"As the American economy plunges deeper into crisis, the
conservative chattering classes are hoping for a replay of their
2001 blame game. Having successfully perpetuated the myth that
President Bush "inherited a recession" from Bill Clinton,
right-wing mouthpieces from Rush Limbaugh to Fred Barnes began
blaming Barack Obama for the Bush recession literally within hours
of his election. But as a quick glance at the data shows, across
virtually economic indicator from GDP, unemployment and consumer
confidence to home prices, foreclosures and manufacturing output,
ownership for this mushrooming economic calamity squarely belongs
to George W. Bush.
Gross Domestic Product. U.S. GDP shrank by 0.3% in the third
quarter (July through September), a decline which followed the
downward revision of the Q2 number from 3.3% to 2.8%. But while
"recession" is traditionally defined as two consecutive quarters of
GDP contraction (which is almost certain to occur), the quarterly
Survey of Professional Forecasters by the Federal Reserve Bank of
Philadelphia concluded that the United States entered a recession
in April.
Recession at the State and Local Level. While there is debate
as to whether or not the United States has technically slipped into
a recession, at the state and local level there is no doubt at all.
According to Moody's Economy, by the end of September 30 states
were in recession, up from just five in March. 19 more states were
deemed "at risk." (Only Sarah Palin's petro-state of Alaska was
forecast to experience economic growth.) 276 of 380 metropolitan
areas measured by Moody's had also sunk into recession. Combined
with the downward spiral of home prices, these regional economic
contractions are having a devastating impact on state and local tax
revenue - and government services.
Unemployment. In October, the American economy shed 240,000
jobs, catapulting the losses for the year to 1.2 million. At 6.5%,
the unemployment rate hit a 14-year high. The percentage of the
adult population now working dropped to 61.8%, its lowest level in
15 years. The Philadelphia Fed survey forecast 222,000 more lost
jobs per month through the end of the year. With some analysts now
predicting unemployment will hit 8% by the middle of 2009,
President Bush's reversal on extending jobless benefits could not
come a moment too soon.
Jobless Claims. Of course, the corollary to skyrocketing
unemployment is an explosion of new jobless claims. The Labor
Department today released figures showing new unemployment claims
jumped to 542,000 last week, a 16-year high. First-time jobless
claims have now remained above the 400,000 for 17 straight weeks.
Consumer Confidence. Given those dismal numbers, it's no
surprise that consumer confidence nose-dived in October to its
lowest level on record. Even with steep declines in gas prices,
consumer confidence dropped 23 points to 38.0, its worst
performance since the Conference Board began the survey in 1967.
Consumer Spending. Consumer spending, long the engine of
American economic growth, is also in a tailspin. It dropped 0.3% in
September and at annual rate of 3.1% for the third quarter, its
worst performance since 1980. And outlays for big-ticket items such
as cars plunged by 2.9%. With disposable income growing only by a
tenth of one percent, Americans for the second month plowed more
money into savings.
Home Prices. The news from the collapsing housing market, the
sector that triggered the economic crisis, remains dark. Earlier
this week, the National Association of Realtors calculated that
median home prices in the third quarter plunged by 7.7% compared to
the same time frame in 2007. Almost 80% of the metro areas (120 out
of 152) measured experienced declines. New numbers from the
Commerce Department reflected that weakness; new housing starts and
permits fell to the lowest annual rates since 1960 and 1959,
respectively.
Home Foreclosures. While Congress and the Treasury Department
debate whether and how to help American homeowners on the brink of
foreclosure, the crisis only deepens. In the third quarter, 766,000
homeowners received a foreclosure notice, a staggering 71% increase
from the same period in 2007. Overall, nearly a fifth of American
homeowners - 7.5 million of them - may now be "under water" on
their mortgages, with levels in Nevada (47.8%), Michigan (38.6%),
Arizona (29.2%), Florida (29.2%) and California (27.4%) all topping
25%
Manufacturing. While the woes of the auto industry dominate
the headlines this week, the American manufacturing sector overall
is in deep trouble. As the Washington Post reported, in October
"the Institute for Supply Management's index of conditions in the
manufacturing sector is at its lowest level since the nation was in
a recession in September 1982." Ian Shepherdson, chief U.S.
economist for High Frequency Economics, called the figures
"hideous" and noted "when you see a number like this, it's very
alarming."
Stock Market. Of course, the highest profile economic failure
of George W. Bush, America's first MBA President, has been on Wall
Street. This week, the Dow dropped below 8,000, its lowest level in
six years and nowhere near the 10,588 when Bush took office. In
all, over $6 trillion was erased from U.S. equities just this year.
Alas, history has proven once again that Wall Street and the
economy overall simply do better under Democratic presidents.
Consumer Prices. In the current crisis, even seeming good
news is bad news. Led by dismal home prices and plummeting oil and
gas costs (which may dip below $2 a gallon), the Consumer Price
Index dropped 1.0% in October. That decline this week sparked fears
among some economists and on Wall Street that the United States
could face the prospect of deflation. While still seen as unlikely,
a chronic drop in prices at a time of low interest rates could
limit the ability of the federal government to spur economic
activity.
Health Care. The downward spiral of the Bush economy is also
producing dire consequences for Americans' health care. Patients
and providers alike are feeling the pinch. A survey by the Kaiser
Family Foundation found that one in three Americans had had trouble
paying medical bills in the past year. Half had someone in their
family skip bills or forego medical care. For the first time in a
decade, orders for prescription medications are down (albeit by
1%). Hospitals, too, are suffering. New data this week from the
American Hospital Association showed decreases in both admissions
and elective procedures as well as a spike in the number of
patients who can't pay for care.
Hunger. With the decline of the American economy has come
another, quietly growing crisis: hunger. Even before the steep
downturn in September, the U.S. Department of Agriculture estimated
that the number of children who went hungry in 2007 - almost
700,000 - jumped by 50% over the previous year. Overall, 12.2 of
Americans - 36.2 million people - don't "have the money or
assistance to get enough food to maintain active, healthy lives."
Leading Economic Indicators. The grim data for jobless
claims, manufacturing and personal income combined to produce a
steeper than expected drop-off in the Conference Board's index of
Leading Economic Indicators. Designed to predict economic activity
six to nine months out, the LEI fell 0.8% in October, its third
decline in the past four months.
President-elect Barack Obama is almost certainly right in
describing the economy he will inherit from George W. Bush as
facing "an unprecedented crisis, or at least something that we have
not seen since the Great Depression." Bank of America CEO Kenneth
Lewis expects no turnaround until at the least the middle of 2009.
The Philadelphia Fed's survey estimated the recession would last 14
months. But whatever the duration of the American economic
downturn, there can be no question as to its paternity.
This is George W. Bush's recession."
In response to assignment:
A message for Obama