Wall Street Weekly | 10/02/2009 3:15 am
Obama: We Need Jobs, Not More Speeches, by Liz Peek

Bears, Bulls, Chickens and Pigs: wOw’s Wall Street Weekly with Liz Peek (Week of 9/28)
Editor’s Note: Liz Peek is a financial columnist and the author of wOw’s SHEconomics.
Should President Obama have gone to Copenhagen to win the 2016 Olympics? Probably not, since the elimination of Chicago is something of an embarrassment. Still, since this campaign might have brought jobs to the U.S., it was worth the effort.
While Congress is debating the fine points of public options, smog production, Charlie Rangel’s ethics violations and whether credit card companies should give you one month or two to deal with a rate increase, more than 20 million Americans are without jobs. Today there are some 15 million people looking for work, 2.2 million who are unemployed but have given up the hunt, and another 9.2 million who have part-time jobs but would like a steadier situation. In addition, brokerage firm Charles Schwab recently reported that there are as many as 9.5 million retirees who are considering returning to the workforce.
Where are all those jobs going to come from? That’s what investors are beginning to ask, as job losses continue at a discouraging pace. Today the Bureau of Labor Statistics reported that job losses in September totaled 263,000, up from 201,000 in August. Earlier in the week the government surprised economists by reporting that unemployment claims had increased by 17,000. Optimists pointed to the four-week moving average of claims which, with a slight decline to 548,000, reached the lowest level of the past 36 months. Instead of pointlessly analyzing these modest ups and downs, maybe we should step back and consider: more thsan a quarter million more Americans – mothers, fathers, sons and sisters — lost their jobs in the past month. The devastation is terrible.
The Obama administration has given the economy several shots of adrenaline through the Cash for Clunkers deal, the stimulus program and the $8,000 credit for new homebuyers. It is not enough. The minute we ran through the Clunkers bankroll, U.S. auto purchases plunged 23%, with GM and Chrysler both reporting a sales drop for September of over 40%. Similarly, the expected demise of the first-time homebuyer credit in December has the housing industry worried that sales will drop there too.
Meanwhile, sentiment readings from corporations have become less rosy. ISI Group reports that their pulse-taking among companies showed weakness for the second week in a row, with shipping, homebuilders and truckers’ responses "well below their peak." This echoes a disappointing durable good order figure last week.
It is clear we need a more sustaining therapy. It cannot come from government spending because federal budget deficits already threaten to compromise the dollar and produce future inflation. Instead, it must come from the private sector. All over the world governments are cutting taxes to spur industry, while U.S. legislators are panting to increase taxes – taxes on energy, taxes on foreign profits, taxes on small businesses, taxes on health insurance plans. Consider: France, a country that admires socialism almost as much as a superbly ripened Camembert, has just announced plans to eliminate a burdensome tax levied on business fixed investment. Francois Fillon, the finance minister, calls the change a "competitiveness shock." In addition, the administration is reducing taxes on small businesses if they hire workers.























409 Reader Comments (so far…) Sign In or Register to comment
Well, F P, that is purely your personal opinion about George Bush, however, he did alot of things right so much so that President Obama has kept many of Bush’s policies in place. You cannot deny that.
We have no choice but to wait another three years, unfortunately, but I fear the damage has been done to Obama’s credibility. I don’t think he can ever recover from his inexperience and his "other" agenda for America.
I would be glad to answer your questions. First, Frank and I go way back and have discussed many a book, political and otherwise, so I’m fairly certain we are on the same page. Whether we could quote from some of these pages is suspect unless we have written down some pithy prose. No, I wouldn’t read a book by someone ideologically opposed to me, but reading someone who is I get all sorts of information on those that don’t and why. I do read articles and essays by people I don’t agree with, however. Since deber and Frank’s discussion centered on those historians that saw/see Bush’s reign as a failure opposed to those who see/saw it as a success, I can only, as I said, give you some from the former. Some of these people I’ve only heard on symposiums, others, their essays or articles, the last seven,
their books, although not necessarily on the Bush administration, per se.
Shelby Foote
John Hope Franklin
James M. McPherson
Arthur Schlesinger Jr.
Howard Zinn
Doris Kearns Goodwin
Bob Woodward (he isn’t considered a Historian, but has written three books on the Bush administration)
There have been many other journalists and writers like Mark Danner, Joan Didion, Tony Judt, Jonathon Mirsky, Frank Rich, ––and many more that have written superb essays on this subject.
Hope this is helpful.
Phyllis, this alert for this response went to my spam and I just found it by accident. Thanks for the info. Some of these I am familiar with and I will check out the others. Like you, I also tend to steer away from authors who are ideologicaly opposite of my own views, but I also like to read opposing views. Sometimes I have even been "persuaded" to views ideas in other lights. Thanks again.
Scarlett
Deber b..you are my hero….I cant believe I am finally reading the other side of this debate and real clear thinking and anti non left ideas and comments on this website..great to hear the facts…I wish you lived in tampa so we could talk face to face . Glenn Beck is just an entertainer who’s a diggin for facts..Rush Limbaugh the same. I wonder if anyone here has the intelligence and courage to watch them!; Tom Cruise.".You just can’t handle the truth!: HA…maybe it’s just the left squeeling and that they are too embarrased to admit this so called "admin" isn’t the hope and kind of change we all expected…or maybe, with good ole Acorn he already knew what he wanted!!! I lived in Europe and in the Middle East…The Middle East is laughing all the way to the oil fields at obama..and Europe already is irritated with us…maybe Obama should take a beer summit with Iran!!!!!!!!! I am so shocked that this website has not deleted your input!
I gotta go I got a czar near my car and looks like an acorn just fell of my tree!
thanks again deber…..
ps..I am a gay , guncarrying,Christian….who also thinks abortion is between doctor and patient…I salute the flag, was in 2 different military divisions..and pray when I am blessed and worried..Hey..what’s up with feinstein and the Smelts….??????..
oh yea love to watch Pelosi and Racheal Maddow what comedians they are!
Hoodia, I’m certain that you either never lived in the Middle East, or that you are boldly fibbing in regard to the reaction of the people regarding the fall in oil prices which came as a result of the U.S./European/Japanese/global financial crisis. According to my personal experience, and the major newspapers (Gulf Times, Gulf News, etc.), nobody here is ‘laughing their way to the oil fields’. And if you actually lived in the Middle East, you would also know that most people here are poor or middle-class, and that in the 4 out of 5 of the "rich" countries of the Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC), the population is about 40-80% Indian/Pakistani/Bangladeshi/Phillipino. They certainly are unaffected by whatever oil that may be around. Of the ‘native’ population, most of those people are also poor or middle class. When the financial crisis hit, most western foreigners left the country, and most construction projects came to a halt. The economy in the GCC thrives on the real estate market (in Dubai, for instance, there is practically no oil), so that meant that even the rich were taken down several notches due to the extreme devaluation of real estate.
Since the fall in oil prices, even the oil-rich suffered here in the GCC.
dr hoodia t — If deber ever gets a chance to meet you face to face - both of you can come over to my house in the Villages in Orlando and we can have one big coffee klatch! I agree, since I’ve been on here I am a big fan of her posts. To me she is like a voice in the wilderness on this site. Keep up the good work deber - thank you for speaking up for all of us! And, I really love this article by Liz Peek - I hope there are many more from her on this site. I totally agree with her, less speeches, more action! Where are the jobs. And, as Tom Cruise said - "Show me the money"!
Maybe I’ll see if Tim Tebow would also like to drop by.