WASHINGTON — The campaigning politicians apparently cannot talk
accurately about the economy. As I am not campaigning for anything,
let me try to describe the economy as it is. The Democrats cannot
talk accurately because if they did the average American would
realize that the economy under President George W. Bush has not
been so bad. Furthermore, the Democrats have not a clue as to how
to improve it. All they would do with their promised tax increases
and other extensions of the federal bludgeon onto the market would
be to slow down an economy that is actually growing.
Did I say growing? Yes I did, but the Republicans cannot talk
about the growing economy because if they did it would sound as
though they had no compassion for those who are not doing
particularly well in this economy. This is a rhetorical trick that
the Democrats have imposed on the Republicans. So effective has it
been in cowing the Republicans that quite possibly never again will
a sitting president be able to boast of a record of economic
achievement. To do so would be to ignore the less well off, even
though there will always be less well off. For that matter, in
every economy no matter how robust, there will be citizens in
difficulty.
Nonetheless, someone ought to note the economic health of the
present economy. Let me give it a try.
Yes, with gasoline pushing $4 a gallon and fuel oil at historic
highs as we face the winter, there is reason to be apprehensive.
Moreover, there are widespread declines in home prices. Financial
institutions are failing. The equity market is down. And inflation
is inching up. Yet that does not warrant describing this economy as
being in “Depression,” as Joe Stiglitz, the Clintonista, has said
it is. Nor is it even in recession, as the Prophet Obama and his
amiable sidekick, Senator Joe Biden, believe it to be.
In point of fact, we are living through the third longest
peacetime expansion since 1857, which is about as far back as such
calculations have been made. The growth continues. Last quarter’s
growth has now been revised upwards from just under 2% to a healthy
3.3%. Milton Friedman calculated that that real GDP grew at 3.25%
since World War II, about the same as it has grown from the middle
of the 19th century.
At the present the economy’s growth is relatively healthy and
its prospects are good. Sure catastrophe could strike, but it will
have to be one whale of a catastrophe, say a big taxer in the White
House surrounded by people with Saul Alinsky’s vision of economics,
which was socialism — assuming that the old radical had any
economic vision at all. Alinsky was the community organizer who
inspired the Prophet. Incidentally, there is no evidence that Obama
has had any managerial experience. Nor has he managed budgets of
any size. Senator John McCain managed the largest air squadron in
the Navy with a budget of over $1 billion. Governor Sarah Palin
managed a small town and the state of Alaska.
So the economy is doing pretty well, though more can be expected
and it is understandable that the citizenry does expect more. Since
the beginning of the Reagan economic comeback, we have all lived
through a period of unparalleled economic stability and vigor. If
the Bush Administration was the third longest period of growth
since 1857, the two longer periods were experienced in our
lifetimes, in the Clinton Administration (120 months) and the
Reagan Administration (92 months). It is natural that contemporary
Americans expect more from their economy.
To expect it from the Prophet Obama, however, is a leap in faith
and an investment in futility.