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Why This Economic "Recovery" Will Be the Worst of Your Lifetime

Posted by Ian Welsh, Open Left at 12:37 PM on October 13, 2009.


All the Obama administration has done is put the economy on life support then wander away.

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It seems that Summers is congratulating himself for having saved the world from the Great Depression:

The Obama administration has helped pull the U.S.  economy back from the "abyss" with aggressive efforts to spur growth and  stabilize financial markets, a top White House adviser said on Monday…

…"Thanks largely to the Recovery Act, alongside an aggressive financial stabilization plan and a program to keep responsible homeowners in their homes, we have walked a substantial distance back from the economic abyss and are on the path toward economic recovery," Summers wrote to House Republican leader John Boehner.

All they did was throw cash at the problem, without dealing with the underlying issues, which is why they didn’t manage (as Jerome points out) to kickstart ANY net private spending.  They didn’t break up major banks.  They didn’t allow bankruptcy judges to rewrite mortgages.  Their mortgage program kept hardly anyone in the house.  And their money for financial firms did not increase lending by one cent.

So, as a Stirling Newberry likes to say "the economy breathes fine, as long as we don’t unplug the life support machines."

That’s all they did - throw the economy on life support by hooking it up to a money spigot, then wander off and have a cup of coffee and tell each other how brilliant they were, not noticing that they hadn’t actually cured the patient.

This is going to be the wost “recovery” of your lifetime, unless you’re in the financial sector at a relatively high level.  Bank profits have recovered but ordinary people are not, in a generation, going to see a full recovery from this clusterfuck - employment will not recover to pre-recession levels before the next recession, and I don’t expect it to recover after that recession either.

At this point, in fact, I am expecting this to turn into a double dip recession—this "recovery" will not have any significant legs.

Anyone who believes Summer when he pats himself on his back should remember that Summers record of being wrong about everything of significance is awe inspiring in its completeness.  This is the man who helped create the necessary preconditions for the financial crisis through radical deregulation of financial markets, then didn’t see the crisis coming till it was already well underway.

Oh, and one reason any peaceniks reading this kiss any chance of the Afghan war ending is that Obama needs the war stimulus to keep the economy on life support and military Keynesianism is the type of stimulus Republicans and Blue Dogs won’t vote against.

Welcome to endless war, money for rich people, and trickle down for you.  The future looks an awful lot like the past, doesn’t it?

Digg!

Tagged as: obama, crisis, bailout, financial crisis, summers, recovery

Ian Welsh is the managing editor of The Agonist and a sometime contributor to FDL and the Huffington Post.


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I didn't want this to be the case but
Posted by: maxpayne on Oct 13, 2009 1:35 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
keeping the same kind of advisors who led to this disaster in the first place was enough of a red flag. The question to ask yourselves is just whose economy is it anyway?

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this is not news
Posted by: sharonsylvie on Oct 13, 2009 1:45 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
All one has to do is drive around and see the endless closed stores and "for sale" signs to know this is no recovery. Retailers are being replaced by a proliferation of second-hand stores and I see huge crowds at the flea markets, looking for bargains. Everyone is selling their junk to pay bills, and the rest of us are looking for what we need at better prices. I will no longer buy anything new made in China; what's the point? it will only break in 3 months.

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» RE: this is not news Posted by: VZEQICVA
THE "WORST RECOVERY" OF MY LIFETIME
Posted by: VZEQICVA on Oct 13, 2009 2:09 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Compared to what? There's a daily litany of bad news and most of the reporting is legitimate. But a blanket statement like this one requires a book. "Worst Recovery" is a contradiction to begin with. Recovery is a positive thing. How about "a slow recovery". Too much hysterical language is making it seem as though nothing will ever be right again ever. A little perspective would do nicely. ANNA

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» Keep thinking happy thoughts... Posted by: bonapartist
Oh come on, Ian! Chant it out loud....
Posted by: DaBear on Oct 13, 2009 2:26 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Hope-Change, Hope-Change, Hope-Change, Hope-Change, Hope-Change, Hope-Change, Hope-Change, Hope-Change, Hope-Change, Hope-Change, Hope-Change, Hope-Change, Hope-Change, Hope-Change...

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» I tried, it didn't pay my bills. Posted by: bonapartist
Seriously, though
Posted by: DaBear on Oct 13, 2009 2:31 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Last Saturday as I laced up my boots to go to work I overheard two owning-classers talking about how "relieved" they were that the recovery was "kicking-in full swing."

I can only shake my head and go earn my $29 managing their kids' match, while of course tolerating mounting abuse from these same two over entitled rich pricks.

Then go home to my rundown rental house I overpay for each month to another owning class person who demands "rent-in-full be paid no later than 5 pm at the designated location" specifying to color of envelope, "check to be typed not handwritten," etc.

Yay, owning class. Yay for the recovery. With improvements like this who needs a Depression.

Oh yeah, Summers, et al. can kiss my flat-ass! He best watch his backside should he accidentally wander into my neighborhood....

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» RE: Seriously, though-OK Posted by: VZEQICVA
The leaking tub is sinking slower now
Posted by: bonapartist on Oct 14, 2009 2:24 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
But it is still sinking, now let us see how long until badly plugged holes spring a leak again. Next time recession will be longer, harder, it will happen sooner and there will be no more money for the quick fix to continue business as usual.

Probably it is for the better int he long term, until this system crashes and burns there will be no reforms or changes.

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New Boss Same as the Old Boss
Posted by: dingham on Oct 14, 2009 6:52 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Joe Biden VP selection was a Credit Card Co. (fill in the blank)ore, Hillary Clinton Sec State was a warmonger repub lite, Summers, Geithner, Emanuel, etc., all sell outs, all the same old same old, not advocates for the people.
We are not EVER going to be a GDP growth economy again, EVER. Peak Oil, Peak Water, Peak Agriculture, Peak Minerals, DUH!!!
What follows this failure of Capitalism as practiced here? Politicaly, Fascism or Socialism?Economicaly, Recession or Depression?
I'm no right wing nut but, they have some valid complaints about where this country is headed. If the reaction to this disappeared economy is a return to the other party our decline will only accelerate.
Campaign/Finance Reform
JobsJobsJobsJobsJobsJobs
Regulate WallStreet
Break up all "to big to fail"
End the Fed
End the "Wars on Terror"
Repeal the "Patriot Act"
I think these are all "teabagger" concerns and it is so sad to see the left dems dismissing these points. They really matter and they could really help. Therefore none of it will happen under the 2 party system.

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Double dip, the first dip hasn't ended.
Posted by: FoonTheElder on Oct 14, 2009 9:12 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
In order to have a double dip recession, we need to come out of the first recession, which we haven't.

The Wall Street gamblers and corporate welfare recipients are the only businesses that are out of the recession. Things may look fine to them, but that's only because the people hurt by the recession are busy funneling them billions of dollars in welfare.

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pay your way
Posted by: CLARENCE SWINNEY on Oct 14, 2009 9:46 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
1980=1000b of debt
20 yrs conservatives=11,000b of debt
SOLUTION
A. Cut Military by 25%
B. lift cap on SS
C.Divident Tax to 28%
D. Restate top Estate Tax
E. Public Campaign Financing No expenditures but amount given
F.Recontrol Rich Man's Gambling Casino- -Wall Street.

cswinney2@triad.rr.com

Easy Solutions.

Democrats Control. Do it.

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Can't the Poors just hold their breath for... 7 years?
Posted by: eddie torres on Oct 14, 2009 12:51 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Jobless recovery --> gold up / dollar down --> Bretton Woods III --> US gas = $10 / gallon --> green economy --> job creation

Hooray!

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What recovery?
Posted by: WeimMom on Oct 15, 2009 5:31 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
This so called recovery is nothing less than false, America is teetering on bankruptcy, and so many are unaware of how fragile we are. Approx 12% of the stimulus money was actually put into act, just short of the 2010 primaries, they intend to release a large amount to stimulate the economy so they can look like heroes and be re-elected. They do not care about us poor Americans; rather how to get the votes!

This is just wrong!

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"It's a 'jobless' recovery"
Posted by: Ian MacLeod on Oct 15, 2009 1:05 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
This means it's a recovery for the super-wealthy, and most of all for the oligarchs of the old banking families gathered under the aegis of the Rothschilds who own and control the "central banks" of every major country in the Western world. They've suborned every US government agency that matters along with the MSM, the Rothschilds having bought Reuters in the late 1800s. They've destroyed the entire industrial capacity of this country, and the propaganda on the TV, on radio and most other media is unending. When it doesn't work, they resort to force, simply ignoring the law, though sometimes using a completely ridiculous interpretation to take power, knowing that the compromised courts will uphold them regardless.

We are a disposable resource, poisoned with almost everything we eat, cook with or eat out of, the water and anything made with it, the air we breathe, the clothes we wear and the soaps and cleansers we use, the medications that Big Pharma offers lying studies about... And we are ignored as long as they can keep robbing us through taxes and by other means, though it appears that they find our numbers inconvenient and are implementing a lot of eugenics programs, quietly, that include lack of medical care and poisoning that is so ubiquitous it's almost impossible to avoid.

There will be a true revolution soon, or a massive die-off, one or the other. If the whole truth were to get out from a reliable source just once, it would be the former. Henry Ford was right.

Ian MacLeod
Activist PRN, Nonprofit, Nonpartisan, 501(C)(3) Corporation.
http://painreliefnetwork.org/
Veteran, Disabled, Chronic Intractable Pain Patient, 26 years
Primum, non nocere!
Illegitimis non carborundum!

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Recovery? Feels to me more like a proctology exam, with a splintery broomstick
Posted by: charles000 on Oct 27, 2009 11:23 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Recovery? Feels to me more like a proctology exam, with a splintery broomstick

Look folks, it's really quite simple.

Back in 2008, then treasury secretary Paulsen delivered his infamous one page shake down letter to Congress - either cough up a trillion dollars in "protection money", or else . . .

Never mind that Paulsen himself was (and still is) one of the insider elite of the Wall Street corporate crime cabal, or that the same collection of soulless criminal scumbags . . . oops, I meant "financial services industry executives", are still, to this very day, paying themselves billions in "bonus" money, while having no answers when it comes to any form of accounting as to where endless billions of bailout money has disappeared to.

The populace is being given an involuntary proctology exam, with a splintery broomstick.

"Let them eat cake" is only going to work for so long . . . .

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