In his acceptance speech for the Republican nomination, Mitt Romney promised if elected the economy would create 12 million jobs in his first four years in office. Considering we are presently in the worst jobs market since the Great Depression, with the longest period of high, sustained unemployment in 80 years, he’s got his work cut out for him.
Overall, since Jan. 2008, the economy has lost
a net of 4.7 million jobs, according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics’ (BLS)
establishment survey. 4.3 million of those were lost in the private sector: 1.7
million in manufacturing, 1.9 million in construction, 724,000 in private
service providing, 811,000 in retail, 378,000 in information, 481,000 in
financial activities, and 116,000 in professional and business activities.
These losses were offset by increases of
95,000 in mining and logging, 342,000 in education, and 1.37 million in health.
For Romney’s numbers to work, the economy
would need to produce a net 3 million jobs a year at a pace of 250,000 a month.
That’s problematic, because according BLS’ household survey, in the past three
years, the economy has only produced jobs at a rate of 64,000 a month, while
the non-institutional population has grown by about 207,000 a month.
At full employment, 63 percent of the
employable population would be working. Therefore to keep up with the growth of
population the economy needs to produce about 130,000 jobs a month. Over
Obama’s term of office, we have come nowhere near that.
Meanwhile, the labor force has been stagnant,
only increasing at a pace of about 53,000 a month in the past two years,
indicative of students staying in school longer or graduates simply not
entering the workforce.
So, compounding Romney’s jobs challenge, there
is a buildup of about 80,000 idle labor supply a month that if allowed to
persist, will make the U.S. look like Spain or Greece in a relatively short
time. Those nations have youth unemployment rates of over 50 percent.
By all measures, we are not in a typical
recession, but a depression — which is characterized by a prolonged period of
high unemployment and collapsing asset prices.
That is one of the major reasons why Barack
Obama has failed to turn the jobs market around. He treated the crisis as if it
was a cyclical downturn. It wasn’t, and it isn’t. Romney cannot make the same
mistake.
What did the economy in was a gargantuan
credit bubble, some $54 trillion of credit outstanding nationwide that had
grown to some 372 percent of the Gross Domestic Product (GDP) by 2008. That was
simply more debt than the economy could sustain — with more loans than there is
money to repay them — and the wreckage is still being found.
The last time this happened in U.S. history
was during the Great Depression. Consider the following chart produced by Dr.
Lacy Hunt, chief economist at Hoisington Investment Management, showing two
major credit cycles in the past 100 years:
The deleveraging (i.e. repayment and default)
process we are currently undergoing is the unavoidable outcome of these credit
cycles. If credit creation becomes excessive, it creates a bubble that, as we
have seen, has the potential to take the economy with it when it pops. Slowed
output and fewer jobs in the aftermath is the predictable outcome.
So, Romney must face what Pimco CEO
Mohammad El-Erian has described as the “new normal”. The problem as El-Erian defines it is “an economy that
must find a way to safely ‘deleverage.’ We must overcome the many years during
which policymakers lost sight of sustainable drivers of growth and jobs and
instead ended up relying on excessive leverage, over-indebtedness and an absurd
sense of credit entitlement.”
And that is just one of the many impediments
to economic growth and job creation facing Romney should he be elected. Others
include a vast web of labor laws, energy production restrictions, new
healthcare regulations, the highest corporate tax rate in the developed world,
a worsening federal budget picture, and a weak dollar that all make it too
costly to do business in America.
To deal with those, the Occupational Safety
and Health Administration and National Labor Relations Board must be reined in,
the Davis Bacon Act repealed, and the Wage and Hour Division seriously
reformed.
The Environmental Protection Agency and
Department of Energy restrictions on producing energy need to be lifted.
Obamacare, of course, must be repealed, and its vast array of regulations
unraveled.
The corporate tax should be eliminated all
together, and the budget put on a path to be balanced over the next decade.But all of that may not be enough. Finally, serious monetary and financial reforms would be needed to restore sound money, prevent credit bubbles, and reinstate real value to our money. Romney ignores this particular plank at his own peril. Failure to address our house of cards financial system is to ignore the elephant in the room.
Overall, we must lower the cost of doing business in the U.S. significantly to make us competitive again. That will create enough jobs at a fast enough pace to get us back to full employment.
On paper, 12 million jobs created may look like an almost impossible task, but in the free market, the impossible is done every single day. If elected, it will be Romney’s job to get the government out of the way of the free market miracle.
Source: Bill Wilson is the President of Americans for
Limited Government. You can follow Bill on Twitter at @BillWilsonALG. Read more at NetRightDaily.com: http://netrightdaily.com/2012/09/romneys-12-million-jobs-challenge/#ixzz25XGxD0Aj
Comments:
Romney’s goal to increase jobs by 3 million a year could be
helped by cutting the 1.5 million legal immigrants that enter the country each
year. The U.S. Immigration Service has
allowed over 1 million new legal immigrants per year to enter the U.S. for
decades. Of the 40 million foreign born in the
United States in 2010, almost 35 percent entered in 2000 or later. In the past, the U.S. limited immigration during periods of unemployment. This time, the U.S. increased the number of legal immigrants from1 million a year to 1.5 million a year. For the past 10 years, we have added over 10 million legal immigrants. We need to reduce legal immigration until real unemployment normalizes to 5%; it is currently about 20%.
To get the other 1.5
million jobs, we will need to ramp up production in everything we drill, mine,
harvest and grow, plus roll back regulations and fix taxes to allow
manufacturing to return to the U.S.
Adding 3 million jobs
a year is actually doable.
Norb Leahy, Dunwoody
GA Tea Party Leader
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