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Whose Economic Recovery?
Has The US Economy Really Been Pulled Back From The Brink? By Danny Schechter
September 10, 2009 "Information Clearing House" --
President Obama's highly anticipated health care speech started on a totally different subject: The economy.
"When I spoke here last winter, this nation was facing the worst economic crisis since the Great Depression," he told Congress and the people at home. "We were losing an average of 700,000 jobs per month. Credit was frozen. And our financial system was on the verge of collapse." "But," he went on, "thanks to the bold and decisive action we have taken since January, I can stand here with confidence and say that we have pulled this economy back from the brink." Applause. Applause. Applause. Are we back from the brink? And what brink is that? On Labor Day, HBO featured a powerful documentary about a GM Plant in Ohio that was shutting down. It showed the workers, teary eyed and forlorn, making the last truck on "their" assembly line. Their faces told the rest of the story as they asked themselves and each other, "What do I do now? What happens to my family and my life?" They had no answers, and neither, alas, does Barack Obama. A "jobless recovery" will not give these workers the money to buy into even the cheapest health care coverage, public option or not. Look around Mr. Obama: the unemployment rate in real terms is over 16%. The consumer economy is shattered. The commercial real estate market is imploding, and, yes, more foreclosures are on the way according to the Washington Post:
Just who is back from the brink? If you listen to the Fed, the glass is more than half full. If you listen to economists like Simon Johnson, it's way more than half empty, as he wrote on Baseline Scenario:
Yes, We Can... Lose, that is, Mr. Lou. And Yes We Are, Mr. Obama. The problem is that we are still in some Bernanke fantasyland, thinking that if we keep saying everything is ok, it will be. Here's Washington's blog on real unemployment as opposed to what the Bureau of Labor Statistics is saying:
Hello, Mr. President? Why can't you bring to the discussion of the economy the same passion and fact-based arguments that you brought to the health care debate? Why can't you propose serious reforms on the financial sector? Why can't we jail the financial criminals? The answer seems to be that Wall Street will be a far more tenacious and resourceful enemy than the health care industry perhaps because they already own much of the Congress. Remember Senator Dick Durbin's comment, ‘the bankers run the place." Alan Blinder a former vice-chairman of the Fed fears that pressure for financial reform is losing steam in part because of the power of what he calls "The Mother Of All Lobbies." He writes, "in the case of financial reform, the money at stake is mind-boggling and one financial industry after another will go to the mat to fight any provision that might hurt it." Obama acknowledged we are not out of the woods yet. (What woods?) But what are the likely consequences? How long can people live without anything coming in? How long can we live on upbeat projections? "There is no doubt class antagonism is stewing," says the editor of the blog Naked Captalism. He expressed a fear of a reaction that will go way beyond flag-waving tea parties:
One is reminded of the title of that movie, There Will Be Blood. Rather than show contrition or compassion for its own victims, Wall Street is hoping to jack up its salaries and bonuses to pre-2007 levels. The men at the top are oblivious to the pain they helped cause. They are getting away with the crime of our time. Mediachannel’s News Dissector Danny Schechter investigates the origins of the economic crisis in his new book Plunder: Investigating Our Economic Calamity and the Subprime Scandal (Cosimo Books via Amazon). dissector@mediachannel.org |