The Dow Jones Industrial Average today briefly touched the 14000 mark, before falling slightly. As I write, it’s hovering right around that level, the first time it’s done so since late 2007. The broader S&P 500 is at a five-year high, about 3 percent off its all-time peak in October 2007. The Nasdaq is at a 10-year high, though it’s significantly lower than its tech-bubble peak. In all, though, these major indices finally are back to roughly where they were before the housing crash and Great Recession (as long as we don’t adjust them for inflation, that is).
Yet, earlier today, the Bureau of Labor Statistics announced the unemployment rate had ticked upward to 7.9 percent even though more people had stopped looking for work than found a job. At January’s rate of job growth (157,000 net jobs created), it would take until at least 2025 to regain pre-recession employment levels. At the rate for all of 2012 (an upwardly revised 181,000), it would take “only” until 2022, a decade and a half after employment peaked.
And yesterday, the Commerce Department said the economy shrank in the fourth quarter of 2012, the first negative quarter since mid-2009. The economy is an estimated 14 percent smaller than it would have been if it had grown since 2008 at the long-term average of 3.1 percent a year. That’s some $2.25 trillion of economic production that never came into existence.
The reason for continued market advances in the face of sluggish economic news might be summarized by this quote from the Wall Street Journal:
“Any not-bad news is helping this market,” said Jonathan Corpina, senior managing partner at Meridian Equity Partners, a New York brokerage. “If we get great news, good news, or okay news, it’s still going to make our screens green.”
“Not-bad” is not exactly indicative of a boom. If this quarter were to repeat last quarter’s performance, the above numbers are where the Obama Recovery would have left us: barely back to zero for investors, still well below it for job-seekers and economic growth.
This is the reality wrought by the primary economic policy of the past four years — trying to jump-start the private sector via government spending and monetary expansion. All the spending and expansion hasn’t translated into robust private-sector growth. Four years later, there’s little reason to believe a boom is just around the corner.
– By Kyle Wingfield
557 comments Add your comment
Aesop's Fables and other Lib Economic Theories
February 3rd, 2013
8:38 pm
Like I said, lights out.
Aesop's Fables and other Lib Economic Theories
February 3rd, 2013
8:48 pm
Listen to these libs at See BS trying to pump life into the 49′ers, it’s almost like they are experts at bs’ing the mindless masses, kinda like how they promote the dummycrat party.
Just listen to the crap they pimp.
md
February 3rd, 2013
8:50 pm
“Even if that were true, I won’t support useless wars where our people die for nothing.
Will you?”
No. But I don’t agree with putting a lot of boots on the ground in any “war” when we have the most sophisticated military on the planet.
And I definitely don’t agree with the “pc actions” we’ve been waging lately. If we are going to war, do it and get everybody home……this pc ask 20 questions before our guys can fire crap won’t cut it.
Tiberius - pulling the tail of the left AND right when needed
February 3rd, 2013
9:03 pm
Oh, and Indigo?
Iraq was a huge mistake. No reason whatsoever to go in there.
Afghanistan? Sorry, sonny, but when you harbor and train the hijackers that caused 9/11, you’re OBLIGATED to go in and take that future threat out. No reason to stay as long as we did, but the initial reason to go in was, and remains, unquestionably a valid national security response.
Lil' Barry Bailout - OBAMAPHONE!!!
February 3rd, 2013
9:05 pm
[Obozo] said the prescription for economic growth is through “a balanced approach” of spending cuts and increases in revenue that he said a majority of Americans agree with.
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What a moron, and an America-hating liberal fascist one. Government is not the economy, and taking more out of the private economy in the form of higher taxes is the exact opposite of what should be done to help the economy.
You have to be a demitard to have supported this POS.
Rafe Hollister preparing for an Obamanist America
February 3rd, 2013
9:08 pm
I guess this is it for NOLA and Super Bowls. Atlanta had a little snow and ice, which did not affect the game and the NFL squelched any talk about another SB. Surely inability to maintain power during a SB will be enough to take NOLA out of the rotation.
Lil' Barry Bailout - OBAMAPHONE!!!
February 3rd, 2013
11:34 pm
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