×
Newsmax TV & Webwww.newsmax.comFREE - In Google Play
VIEW
×
Newsmax TV & Webwww.newsmax.comFREE - On the App Store
VIEW
Tags: economy | growth | obama | jobs

Obama Keeps US Mired in Slow Growth

Peter Morici By Thursday, 27 March 2014 09:01 AM EDT Current | Bio | Archive

The economy expanded at a 2.6 percent pace in the fourth quarter — hardly the 4 percent to 5 percent needed to provide enough jobs and restore housing prices to prerecession levels.

Throughout 2013, higher taxes on all income classes — President Barack Obama's levies on the wealthy, higher local taxes on the middle class, and reinstatement of Social Security taxes on lower-income workers — depressed consumer spending.

Consumers coped by saving less but that dampened winter spending, and first quarter is expected to register growth at about 2 percent. Activity should pick up this spring to about 3 percent in the second half of the year.

Alert: 399% Stock Market Rally Predicted (Buy These 4 Stocks Now)

Jobs Market

The unemployment rate has become a meaningless statistic for evaluating the economic recovery, because so many discouraged Americans have quit seeking jobs and aren't counted in jobless statistics. If the same percentage of adults were active today as when the recovery began, the unemployment rate would be 9.6 percent.

Baby-boomer retirements aren't driving down adult labor-force participation. During the last decade, to compensate for shrinking pensions, the percentage of Americans ages 65 to 69 who have been forced to continue working has risen from 26.8 percent to 30.8 percent.

Going forward, the economy will create about 200,000 jobs each month, hardly the 350,000 needed to raise employment to prerecession levels.

Housing Prices

Homes have recovered 43 percent of the value lost during the financial crisis. Speculators scooped up bargain-priced foreclosures but that activity is abating.

More young adults are leaving their parents' nests. Housing starts should rise above 1 million for the first time since 2007, still less than half the precrisis peak.

Comparing household incomes with home prices, homes look quite affordable, but first-time buyers are terribly burdened by student debt. Coping with uncertain job security, many are opting to rent apartments.

Apartments are cheaper to build, result in fewer spinoff purchases for improvements and help lift the economy and employment less than single-unit dwellings. That's the hangover from young folks borrowing too much to obtain questionably useful college diplomas.

Stocks

The bull market is five years old, and many analysts believe it is time to cash out some profits. Price-earnings ratios are frothy, especially considering weak domestic growth.

However, the Standard & Poor's 500 earn much of their profits abroad. Since 2000, corporate earnings are up 440 percent, while stocks increased only 21 percent — much less than inflation at 43 percent or housing values at 62 percent.

Young folks in apartments should put $50 a month — or whatever they can spare — in an S&P index fund. They will be thankful when their grey hair arrives.

Breaking the Funk

Years of huge federal deficits make fiscal policy a spent force, and the Federal Reserve can't do much more to spur growth. The real remedies are found in boosting individual industries, regulatory reform and better competing in foreign markets.

Increased onshore oil-and-gas production has dramatically reduced oil imports. Remaining foreign purchases could be eliminated by lifting excessive environmental regulations that ban drilling off the Atlantic and Pacific Coasts and parts of the Gulf.

More meddlesome to growth is the continuing surge of Chinese and Japanese imports made artificially cheap by Beijing and Tokyo's manipulation of yuan and yen exchange rates.

Economists across the political spectrum have suggested remedies, but ideologues on both the right and left in congress and administration eschew practical solutions.

Credit to businesses could be boosted, and capital markets made more supportive to growth, by scrapping most of Dodd-Frank, separating Wall Street financial houses from ordinary banking, and breaking up the biggest banks to achieve a balance between competition and regulation.

Obamacare is raising the cost of health insurance, limiting the range of care choices, and creating an army of part-time workers as businesses seek to avoid burdensome mandates.

Republicans can't come up with a viable alternative because they eschew foreign models that work — like those in Germany and Holland that recognize that markets alone can't discipline healthcare costs and regulate prices.

More reliance on markets in banking, less in healthcare — that sounds like a prescription for moderation. Something shrill voices on Capitol Hill and the White House can't embrace.

Greek civilization flourished adhering to the Golden Mean — the middle between the two extremes — that is still where most solutions to our problems reside.

Alert: 399% Stock Market Rally Predicted (Buy These 4 Stocks Now)


© 2023 Newsmax Finance. All rights reserved.


Peter-Morici
The economy grew 2.6 percent in the fourth quarter - hardly the 4 to 5 percent needed to provide enough jobs and restore housing prices to prerecession levels.
economy,growth,obama,jobs
735
2014-01-27
Thursday, 27 March 2014 09:01 AM
Newsmax Media, Inc.

Sign up for Newsmax’s Daily Newsletter

Receive breaking news and original analysis - sent right to your inbox.

(Optional for Local News)
Privacy: We never share your email address.
Join the Newsmax Community
Read and Post Comments
Please review Community Guidelines before posting a comment.
 
Get Newsmax Text Alerts
TOP

Newsmax, Moneynews, Newsmax Health, and Independent. American. are registered trademarks of Newsmax Media, Inc. Newsmax TV, and Newsmax World are trademarks of Newsmax Media, Inc.

NEWSMAX.COM
MONEYNEWS.COM
© Newsmax Media, Inc.
All Rights Reserved
NEWSMAX.COM
MONEYNEWS.COM
© Newsmax Media, Inc.
All Rights Reserved