If you are to ask Krugman, and many other economists, the failures stem from the stimulus package being too small.
Yes, if only it had been a million bazillion instead of nearly a trillion, everything would be better. Unfortunately, we can't go back in time, so we have to evaulate the stimulus that did pass (which I believe Krugman supported anyway).
If you need a reminder of this, the title of the thread is "The Stimulus Seems to have failed". Not the imaginary stimulus that Krugman might have liked,
but the one that actually passed. BAC and Skeptic took a lot of grief for asserting this back in February. Turns out they were right.
Going all the way back to the first post, Obama was right about what the stimulus should have been designed to do: create 3 million jobs. However the stimulus bill that was delivered to his desk to sign had had its wings clipped and most we could expect was a million or two saved or created jobs.
We didn't create any jobs. We've lost
over two million since the stimulus was passed. Unemployment has gone up two points since then.
We don't know if the stimulus saved 10 jobs or 10 million. Claims that it saved millions of jobs are like a snakeoil salesman telling a patient, "Sure you got sick, but if you hadn't taken my patented tonic, you'd have gotten even sicker!"
PS. The stimulus wasn't supposed to "cap" unemployment, it was expected to reduce it by 1% point from where it would have been otherwise. The CBO reports confirm this took place.
Source for this?
"Back in early January, when Barack Obama was still President-elect, two of his chief economic advisers — leading proponents of a stimulus bill — predicted that the passage of a large economic-aid package would boost the economy and
keep the unemployment rate below 8%.
http://www.time.com/time/business/article/0,8599,1910208,00.html
As for the CBO, this exchange is illuminating:
The critics say: The most basic argument against the stimulus is the fact that the economy did worse than expected. As of January 2008, unemployment was forecast to hit 8% by the end of 2008 if the stimulus were approved. However, the jobless rate hit 10.2%. Ergo, the stimulus failed. This argument is often voiced by congressional Republicans, including House Republican Leader John Boehner.
The CBO replies: "Data on actual output and employment during the period since ARRA's enactment are not as helpful in determining ARRA's economic effects as might be supposed, because isolating the effects would require knowing what path the economy would have taken in the absence of the law." We cannot know for certain what path the economy would have taken without the stimulus.
The worse-than-expected growth in 2009 "reflects greater-than-projected weakness in the underlying economy rather than lower-than-expected effects" of the stimulus, said CBO Director Douglas Elmendorf. http://www.marketwatch.com/story/cbo-fights-back-at-stimulus-critics-2010-02-23
Of course. Who on Earth would want to use
actual data to evaluate if a government program is working or not?
Made up hypothetical data gives so much better resutls.
I wonder what the CBO would have said if unemployment had fallen to 7% by now. Think they'd still be hesitant about using
actual data?
