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Wall Street Weekly | 11/06/2009 11:45 am

Liz Peek: Obama Deaf to Election Warning But May Get Bailed Out

As bad as the recent jobs report is, the president is likely to receive some good news over the next several months …

Bears, Bulls, Chickens and Pigs: wOw’s Wall Street Weekly with Liz Peek (Week of 11/2) 

Editor’s Note: Liz Peek is a financial columnist.

The Bureau of Labor Statistics reports that the unemployment rate rose from 9.8% to 10.2% in October, the highest level since 1983. Job losses were primarily in construction, manufacturing and retail, and were worse than expected. This is not good news; the terrible job market clearly weighs on consumer sentiment and spending, slowing the recovery. The debilitating payroll cuts also produced some cranky voters this past Election Day.

All politics may be local, but it is hard not to read national significance into Tuesday’s election results. Voters rallied against high taxes and the worrisome economy, while in Virginia, disillusioned young and independent voters crossed the aisle yet again to elect a long-odds Republican.

Astonishingly, the Obama administration has chalked up this apparent warning shot to circumstances beyond their control. Neither tea parties nor sinking polls or, now, pointed election returns seem to have made the slightest dent in their enthusiasm for policies that the majority of Americans do not embrace. Speaker Nancy Pelosi could barely contain her glee that the Democrats had picked up an extra House seat in New York – all the better to ram health-care legislation through. Remember Obama’s words on the night he was elected? "I will listen to you, especially when we disagree."

Americans are genuinely concerned about their country’s fiscal prospects, and about Obama’s programs that will create even worse deficits down the road. Fundamentally, they are worried that a shrinking number of people are supporting a growing segment of the population. The jobs being "saved" or added currently are mainly government jobs; the private sector continues to lay off workers. Even a caveman (with all due respect) gets that this is an unworkable trend.

In 2007 economist Gary Shilling wrote that 52.6% of Americans received "significant income from government programs, up from 49.4% in 2000 and 28.3% in 1950." These figures included, for 2007, 19 million Americans on food stamps, 57 million receiving Social Security payments, over 4 million collecting income from the Veterans’ Administration and millions more employed by the government. For sure, the figure has risen in the past two years as increasing numbers have received unemployment assistance and as the government has propped up banks and autos.

At the same time, a growing number of Americans do not contribute to our tax roles. The Tax Foundation reports that about one-third of our population files returns but pays no taxes, up from 18% in the early 1980s, while another 20 million Americans do not file returns at all.

This is not about social justice. It’s about a shifting of the economic burden in a way that is unsustainable. As baby boomers approach retirement and begin to receive Social Security, the number of people paying in more than they are taking out is going to shrink yet again. Add to that inevitability the millions that will receive health care under the legislation working its way through Congress and it is no wonder that young voters shifted gears. They see the burden contained in the legislation that Democrats are so eager to adopt. It is worth noting that, in 1980, 55% of Americans were receiving government handouts – a level that ushered in the Reagan revolution.

433 Reader Comments (so far…) Sign In or Register to comment

Sara Smile

Wow, Belinda — very interesting points!   I particularly love:

Well if we are to believe the statistics that you quote, "who" are these people doing the complaining? How can they have one hand in Uncle Sam’s pocket and the other waving a banner with President Obama as Hitler in the other?

My personal opinion is that the numbers/statistics quoted are valid — as anyone who has taken a college statistics course knows — the questions asked and the numbers can be manipulated to prove any point one wants to make.

 

By Sara Smile on 11/06/2009 12:16 pm
Sara Smile
Whoops — numbers and statistics are NOT VALID.
By Sara Smile on 11/06/2009 12:18 pm
True Grit

Oh my…people STILL haven’t gotten the memo? The top 20% pay 86.3% share of idividual income taxes.

That’s the point, these people are being taxed to death to support the rest and grow the government. The poor have a positve income change while the middle class has slowed and the rich are in a negative growth. That’s what happens with socialist programs….you eventually run out of other people’s money.

In regard to real median income growth from 1980-2007;

Black women are at the top with 80%

White  women 78%

Black men 34%

White men 10%

All people 40%

Obama is attempting to ruin this country, but the citizens are stand up for their constitutional rights.

By True Grit on 11/06/2009 12:49 pm
Laurel Sayler
Since when does anyone need millions a year to survive???
By Laurel Sayler on 11/06/2009 4:54 pm
Leigh Hart
Lauren, Since when is living merely about survival? We are a republic where you are free to work as hard as you want to make as much money as you can and then do with your money as YOU see fit. It’s not up to you or the government to decide who has enough money. Class envy speaks volumes about a person.
By Leigh Hart on 11/07/2009 3:30 pm
Mary E. Sayler
When the GREED of some people means that there are people who CAN NOT find a job because they have all been ship overseas we have a national problem.  CHEAP does not equal GOOD.  As much as I can I buy American made and grown.  I was brought up to believe that was the way we keep our economy growing.  I was also raised to live within my means so my pension from teaching has continued to make my life confortable.  I know how to buy only what I can efford to pay for so that it is mine from the get go.  My pension is more then you get with SS but less by 1/2 what I was earning at the tail end of my career.  You want jobs here in the United States then you must by American.  If the population is buying goods made here then there will more jobs created.
By Mary E. Sayler on 11/07/2009 4:41 pm
Kathy Lee

Mary,

If you want to talk about jobs being shipped overseas, you may want to do some research on "Cap and Trade" if it gets passsed.  This is your find administration at work to destroy our Country.

By Kathy Lee on 11/07/2009 11:05 pm
Laurel Sayler
I don’t have class envy. Nobody needs millions a year to have a comfy life. Since when did living include greed, corruption, fraud, and theft??? And the name is LAUREL
By Laurel Sayler on 11/07/2009 5:43 pm
Leigh Hart

Pardon the error on your name Laurel. So first, it’s survival. Now it’s a comfy life? Who are you to determine what that is? If you or I work hard enough to earn millions then it’s our millions to do with as we see fit. It’s not for anyone else to decide we have enough to survive or have a comfy life. Wow…what arrogance!

The majority of millionaires in this country became millionaires due to hard work. The greed, corruption, fraud and theft are not the norm of the rich.

By Leigh Hart on 11/07/2009 6:07 pm
Mary E. Sayler

My father was raised on a Homestead in Washington State.  They came to CA in 1922 where Burton (Dad’s father) had a job as a truck driver for a lumber yard.  Burton was killed when Dad was 17 years old.  The legacy he left Dad was that education was important and could get you wherever you wanted to go.  After high school Dad went to L.A. Trade School and from there went to work for companies that were involved grinding parts to make valuable parts for our U.S. companies.  His creative ideas and work keep our planes in the air during WWII.  In 1949, Dad started his own business and when I graduated from College he and Mom were worth well over 1 million dollars.  What I learned from my parents (by their example) was that it was my duty and responsibility to help others whenever possible.  That help could be service (teaching) or monitary (charity).  My parents used their extra money to help others.  Piney Woods School is one I can think of at the moment.  Besides money Dad also gave the school his E flat Alto Saxophone, which he began playing as a young child.  They helped their children out also, but we were expected to pay it back, which I did.  When Dad died this year he left his children well taken care of, which he had promised to do when he was 17 and his fathers death left the family with $1.25 in the bank and morgage $450.  The greatest gift my parents gave me was their example of the Golden Rule and the importance of education.  Oh, by the way they were also Laurel’s Grandparents. 

From what I read current millionaires are greedy, corrupted, creators of fraud, and guilty of theft from each other, the middle class and the government.  I personally do not have faith in the majority of millionaires and believe that my parents were anomaly.       

By Mary E. Sayler on 11/08/2009 8:27 pm
Frannie Em
By Frannie Em on 11/08/2009 1:44 am
Sherrie Crews

Thanks for the link macwoof, your’re right it is almost as good as Jon Stewart. It’s right up there with Colbert’s commentary about that guy fawking Michele Bachman.

http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2009/11/06/guy-fawkers-the-next-acci_n_348…
By Sherrie Crews on 11/06/2009 12:03 pm
phyllis Doyle Pepe
Because Sherrie calls them the way she sees them. The Bachman debacle yesterday was shameful and stupid and horrific––to have a huge sign portraying the dead bodies from a concentration camp is beyond belief. What kind of people resort to that kind of thing? We should react strongly to something like that and call a spade a spade!
By phyllis Doyle Pepe on 11/06/2009 1:28 pm
Zera Lee

That’s Bachmann, with two ‘N’s. “Bachman’s, Inc”, a large florist and garden company here in Minn. wanted to make it clear back in 2008 that the Bachman family and their business have nothing to do with her. It was at a time when they lost their leader, Todd Bachman, at the Olympics and Michele Bachmann took her ravings national.

I know it was only a typo, and I usually let them go, but Bachman’s is a fine company that tends to treat their employees and customers like family - nothing at all like Bachmann.

It also doesn’t help that her district borders on mine and she is local news even more than national news. Every time she foams at the mouth, I have to wash my windows.

By Zera Lee on 11/06/2009 2:45 pm
phyllis Doyle Pepe
Zera––my sincere apologies–––absolutely two NNs from now on. My sympathies to the Bachman’s from Minn.
By phyllis Doyle Pepe on 11/06/2009 6:53 pm