The history of America's recessions is provided at the website of the National Bureau of
Economic Research (NBER). Before this last recession, since the Great Depression recessions in
America have lasted an average of 10 months, with the longest previously lasting 16 months. Yet
here we are 47 months after the last recession started, and we still have no real recovery.
Instead, unemployment has been stuck at 9% or above for the longest period since the Great
Depression. Unemployment for blacks has remained over 15% for over 2 years, with Hispanic
unemployment stuck well into double digits over that time as well. Teenage unemployment has
persisted at nearly 25%, with black teenage unemployment still nearly 40%.
The U6 unemployment rate, reflecting all of the unemployed still wanting work and the
underemployed who can't get full time work, is still 16.2%. That includes an army of the
unemployed or underemployed of over 26 million Americans. And that still doesn't fully count
the millions of Americans who have given up and dropped out of the work force altogether.
On September 13 came the Census Bureau report fleshing out the full meaning of no economic
recovery under Obama. Median family income has fallen all the way back to 1996 levels. The
Wall Street Journal further reported on September 14, "Earnings of the typical man who works
full time year round fell, and are lower--adjusted for inflation--than in 1978."
The poverty rate climbed to 15.1%, higher than in the late 1960s when the War on Poverty was
getting underway, $16 trillion ago. The child poverty rate climbed to 22%, nearly a quarter of all
American children. The total number of Americans in poverty is higher than at any time in the
over 50 years that the Census Bureau has been tallying it. Moreover, the number of Americans
ages 25-34 living with their parents has soared by 25%.
Yes, I know NBER declared the recession technically over in June, 2009, still the longest
recession on record since the Depression. But the point is next month will be 4 years since the
recession started, and there is still no sustained real recovery. Or as economist John Lott has
emphasized, Obamanomics has produced the worst recovery since the Great Depression.
Obama apologists can't continue to blame the depths of the previous recession, and they can't
because the historical record makes plain that the worse the recession, the stronger the recovery.
Based on that historical record, we should be completing the second year of a booming economy
by now.
In the second year of the Reagan recovery, real economic growth boomed by 6.8%, the highest
in 50 years. In the first two years of that recovery, 7.6 million new jobs were created, on the way
to 20 million jobs created during the first 7 years. Presently, we are still 6 million jobs below the
peak before the last recession, four years ago.
The chief excuse of the Obama apologists is "this time is different," citing the book of that title,
This Time Is Different: Eight Centuries of Financial Folly, by Carmen Reinhart and Kenneth S.
Rogoff. But the theme of that book is exactly the opposite of what it is cited for here - that "this
time is different" is never true.
The apologists cite the book to argue that what we have suffered this time was not just a
recession, but a financial crisis, and the data in the book shows, they argue, that recovery from a
financial crisis takes a lot longer than recovery from a recession.
But that is not the experience of the American, free market, capitalist economy. The experience
of the American economy is reported in full at the National Bureau of Economic Research, as
cited above - recessions since the Great Depression previously have lasted an average of 10
months, with the longest previously 16 months, and the deeper the recession the stronger the
recovery. That is the standard by which the performance of Obamanomics is to be judged. Which
of those American recessions were a "financial crisis" that breaks the pattern?
The data discussed in the book, by contrast, "covers sixty-six countries over nearly eight
centuries." It "goes back as far as twelfth century China and medieval Europe." The data "come
from Africa, Asia, Europe, Latin America, North America, and Oceania." The experience
from 12th century China, medieval Europe, spendthrift demagogues and socialist economies
from Latin America, Europe, Africa and Asia, do not set the standard of expectations for post
depression, free market, capitalist America over the last 70 years, the most powerful economic
engine in the history of the world.
The data in the book is marshaled instead to explain the fundamental principles common to the
data, and why, in fact, "this time is different" is actually always wrong. Seizing upon the data in
the book to try to give some sort of pass to Obamanomics for failing the economic performance
standards of American history is just political propaganda.
Moreover, the concept of a recession is well-defined. It is two consecutive quarters or more of
negative GDP growth. By that standard, we can rigorously define when a recession starts and
when it ends. But trying to label a recession as a "financial crisis," for the purposes of giving
policymakers a free pass on their performance, is not similarly so well-defined. Again, which
of the postdepression recessions in America was a "financial crisis" that shows a break in the
pattern?
The only previous American economic performance, at least within the last 100 years, that
begins to look like the results of Obamanomics is the 1930s, which makes sense because
that is when America followed similar policies to Obamanomics. That is when Obama's
unreconstructed, naïve, Rip Van Winkle, Keynesian economics first arose. It failed then for
the same obvious reasons it has failed now.
Increasing government spending, deficits and debt does not promote economic growth and
prosperity, as Obama and ineducable Democrats to this day believe. What promotes economic
growth and prosperity is incentives for increased production, as Reaganomics proved 30 years
ago for anyone sentient who was paying attention.
Moreover, as I argue in my new publication, Obama and the Crash of 2013, unless the policies
of Obamanomics are changed, the result will be another severe recession in 2013 that will make
the results overall of the Obama years look similar to the 1930s. That should not be a surprise,
because Obama is modeling his Administration and its policies and political strategies on the
Franklin Roosevelt years.