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Good News Everyone, The Economic Crisis Is Over! (Right?)

Posted by Allison Kilkenny, True/Slant at 12:15 PM on October 30, 2009.


There's a disconnect between official economic figures like GDP, "third quarter growth," and average citizens' lives.
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Good news, everyone: The economic crisis is OVER!

Kind of. Today's New York Times reports

The United States has emerged from the longest economic contraction since World War II.

The nation's gross domestic product [GDP] expanded at an annual rate of 3.5 percent in the quarter that ended in September, matching its average growth rate of the last 80 years, according to the Commerce Department.

If life still sucks for you: you're still unemployed, depressed, broke, homeless, or scraping by on food stamps, don't worry. You're not alone. In a recent Wall Street Journal/NBC poll, 58 percent of people said they see the country as being on the wrong economic track.

There's always been a weird disconnect between official economic figures like GDP, "third quarter growth," and average citizens' lives. Basically, things can look great on paper, while low and moderate-income people suffer. It's almost like the official record keepers have no idea what life is like for the guy working the graveyard shift in South Side Chicago.

This is not a new problem. Economic indicators like GDP may work swimmingly in lecture hall theories, but they ignore many factors important to the well being of a society, such as health care or life expectancy.

For example, 80 percent of Americans have reported feeling stressed about the economic downturn. The stress affects women the most, who report increases in symptoms like irritability, anger and fatigue. These kinds of economic downturn byproducts have untold consequences on family, workplace, and societal stability.

This stress can also manifest as insomnia. In West Virginia, the AP reports that nearly 1 in 5 West Virginians said they did not get a single good night’s sleep in the previous month. For West Virginia, a state that ranks at or near the bottom of the nation in several important measurements of health, including obesity, the insomnia epidemic may have its roots in the economy, says Dr. Ronald Chervin, a University of Michigan sleep disorders expert. Chevin says financial stress and odd-hour work shifts can play roles in sleeplessness.

However, insomnia isn't measured in GDP. This disconnect was large enough to attract the attention of economists like the Nobel laureate Joseph Stiglitz, who is trying to come up with a new, broader definition of prosperity. In an interview with Bloomberg, Stiglitz said:

GDP has increasingly become used as a measure of societal well-being and changes in the structure of the economy and our society have made it an increasingly poor one ... So many things that are important to individuals are not included in GDP.

In the model they unveiled, the academics recommend including other factors, such as sustainability and education.

Even the guy who invented the GDP, the late Russian-American economist Simon Kuznets, knew his system had significant shortcomings. He once said, "The welfare of a nation can scarcely be inferred from a measure of national income."

It’s true. Fancy lab room words that seemed benign at the time, like "derivatives" and "sub-prime mortgages," had unforeseen, terrible consequences on average citizens' lives. Similarly, the specialized jargon of "GDP" and "third quarter growth" exist on different planets from the rest of us. While the students at the University of Chicago's Department of Economics say one thing, it appears as though the opposite is happening in our backyards ... again.


"The nation's gross domestic product expanded at an annual rate of 3.5 percent in the quarter that ended in September." Fantastic. So what? Does that bring back car-manufacturing jobs from Mexico? Does that mean corporations will now be taxed their fair share?

The official unemployment rate is at a 26-year high, and these statistics don't count people who have been out of work so long that they've given up searching for employment. If we count the “discouraged,” as they’re so preciously called, it’s estimated that 26 million people are out of work.

"The big-picture perspective is that things have improved," said Jan Hatzius, an assistant manager at Wal-Mart…

I'm sorry. I read that wrong. Hatzius is the chief United States economist at Goldman Sachs. I guess things do look pretty sunny over there.

Digg!

Tagged as: economy, economic crisis

Allison Kilkenny co-hosts Citizen Radio, the alternative political radio show. G. Gordon Liddy once told her her writing makes him want to vomit, which is the greatest compliment she's ever been paid, ever.


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Stock Market
Posted by: ClassAct on Oct 30, 2009 12:22 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I guess the brightening economic picture is why the Dow fell 200 points today.

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The problem is...
Posted by: shermhead on Oct 30, 2009 1:01 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
That 10 million, as in 10,000,000!, jobs have to be created over the next 8 years to bring the U.S. back to the year 2000 job levels. And even then the U.S. was looking at 6% unemployment pretty much being entrenched. The time period between 1999 to 2009 saw a loss of jobs at a rate never seen before in the history of the country. For an entire decade more jobs were lost than were created, and something like that cannot be changed over night.

Don't believe the hype of the Corporate Overlords. The U.S. and global economy has not even hit rock bottom yet. Not by a long shot!

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popham
Posted by: popham on Oct 31, 2009 6:28 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Indeed, jobs are what we need first and foremost. Unless we put a little money in the
wallets of the 17% of unemployed, then unemployment rates will only rise.
GDP figures are for the corporate and federal
spin/propaganda junkies. This does noy sit well
with the average American struggling to make ends meet. With the commercial/industrial real
estate bubble bursting, it is only a matter of time before banks "too-big-to-fail" will go
under. The added ripple effect will further
impact an already stressed economic climate.

And so all the while, we have a Congress and
Administration, that persists in perpetrating
health care mandates, excessive taxes and higher costs, at a time in history, when the
average American citizen is already over-burdened by the economic crisis. Of course this
is all political. It has nothing whatsoever to
do with the betterment of our country. Rather,
it is a selfish ongoing agenda that has been
dragging this once great nation down for the past 30 years.
When are we ever going to exclaim: "Enough is enough?".

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Please may i say somthing
Posted by: flymulla on Oct 31, 2009 7:37 AM   
Current rating: 1    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Jeffrey Sachs, The End of Poverty,
Penguin, Copyright 2005 by Jeffrey Sachs, pp.
149-151.
draconian
PRONUNCIATION:
(dray-KO-nee-uhn, druh-)
MEANING:
adjective: Unusually harsh.
ETYMOLOGY:
After Draco (late 7th century BCE), Athenian legislator, noted for the harshness of his code of laws.
NOTES:
Under Draco's laws even trivial offenses, such as idleness, brought capital punishment. When asked why he had instituted the death penalty for most offenses, he supposedly replied that the lesser crimes deserved it and he knew of no greater punishment for more important ones. Could it be an example of an aptronym (in Greek his name means dragon)? His laws were said to be written in blood instead of ink. When it comes to lawmaking, the name of one of Draco's successors has entered the language in an opposite sense. The Athenian lawmaker Solon's reform to make Draco's laws humane earned him a place in the dictionary as an eponym meaning "a wise lawgiver". It was Solon who said: Laws are the spider's webs which, if anything small falls into them they ensnare it, but large things break through and escape.
USAGE:
"The 'criminalization of any criticism' of General Musharraf, his regime, and other state functionaries was an unprecedented draconian measure against the freedom of speech."
17 Retired Judges Want Revival of Constitution; Daily Times (Lahore, Pakistan); Nov 28, 2007.
A THOUGHT FOR TODAY:
The tragedy of modern war is not so much that young men die but that they die fighting each other, instead of their real enemies back home in the capitals. -Edward Abbey, naturalist and author (1927-1989)
Want to know the true reason. It is France and Tony who created the farced wars. Have it either way Tony loses. Read on
Tony Blair's hopes of becoming President of Europe were dealt a fresh and possibly devastating blow today as the French leader signalled he would not back him.
Nicolas Sarkozy, who was initially one of Mr Blair's most vocal supporters, declared that there would be a joint Franco-German candidate for the post.
And he warned: 'The first names to come out of the hat are not the ones that are finally chosen.'
This appeared to be a clear reference to Mr Blaire, who was at first seen as the hot favourite to land the plum £275,000-a-year post.
The French President's comments came as Gordon Brown reiterated his backing for his predecessor, and David Miliband ruled out becoming EU high representative - a role that will also be created once the Lisbon Treaty is ratified. Therefore I say
Lemon being a citrus fruit, fights against infection. It helps in production of White Blood Cells and antibodies in blood which attacks the invading microorganism and prevents infection.
2. Lemon is an antioxidant which deactivates the free radicals preventing many dangerous diseases like stroke, cardiovascular diseases and cancers.
He who is firmly seated in authority soon learns to think security, and not progress, the highest lesson of statecraft.
-- James Russell Lowell I thank you
Firozali A. Mulla

[« Reply to this comment] [Post a new comment »] [Rate this comment: 1 - 2 - 3 - 4 - 5]

Please may i say somthing
Posted by: flymulla on Oct 31, 2009 7:37 AM   
Current rating: 1    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Jeffrey Sachs, The End of Poverty,
Penguin, Copyright 2005 by Jeffrey Sachs, pp.
149-151.
draconian
PRONUNCIATION:
(dray-KO-nee-uhn, druh-)
MEANING:
adjective: Unusually harsh.
ETYMOLOGY:
After Draco (late 7th century BCE), Athenian legislator, noted for the harshness of his code of laws.
NOTES:
Under Draco's laws even trivial offenses, such as idleness, brought capital punishment. When asked why he had instituted the death penalty for most offenses, he supposedly replied that the lesser crimes deserved it and he knew of no greater punishment for more important ones. Could it be an example of an aptronym (in Greek his name means dragon)? His laws were said to be written in blood instead of ink. When it comes to lawmaking, the name of one of Draco's successors has entered the language in an opposite sense. The Athenian lawmaker Solon's reform to make Draco's laws humane earned him a place in the dictionary as an eponym meaning "a wise lawgiver". It was Solon who said: Laws are the spider's webs which, if anything small falls into them they ensnare it, but large things break through and escape.
USAGE:
"The 'criminalization of any criticism' of General Musharraf, his regime, and other state functionaries was an unprecedented draconian measure against the freedom of speech."
17 Retired Judges Want Revival of Constitution; Daily Times (Lahore, Pakistan); Nov 28, 2007.
A THOUGHT FOR TODAY:
The tragedy of modern war is not so much that young men die but that they die fighting each other, instead of their real enemies back home in the capitals. -Edward Abbey, naturalist and author (1927-1989)
Want to know the true reason. It is France and Tony who created the farced wars. Have it either way Tony loses. Read on
Tony Blair's hopes of becoming President of Europe were dealt a fresh and possibly devastating blow today as the French leader signalled he would not back him.
Nicolas Sarkozy, who was initially one of Mr Blair's most vocal supporters, declared that there would be a joint Franco-German candidate for the post.
And he warned: 'The first names to come out of the hat are not the ones that are finally chosen.'
This appeared to be a clear reference to Mr Blaire, who was at first seen as the hot favourite to land the plum £275,000-a-year post.
The French President's comments came as Gordon Brown reiterated his backing for his predecessor, and David Miliband ruled out becoming EU high representative - a role that will also be created once the Lisbon Treaty is ratified. Therefore I say
Lemon being a citrus fruit, fights against infection. It helps in production of White Blood Cells and antibodies in blood which attacks the invading microorganism and prevents infection.
2. Lemon is an antioxidant which deactivates the free radicals preventing many dangerous diseases like stroke, cardiovascular diseases and cancers.
He who is firmly seated in authority soon learns to think security, and not progress, the highest lesson of statecraft.
-- James Russell Lowell I thank you
Firozali A. Mulla

[« Reply to this comment] [Post a new comment »] [Rate this comment: 1 - 2 - 3 - 4 - 5]

Where are those jobs coming from?
Posted by: lclark on Oct 31, 2009 9:22 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Since manufacturing continues to be exported, where are those jobs coming from?

Since we import more than we export, how can the economic picture improve?

Since small business and farming is disadvantaged by corporate control of retail and the production, purchase, and distribution of food, where will be the distribution of wealth into the general population rather than the continued concentration of wealth into a smaller number of the super-wealthy?

Since our debt is increasing to foreign governments, where is the power to act independently of the interests of foreign governments?

Since our federal legislators and executive branch can only run for office with the financial assistance of special interests, how will indedendent thinking and action by our so called "representatives" be possible?

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Darn, I thought the headline was
Posted by: chetdude on Oct 31, 2009 11:21 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Good News! The Economy is over!

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Lumberman
Posted by: scremf on Oct 31, 2009 2:59 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I'm glad someone else get's it. To quote one of my friends "The Farm has already been sold". We're just awaitin the eviction notice I reckon. Bein poor white trash the GDP never really seemed to be an accurate indication of my prosperity or of anyone with whom the likes of me hangs. At 55 years of age I am now resigned to living in my 78 chevy 20' motorhome in Palinville Alaska. It's o.k. though I can see Sarah Palins house from where I live, and that alone brings me hope, that I do can succeed, and live the Great American Dream. I understand that if I only take personal responsibility for my failures instead of constantly blaming our hallowed system, then I too can through hard work finally obtain my own personalized AMERICAN DREAM. After all it is a level playing field and we can all succeed if we only try. Why there is room for all of us at the top!! We only have to find enough developing nation lackies to support us, an easy task for anyone fortunate enough to have been born a son or daughter of liberty in these great United States. So fear not, do not let the lies and deceits of the liberal elite media lull you into despair. All is well in America, long live the GDP and Wallstreet.

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Good News Everyone... ala Professor Farnsworth??
Posted by: Bearzerker on Nov 1, 2009 10:12 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
the grim reaper [economically speaking] has to claim his due sometime and if not now, time will surely come later.

education will surely pacify the professor, so if the DC goose/two-stepping bureaucrats could get their herds of cats in order then perhaps we could out think our futurama debacle...

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