Killing jobs with stimulus spending
Europe teaches America a lesson about fiscal restraint
WashingtonTimes.com
Obama officials claim government "stimulus" spending and trillions in
deficits saved America from higher unemployment and a depression. Their numbers
have been spun too much and don't add up.
From January 2009 when
Barack Obama became president until August of
this year, unemployment increased by a full 2 percentage points. Last month, it
rose slightly again. Last year, Democrats warned the unemployment rate would
reach 9 percent if
Congress didn't pass the $814 billion stimulus
package. Democrats now profess unemployment would have topped 11 percent without
it.
The liberal dogma is that no matter how horrible the economy is, it would
have been much worse without the federal spending spree. Our friends across the
pond expose that falsity. "We consider that in Europe we have already invested a
lot for the recovery, and that the problem is not about spending more," French
President
Nicolas Sarkozy said in March 2009. German
Chancellor
Angela Merkel stood at his side, nodding in
agreement.
France and
Germany both resisted
White House pressure to try to spend their way
out of a recession
Obama-style.
Comparative unemployment trends suggest which policy works better. From
January 2009 to July of this year (the last month German numbers are available),
Germany's unemployment fell by 0.3 percentage
points.
France's rate from January 2009 to June of this
year (the last month available) rose by 1.3 percentage points, which is lower
than U.S. numbers. These countries aren't isolated examples. According to the
Trading Economics website, which collected unemployment data for 31 countries
from January 2009 to June 2009, America's unemployment spike was worse than 26
of the other nations studied. Eight saw unemployment go down. On average,
unemployment increased by 0.8 percent, less than half of the U.S. rise.
It takes some serious political gymnastics to avoid the conclusion that
Mr. Obama's stimulus made unemployment worse and
will continue to do so. While unemployment rates in much of the rest of the
world are falling, American joblessness continues upward. New government
spending and more regulations will only dig a deeper hole.
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