“The American people want
action on jobs,
and the House is listening to
the American people.”
~John Boener 12/02/2011 |
The Federal Reserve report
on Americans’ finances documents the terrible damage the Great Recession has
inflicted on the nation, a toll that has been clear to its victims since the
collapse began. The report’s dry language doesn’t begin to describe how bad
things really are, and it stops short of blaming those who perpetuate the
misery.
In pursuing this story since
2007, I and other journalists have seen foreclosed homes and visited
unemployment offices, free food distributions, community health centers and
mental health counselors. Former donors were now coming to free health clinics
and food banks to get help themselves, an experience that will be forever
remembered by their families. Lost homes, jobs and hopes are the legacy of this
period.
The presidential campaign
doesn’t reflect the urgency the situation demands. Republican Mitt Romney has
nothing to offer except blaming President Barack Obama and joining with House
Republicans in opposing presidential initiatives. Obama has some solutions, but
doesn’t know how to sell them. The president had a chance last week when
disappointing employment figures came out. Unfortunately at his news conference
Friday, he reminded me of a bored university economics professor lecturing to
an equally bored freshman class, not the nation’s leader who is in real danger
of losing his office.
A family in the economic
middle, between rich and poor, saw its net worth—the difference between gross
assets and liabilities—drop almost 40 percent between 2007 and 2010. That
brought the figure, the report said, “close to levels not seen since the 1992
survey.”
The recession hit everybody.
“Net worth decreased for all education groups,” the report said. “Each of the
four education groups experienced a very large decline ... ranging from a drop
of 53.7 percent for the no-high-school-diploma group to a drop of 32.7 percent
for the high-school-educated group.” The declines were even lower for college
graduates and those with some college. The net worth of people of color
decreased more than that of whites.
As Obama talked about the
weak economy at the news conference, he said the private sector was “doing
fine.” It was the public sector dragging things down. It was an unfortunate way
to put it, but Obama actually had it right.
Ben Polak, chairman of the
economics department at Yale, and Peter Schott, a Yale School of Management
professor, wrote in The New York Times Economix blog that “recovery in the
private sector has not been particularly slow by recent historical standards.
... But there is something historically different about this recession and its
aftermath: In the past, local government employment has been almost
recession-proof. This time it’s not. Going back as long as the data have been
collected (1955), with the one exception of the 1981 recession, local
government employment continued to grow almost every month regardless of what
the economy threw at it. But since the latest recession began, local government
employment has fallen by 3 percent, and is still falling.”
Part of the problem is local
governments’ practice, during the good years, of agreeing to overly generous
retirement and health benefits. But the federal government has also failed to
help local governments with aid to prevent more employee layoffs and financing
for their public works projects.
Take, for example, a
job-creating bill that has been stalled in the House by Republicans. The
measure would finance transportation projects around the country. “Clearly, the
indecision in passing a transportation reauthorization bill is having a
terrible impact on the construction industry—28,000 construction jobs lost last
month,” said the author of the Senate-passed bill, Sen. Barbara Boxer, D-Calif.
Every day, I see what good
such proposals do. Four blocks from my house in Los Angeles , workers are widening one of the
nation’s most jammed roads, Interstate 405. About a mile away, other workers
are building the Expo commuter rail line, part of an expanding network. Without
much media emphasis on the job aspect, these projects are already putting
people to work in a county where unemployment is 11 percent, down during the
Obama administration from a 2010 high of 13.4 percent. Many miles away, workers
have started on the Gold Line commuter rail extension through the San Gabriel Valley , which business interests there
say will create 2,630 construction jobs and 4,270 more in businesses related to
the project. After watching the misery of the recession, it’s heartening to see
men and women working on the roads and rail lines.
These are being financed by
a local sales tax. Boxer wants to permit the federal government to loan money
to local authorities to speed up work on such transportation projects. In Los Angeles County , proceeds from the sales tax
would repay the loans.
This is just one program.
There are others, blocked by House Republicans and opposed by Romney. Although
they are not mentioned in the Federal Reserve report, these recalcitrant legislators—whose
only goal is to defeat Obama, even at the cost of average Americans’
well-being—are the villains in this story.
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