By R. Emmett Tyrrell, Jr. on 3.11.04 @ 12:06AM
John Kerry doesn’t get it. But then he’s never been self-employed.
WASHINGTON -- Recently I have been making my own scholarly
contribution to political scientists' understanding of the 2004
election by identifying a rising new constituency within the
electorate, the moron vote. Those who compose it are the angry, the
fearful, and the unaccountably neurotic. When they beheld Dr.
Howard Dean hollering in public about how very angry he was, they
thought of Abraham Lincoln. Now they behold Senator John Pierre
Kerry boasting of all the hair he has on his chest, the medals on
his wall, and his grim plans for President George W. Bush and they
think of John F. Kennedy or maybe Robespierre -- Kerry is still
very French-looking, n'est-ce pas?
Yet Senator Kerry has to cast his net more widely if he is to
give the Bush of his tirades the promised heave-ho. Thus he now
goes beyond anger and personal braggadocio to speak of economics
and foreign policy. In doing so he is not merely addressing our
country's morons. He is addressing the understandably confused. For
whatever reason in addressing them he merely adds to their
confusion. Possibly he too is understandably confused. He sees
hostilities in Iraq that have gone on beyond four months and cannot
understand why our troops are not en route home. Certainly his
experience in war lasted only four months and then it was homeward
bound. He sees an economy that is growing at a brisk 4% or more and
sees economic despair. He is the perfect candidate for the
understandably confused.
Yet elections are not supposed to spread confusion. Those of us
who relish democracy always hope that an election is an opportunity
for debate and for spreading the truth. Once the Massachusetts
Braggart has quieted down, allow me to file two caveats against his
lamentations. First, in Iraq we have won the war and seem to be
winning the peace. Though it would be imprudent for our government
to mention it, our casualties have dropped dramatically this past
month. The Iraqis may soon be governing themselves with minimum
involvement from us or our heroic allies, the French and the
Germans.
As for the economy, its robust growth suggests that job growth
must be strong also. Yet the Bureau of Labor Statistics publishes
data declaring job growth is low, only 21,000 new jobs in February
as opposed to the forecasted 125,000. Are these statistics sound?
Senator Kerry does not ask that question, but some economists are
asking it. One, Brian Wesbury, a man distinguished for his reading
of economic trends and business achievement, has looked carefully
at the economy and found job growth where others have failed to
look.
Wesbury claims that in the New Economy, invigorated as it is by
developments in soft-ware and technology that make founding small
businesses more feasible, job creation is missed by the old way of
measuring it. The old way was through the job survey called the
Establishment Survey. The new way is through the survey called the
Household Survey. The Establishment Survey takes into account
business establishments nationwide by measuring payroll
employment. "But," writes Wesbury in the April issue of
The American Spectator, "payrolls are not where the action
is today. The real growth is entrepreneurial. Self-employment and
Limited Liability Corporations (LLC) are growing like weeds, and
these types of employment do not fit into the normal payroll." They
do fit into the Household Survey.
Whereas the Establishment Survey tells us that since the end of
the recession in November 2001 payroll jobs have declined by
718,000, the Household Survey indicates 1.9 million jobs have been
created. Naturally, Senator Kerry, the candidate of confusion,
relies on the Establishment Survey. I doubt he has ever paid any
attention to the Household Survey.
Wesbury believes that he should. It not only calculates job
growth more accurately than the other survey it also has tracked a
trend. For two decades self-employment has represented an ever
larger percentage of post-recession job growth. In the months
following the 1982 recession self-employment accounted for 5.4% of
job growth. In the months following the 1991 recession it accounted
for 9.3% of job growth. "Since the recession ended in November
2001," Wesbury writes, "total household employment has climbed 2.1
million and self-employment has grown by 644,000….31.1% of
all job growth in the Household Survey."
Is it possible to have the healthy growth we now have and a
decline in jobs? The understandably confused are confused by this
as well they should be. If Wesbury is right, the confusion is
caused by economic statisticians' failure to keep up with our
dynamic economy. The economy is growing and so is the job
market.
topics:
Foreign Policy, Economics, Business, Iraq, NATO