When Obama won the presidency, the economy was in free fall and
many people hoped that his policies would be more like Clinton’s than Bush’s,
returning us to a time of robust growth in job creation and market indices. As
much as it may horrify Democrats and Republicans alike to hear this, his
presidency may turn out to be more like Reagan’s than Clinton’s. For one thing,
they’re the only presidents since World War II who have had to deal with a double
digit misery index.
For decades before Reagan, economists generally agreed that
there was a trade-off between inflation and unemployment. One could pump more
money into the economy and stimulate spending and job creation, but pay the
price of higher inflation. Or, conversely, one could fight inflation by
limiting the growth of money and government spending but risk higher unemployment.
Then, oil prices rose, simultaneously triggering price hikes at the same time
that production costs shot up, making it harder for businesses to compete:
suddenly, inflation AND unemployment were rising together.
High unemployment and high inflation alike make people
miserable, so economists began to track the misery index, the sum of these two.
The reasons that Reagan and Obama had to deal with
double-digit misery indices are similar. Both men had to deal with a faltering
global economy (the catalyst in Reagan’s time was the oil-shock and in Obama’s
was the financial crisis). Both managed to offend opponents who thought that
their policies just made things worse.
In spite of offering a message of hope, things seemed to get
worse under the charismatic Reagan. When he took office, the misery index was
only 8.3 but by the second half of the following year, it was persistently
above 10, staying at 10 or above for 14 months (peaking at 10.7). It was not
until the middle of 1983 that the misery index fell below double-digits, and it
continued to drop until, by the November of 1984 when he was re-elected, it had
fallen to below 8. His vice-president, HW Bush, inherited an economy with a
misery index roughly half of what it had been during its peak during Reagan’s
tenure. Reagan inherited something bad,
made it worse, and then left it far better.
Obama, too, seemed to have made a bad situation worse. Not
only did unemployment jump when he took office, but the deficit soared to
record levels. For him, the misery index peaked at only 10.2, but it did so in
his first year. And even his supporters admitted that it persisted for too high
for too long.
Most people now see the recession and unemployment in Reagan’s
first term as unavoidable in the quest to drive out inflation. Had Reagan
heeded the call of critics to adopt policies that lessened unemployment, he
would have risked triggering inflation before it had been tamed.
Similarly, it is hard to see how Obama’s attempt to reduce the
deficit during a recovery could have done anything other than risk triggering
another recession. (And in fact, the bright David Cameron, Britain’s PM, has
done just that, putting austerity ahead of full employment; Britain’s GDP
growth in the fourth quarter of 2011 was 0.) Just as Reagan had to first deal with
inflation and then unemployment, so did Obama have to deal first with
unemployment and then the deficit, in spite of criticism from people who could
only see what he was doing wrong.
Reagan was also seen as the man who brought back the country
from excess. While everyone admitted that there needed to be some regulation
and government spending, most felt like it had gone too far. The perception at
the end of his term was that he’d given the economy a more solid foundation,
less dependent on bad policies that hampered businesses and left everyone
perpetually uneasy about inflation.
While conservatives seem perpetually convinced that a turn
to the right will get us where we’re going (and liberals a turn to the left),
in fact the moderates who swing elections realize that a country is as likely
to run off the road in either direction.
Obama, like Reagan, is seen by his supporters as a man who
brought back the country from excess. While everyone admits that corporations
need some freedom to pursue policies disdained in DC and taxes would ideally be
lower, many felt like deregulation and tax cuts had gone too far. If Obama
manages to better regulate Wall St – and all of corporate America – while getting
tax revenues back up, he’ll be seen as giving the economy a more solid
foundation, less dependent on debt and bad policies that left businesses
unaccountable and everyone perpetually uneasy about job loss and growing income
inequality.
There are differences between the two, of course, but if
this recovery continues it wouldn’t be surprising if Obama becomes a new model
for future politicians on the art of using double-digit misery to promote
substantial change.
1 comment:
I think the middle is overrated, not nearly as wise and useful as they think they are.
Of course I'm solidly on the Left, so what do I know?
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