The Bush Jobs Boom
It was only a year ago that John Kerry was blasting the "jobless recovery." Lou Dobbs was flogging "outsourcing" every night on CNN as a sign of peril for the American workforce. That criticism now looks wildly off base. The 5% jobless rate today is almost a percentage point below what it was during the same stage of the business cycle during the vaunted "Clinton expansion."
In the past 24 months 3.5 million more Americans have found work, which is the equivalent of a new job for every worker in the entire state of Indiana. Every single job that was lost during the bursting of the technology bubble and stock market collapse of 2000-01 has been matched by a new job, often in a new industry. As the nearby chart shows, the bottom of the jobs recession hit in mid-2003 -- and the recovery began at the very point that the Bush marginal-rate tax cuts were enacted into law.

So says the
lead editorial in today's Wall Street Journal.
First, more Americans have jobs today than at any other time in history. Second, over the past two decades or so, the U.S. has created more than 40 million jobs -- twice as many as Europe and Japan combined. And third, the U.S. has one of the lowest jobless rates of all developed nations.
[...]
Part of the explanation for this success is that, especially compared to Europe, the U.S. has imposed fewer taxes and regulations (even though we have plenty) that make it onerous for employers to hire and fire workers. A unique feature of the U.S. economy is that Americans move in and out of jobs -- usually to rise up the income elevator -- at a rapid and persistent pace. This is the key to the Great American Jobs Machine, and it explains why Europe and Japan should be more like us, and not the other way around.
But why am I blogging this? Surely you saw this chart in the New York Times and on CNN. Right after the story of "Air America's" unconventional-to-say-the-best funding and before the story of the women's rights protests in Iraq.
Economics and Markets
Posted by jk at August 8, 2005 10:56 AM
Whoa whoa whoa..
Aren't there more jobs on the right side than there are on the left?
I thought Bush was hemmoraging jobs for the US.
My whole world view is being shattered!
Whoa whoa whoa..
Aren't there more jobs on the right side than there are on the left?
I thought Bush was hemmoraging jobs for the US.
My whole world view is being shattered!
Posted by: AlexC at August 8, 2005 12:28 PMI was jobless from about July of '02 to October '04. That tax cut came just in time! I'll add that the worst part about the Clinton recession was not how low it went but how LONG it continued on a downward trend. Until, POOF, it magically reversed course. Looking at the graph provided, I wonder why? Must've been the Iraq War that turned it around. Yeah, that's it. Hey, let's invade some more countries!
Posted by: johngalt at August 8, 2005 3:29 PM | What do you think? [2]