opinion

Michael Barone

A Political Reality Check on the Economy

May 29, 2008 03:41 PM ET | Michael Barone | Permanent Link | Print

"It's the economy, stupid," James Carville famously said during the 1992 campaign, when a young Bill Clinton was running against the other President Bush. The same could be said during this presidential campaign. The headlines are full of economic bad news—mortgage foreclosures, the collapse of an investment bank, higher gas and food prices, lower home prices. Voters routinely list the economy as their chief concern, and consumer confidence has sunk to low levels.

Yet at the same time the economic numbers are not so bad. A recession is defined as two quarters of contraction. But we haven't had one yet. The gross domestic product has grown, albeit by only 0.6 percent, in the past two quarters. As my U.S. News colleague James Pethokoukis blogged after the most recent numbers came in, "Dude, where's my recession?"

By any historic standard, our economic numbers are good, though possibly headed in a negative direction. April's unemployment was 5 percent—a figure that once upon a time was considered full employment. The Consumer Price Index was up 3.9 percent, largely due to price rises in energy and food; core inflation was 2.3 percent. Productivity was up 2.2 percent.

Those are numbers that would have been taken as a sign of very good times when I was growing up. Then we had recessions every four or five years, bad bouts of inflation in the 1940s, 1950s, and 1970s, and unemployment that sometimes surged to 10 percent nationally and to 15 percent in industrial states like Michigan. In contrast, we've had only two mild recessions since 1983, with a third now possible but not yet in view.

In those 25 years, we have had low-inflation economic growth more than 90 percent of the time—something never before achieved in American history. Alan Greenspan titled his memoir The Age of Turbulence, but the story he tells is one of the amazing resilience of the American economy. Hit by one shock after another—a stock market crash in 1987, currency meltdowns in Mexico in 1994 and in Asia in 1997, the collapse of Long-Term Capital Management in 1998, the September 11 attacks, and the Enron collapse in 2001—our economy has adapted and kept growing.

In the America I grew up in, the political effects of economic issues were clear. Voters, most of whom had vivid memories of the Depression of the 1930s, tended to vote for Democrats when the economy sagged. Political scientists produced formulas for predicting elections that were based largely on macroeconomic indicators: If the economy was growing, the incumbent party's presidential candidate would win; if it was in recession, he'd lose. But those formulas don't work any more. If they did, Al Gore would have been elected by a comfortable margin in 2000.

The norm. Today, few voters remember the 1930s; the median-age voter has lived all his adult life in a period when low-inflation economic growth has become the norm. Voters take a good economy for granted and are enraged by any irritation. But who is to blame? The subprime mortgage crisis was brought about by policies encouraging homeownership supported by George W. Bush and members of Congress of both parties. Monetary policy is made by Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke, who has bipartisan support.

Polls suggest votes are not moving in response to local economic conditions. Recent polls in Michigan, the No. 1 state in unemployment, show John McCain running even with Barack Obama, even though George W. Bush lost the state by 3 percent in 2004. And Obama is running much stronger than John Kerry did in Great Plains and Rocky Mountain states with very low unemployment. But then Obama is advocating fiscal and trade policies—higher taxes on high earners, more protectionism—which are the opposite of John F. Kennedy's and the same as Herbert Hoover's. Yes, the economy matters in politics but not in the way it used to.

Tags: economy | politics

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Reader Comments

Hmmm... What I remeber...

My grandmother faithfully every night after the tonight show would watch the Dow Jones report. If it went down 20 to 30 points she would not be an easy person to live with. She is probably flipping around in her grave if she would know that her grand children and great grand children with the economy of today live check to check and no way of supporting themselves other than maybe fishing to eat or feed our children. This is worry some for me because I know just enough to see that the stock market crashed. I see just enough and read that the banks will have a run on them if it has not started already. People will turn to what is real and not a bank note or a reserve insured promise. I know just enough to know MYSELF, MY FAMILY OF FOUR AND TWO DOGS ARE IN SEVER FINANCIAL SCREW UP IF I CAN'T FIND A WAY TO INVEST OR COME UP WITH A WAY TO SURVIVE. OKAYE THIS IS REAL... NOT A JOKE ANYMORE THIS IS GOING TO HAPPEN. WHERE DO PEOPLE LIKE US DO OR GO. WE CAN'T EVEN THINK OF LEAVING THE COUNTRY. MIDDLE CLASS IS WHERE WE ARE TRYING TO GET TO BE BUT WE ARE GOING TO BE THE WORSE CLASS OF ALL. I SHOULD OF LISTENED TO MYSELF FROM THE VERY BEGINNING AND NOT GOT A BANK ACCOUNT. NEVER SHOULD OF USED DRAFTING SYSTEM. NEVER WILL I BUY ANYTHING WITHOUT SAVING IT ON MY PERSON AGAIN. IF THE AMERICAN PEOPLE GET THROUGH THIS WITHOUT A REVOLUTION I WILL BE AMAZED. WE ARE NOT THE PEOPLE WE USED TO BE. THE PLAIN TRADE AND BARTER SYSTEM IS ALMOST OBSELETE IN OUR VOCABULARY AND IT WAS WHAT WE WERE FOUNDED ON.

I HAVE NOTHING ELSE TO SAY EXCEPT VOTE FOR MICKEY MOUSE BECAUSE BOTH CANIDATES HAVE NOT SHOWN ANY WAY OF BEING HELPFUL TO OUR SITUATION.

Economic Tailspin

Mr. Barone: The entire country is not on the same valium you are on. The cost to heat my home has tripled in one year. My gasoline price is up 50 percent in one year. My groceries are up 40 percent in one year. This is no small trend. No matter how you mis-report the numbers, the country is now on the ropes, soon to be on the mat with grocers, oil companies and manufacturer's kicking at its dying body. Get off of whatever sedative du jour you are on. If you're going to "call the play by play", give your readers the right score.

jg

Michael, you are an outstanding political commentator.

A few thoughts on your economics column:

The recession start and stop dates are set by the National Bureau of Economic Research Business Cycle Dating Committee. They do NOT use two consecutive quarters of falling GDP; this is their announcement of the last recession:

http://www.nber.org/cycles/november2001/

The four metrics that they list in paragraph two -- industrial production, employment, real income, and wholesale-retail trade -- have all peaked and begun declining over October 2007-March 2008.

The recession is underway, and the NBER BCDC will announce such within a few months.

Oh, and the economy is terrible because of the horrendous household debt overhang. It is without precedent; the Great Depression was caused by easy credit and high household debt levels (and the recovery was tripped and slowed by stupid government fiscal policies and regulations). Yet, today, household debt to GDP is 50% higher than in 1929, the start of the Great Depression.

It is ugly out there, Michael.

Keep up the outstanding work on political commentary, and drop a line if you need direction to logical, factual, and true (alternative) views on the economy.

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Michael Barone is a senior writer for U.S.News & World Report and principal coauthor of The Almanac of American Politics. He has written for many publications—including the Economist and the New York Times.

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