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The Full Employment Stimulus Bill

by: Clem Guttata

Sat Oct 10, 2009 at 08:49:21 AM EDT


By Clem Guttata

I stand by my prediction from June, 2009 ("What could 1,000 West Virginians accomplish in 1,000 Days?") that before the "2010 mid-terms elections, the Democratic Congress and the Obama administration will pass a second stimulus bill focused on job creation."

Nathan Newman at the Progressive States Network is adding his voice to the call for a jobs-focused stimulus bill:

Job Losses & State Fiscal Crises: Time for More Federal Stimulus Spending

The numbers from this month's job report were brutal: 263,000 payroll jobs lost in a month and the unemployment rate hit 9.8 percent.  Since the pre-recession peak, the economy has lost 7.2 million jobs and overall hours worked have now declined by 8.6 percent.  A record share of the unemployed (35.6 percent) are “long-term unemployed” and have been out of work for at least six months.  (See graph courtesy of Center for American Progress)

Public Layoffs Threatening to Make Things Worse:  One of the most disturbing parts of this trend is that the government sector lost 53,000 jobs in September, compared with a loss of 19,000 jobs in August.  This is tied to the fiscal crisis hitting the states. 

The initial federal recovery funds from the Spring have held off far worse cuts than were originally projected; in fact, before last month, state and local government layoffs had amounted to just 110,000 jobs lost over two years.  However, projections are that fewer recovery funds will be available for fiscal year 2011, so government job losses will inevitably mount as states seek to balance their budgets going into next year.

Avoiding Fifty Herbert Hoovers with a New Stimulus:  History tells us that government should be hiring when the private sector is laying people off to act to act as a counter-cyclical economic lever on the economy.  A wide range of economists, including Nobel Laureates Paul Krugman, Robert Solow, and Paul Samuelson, are now calling for an additional federal stimulus to counter these jobs losses.

Back in February, as we noted at the time, the U.S. House had originally proposed tens of billions of dollars more in help for the states in the recovery plan, but those funds were cut during U.S. Senate negotiations to overcome a filibuster.  But this reflects the fact that even then, many understood that more help to the states was needed to deal with the severity of the recession we face. 

Already the Obama administration is talking about a broader transportation bill, extensions of a homebuyer tax credit and extended unemployment benefits as part of additional spending to deal with the economic crisis.  All of these are necessary, but priority should be to extend further aid to the states to stem the layoffs of teachers, nurses, and public safety officers which is needed not just to avoid further unemployment but is critical to provide the services to a public in even greater need of help during this economic crisis.  And other funds should go directly towards additional forward-looking job creation programs tied to green jobs, broadband deployment and rebuilding our overall infrastructure to both employ people in the short-term while improving the global economic competitiveness of our communities over the longer-term.

A jobless recovery is not a recovery. It is a temporary sop for the already wealthy. The only path for long-term financial stability is full employment. It's both the right thing to focus on economically and morally.

Clem Guttata :: The Full Employment Stimulus Bill
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second stimulus needed

In fact, raising interest rates at the moment, a mistake made during the Great Depression, is contra-indicated. And that will still be so as long as unemployment runs high. Additional stimulus would not lead to near-term inflation, he argues. You can see Krugman's more wonkish version of exactly when interest rates should be raised to stave off inflation here.

DeLong convincingly explains in detail why adding fiscal stimulus now will have a favorable multiplier effect that boosts the economy by generating jobs as well as increasing tax revenue without increasing inflation and a need for raising interest rates.



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