Austerity Has Cost The U.S. Economy 2.2 Million Jobs: Study
There
are more than 2 million unemployed Americans who might have jobs
today if not for austerity.
6
May, 2013
That's
the conclusion of a new
study by Michael Greenstone and Adam Looney at the Brookings
Institution.
In the 46 months since the Great Recession ended, state, local and
federal governments have cut about 500,000 jobs. In contrast, in
every other U.S. recession since 1970, the government hired
approximately 1.7 million people, on average. That means the U.S. is
an estimated 2.2 million jobs in the hole.
Given
the size
of the U.S. labor force,
an extra 2.2 million jobs would mean the U.S. unemployment rate would
be about 6.1 percent, instead of 7.5
percent.
That would be below the 6.5 percent rate the Federal Reserve is
targeting with its extraordinary bond-buying program known as
quantitative easing. Worried about Fed-fueled financial bubbles?
Thank austerity. In fact, the Fed
recently called out tight fiscal policy in
explaining why it's keeping the economy's gas pedal floored.
That
2.2 million jobs would also get the U.S. job market back to its peak
level of employment, set in January 2008, in the early months of the
recession. Right now, we're about 2.6 million jobs shy of that peak,
making this the
slowest job-market recovery since World War II.
The government has not helped at all -- in fact, it has pulled in the
other direction, firing people when it should be hiring.
That
2.2 million jobs would also help close another wide disconnect:
Employers aren't firing people any more, but they're only barely
hiring, leaving the economy about
4 million jobs short of where it should be,
given current levels of unemployment benefits. More than half of that
gap could be attributed to stingy government, if Brookings is right.
Though
the austerity movement has taken a serious blow with the discovery
of errors in its favorite research report,
many austerity
fanatics still doubt the
U.S. has taken all of the bitter medicine it should. But the fact is
that the government has slashed its payrolls after the worst
recession since World War II and cut
spending at the fastest rate since the end of the Vietnam war.
And
this is all before most of the effects of the across-the-board budget
cuts of the federal government's sequestration, which might cost the
economy another 750,000 jobs, the Brookings study notes.
Austerity
is real, and it is choking the life out of the U.S. economy.
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