The underperforming Obama economy

Author: By Donald Lambro

The anemic, underperforming Obama economy ended with a whimper in December, a victim of his anti-growth, anti-capital investment, tax hike policies. You probably didn’t see any mention of it in the nightly network news shows last month, because, for the most part, they didn’t report it.

Mr. Obama’s bedridden economy was defined by three things: a painfully long recovery from the 2008 recession, the lack of enough good paying, full-time jobs, and a very sluggish growth rate that was largely stuck in the 2 percent range over his entire presidency.

Mr. Obama left office declaring that his policies had pulled the economy out of the recession, created lots of jobs and had made the economy healthy again. In the last month, pro-Obama business journalists were projecting that the economy’s fourth quarter GDP growth rate could be as high as 3 percent.

Not even close. The Commerce Department reported last week that the U.S. economy had barely expanded at an embarrassingly, minuscule 1.9 percent rate between October and December. The GDP rate for the last year of Mr. Obama’s presidency came in at an ignominious 1.6 percent – the lowest rate on record since 2011. In other words, the U.S. economy was clinging to life, but barely breathing.

Economists correctly blamed the weak growth rate on lackluster business investment, which was a major factor, but the root of the U.S. economy’s illness ran even deeper than that. Oppressive tax rates on businesses, large and small, a jungle of increasingly costly regulations, the scary threat of raising the minimum wage, which Hillary Clinton promised would be one of her official acts if she won the presidency.

The nonpartisan Congressional Budget Office issued a report that warned a higher minimum wage would result in the loss of 500,000 to one million jobs because employers would cut their payrolls to remain in business. But Mr. Obama, Hillary and the Democratic lawmakers on Capitol Hill didn’t care about them, and proved it by never uttering any complaint about the subpar economy in the eight years of Mr. Obama’s presidency.

Indeed, some of them called the dismal growth rates “the new normal.” Now it’s the Republicans’ turn to run the economy, but it’s still an open question about what kind of policies they will put into effect to turn it around and make it great again.

Cutting tax rates to encourage business investment and new job creation, and helping struggling middle to low income taxpayers to get ahead and achieve the American dream, is the hallmark of Republican economic policy.

It worked in the 1980s under President Reagan who ended the Jimmy Carter recession in just two years. Democrats said it was “trickle down” economics and wouldn’t work, but the nation held a referendum on it in his re-election campaign, that he won in a 49-state landslide.

Mr. Reagan also championed trade expansion as the other pillar of his successful economic revolution that led to widespread growth at home and abroad.

European countries were privatizing certain government programs, and many of his global critics admitted he had made capitalism and free trade popular again.

But President Trump has taken a sharp leftward turn away from Reagan’s trade expansion policies and plans to either kill or renegotiate the North American Free Trade Agreement that President Clinton expanded to include Mexico.

Blaming trade deals for America’s manufacturing job losses, he is calling for imposing a 20 percent tariff tax on Mexican exports. That’s never going to pass muster in the GOP because Mr. Trump’s border tax would raise retail prices here by 20 percent, hurting consumers, according to the retail industry.

Mr. Trump has other plans for some of the tax revenue: to pay for his $20 billion wall along half of our border with Mexico. So, in effect, American consumers would be paying for it in the form of higher prices.

It is true that manufacturing jobs have been declining for decades, but not because of trade with other nations. The decline began in the 1950s and ’60s, long before we ran yearly trade deficits, but have continued since then. The reason: increasing manufacturing technologies and automation that results in fewer assembly line employees, according to a study by University of California economist J. Bradford DeLong in a report posted on the Vox website.

Mexico is one of our top three trading partners. The U.S. Chamber of Commerce says six million U.S. jobs depended on trade with them in 2015. The Commerce Department says sales of U.S. auto parts to Mexico rose from $17.5 billion in 2010 to $30 billion in 2015. “There are close to a couple of dozen states for which Mexico is the top export destination,” says Gordon Hanson, who teaches international economics at the University of California. Mr. Trump’s border tax is a loser for American consumers and for U.S. factory workers, too.

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