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Corporate Accountability and WorkPlace

The 'Bush Boom' is an Epic Bust

By Hale Stewart, Huffington Post. Posted April 9, 2008.


There's no spinning this economic disaster.
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Either we're in a recession or we're about to start one. Either way, the latest expansion is over. While there may be some question about when it happened (the expansion, that is) the reality is it was the least impressive expansion since WWII. Below I will explain why.

Before I move forward, let me address specifically any readers who still think the last expansion was "the Greatest Story Never Told." I am going to use facts to demonstrate why the latest expansion was terrible. If you don't like the facts please feel free to present you own facts. In fact, please do so. But please only use facts from reliable sources. Reliable sources would be the government agencies that collect and present this data. To sit at this table, you must bring data (properly adjusted for inflation) that is from sources used by all economists not from sources whose credibility is non-existent.

That being said (and I can't believe I even have to address this issue).

Let's start with the consumer side of the equation. First , job growth during this expansion is the weakest of any recovery since WWII. (This information comes from the National Bureau of Economic Research and the Bureau of Labor Statistics)

As a result, real median household income (income adjusted for inflation) is now lower than it was at the beginning of this expansion (this is the first time this has happened in 40 years) (This information comes from the Census Bureau).

So -- where did the money for consumer spending come from? Part of it came from savings. Here is a chart from the St. Louis Federal Reserve of U.S. national savings. Notice this number has been decreasing for the last 25 years and is currently hovering around 0 percent.

Debt is the real source of funds for this expansion (this information comes from the Federal Reserve's Flow of Funds report and the Bureau of Economic Analysis).

As a result of this increased debt load, a larger portion of consumer's income (which has been stagnant for this expansion) is going to debt payments:

So looking at the consumer we see the following picture emerge.

1.) Job growth was the weakest of any post WWII recovery.

2.) Real median income actually dropped for the duration of this expansion.

3.) To sustain consumption, consumers went on a mammoth debt acquisition binge, so that now

4.) Debt payments are as high as they have ever been on a percentage of disposable income basis.

So after 7 years of economic expansion we have lower incomes and more debt.

However, the consumer isn't the only person who ran up a ton of debt.

The Bush White House has again run up the national credit card. Here is a list of total debt outstanding at the end of the government's fiscal year:

09/30/2007 $9,007,653,372,262.48
09/30/2006 $8,506,973,899,215.23
09/30/2005 $7,932,709,661,723.50
09/30/2004 $7,379,052,696,330.32
09/30/2003 $6,783,231,062,743.62
09/30/2002 $6,228,235,965,597.16
09/30/2001 $5,807,463,412,200.06
09/30/2000 $5,674,178,209,886.86

The current debt outstanding is $9,437,425,175,221.31


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See more stories tagged with: recession, crash, economy, bush

Hale "Bonddad" Stewart is a former bond broker with several regional firms. He has been involved with the financial markets since 1995. He currently practices law in Houston, Texas. Stewart is the proprietor of the Bonddad Blog.



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Great Information...
Posted by: Tim Brown on Apr 9, 2008 6:02 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Sometimes simple facts are more effective in conveying a truth than are clever opinion pieces. It ain't pretty prose, but it gets to the heart of the matter. Thanks for the info and the clear perspective.

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Commondreamer
Posted by: CommonDreamer on Apr 9, 2008 7:16 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
A great article. A house of cards it was...I knew it way back then....you don't get something for nothing. And they gave nothing but debt to the median and under income worker. Subprime wages and overinflated everything else (housing, healthcare, CEO salaries, tax cuts for the rich) do not make a good recipe. It's a flat out disaster, a big plutocratic, fascist souffle with the wrong ingredients, and definitely the wrong chefs at the stove.

Remember the Clinton years? We never had anything like this. Just real growth, albeit a bit too much targeted at the top...but we should remember what a good job he did in merging many interests together.

Does it really take disasters happening...to get through to people just how damaging these kinds of policies are? Can we really be hearing that knee jerk voting will take place - again - and bring on more of the same disaster? Please, Democrats, unite behind whichever candidate is nominated - if you don't, we will go down the drain for good with these fascist policies...if you want to have a protest vote - where are you when we really need protesting right now - not in the voting booth - do something constructive instead - get petitions signed - write your Senators, Congressmen - if enough of our voices are heard, they'll know we're watching because we are the ones who have the power....we just have not used it. But a protest vote will never rid us of this regime - never. And then we will have only that to blame as this country goes to the dogs.

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Still wondering why voters do not look at resumes
Posted by: kabac55 on Apr 10, 2008 10:49 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Sometime around 1998-1999, when I heard G.W. Bush was planning to run for president, I had heard rumors about this guy and what was happening in TX under his governorship. (As a Michigander who lived through 12 years of John Engler as governor, I can relate to poor state leadership.)

The late Molly Ivins in her columns undoubtedly increased my suspicions that this guy was not competent enough to be presidential material. As a business man, he managed to bankrupt any corporation he's been involved with. His educational achievements are not great; his intellectual curiosity minimal. And then there was that military service record which was nothing to boast about either.

So, the guy's in the White House taking the US down the tubes. It's too bad we don't have a "Poppy" to bail us out of the disaster of the Bush II administration. We, the People, will have to clear up the mess if we can.

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A truly revealing article and one ignored by the plutocrats, oligarchs, war profiteers and other
Posted by: thekidde on Apr 10, 2008 10:52 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
"I've got mine, screw you" Friedmanites and neo-con criminals. The executive class in the US should be imprisoned or executed (depending on how egregious their greed, i.e.: K. Lay would be up for execution as would most of BushCo).

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Hale Stewart is too optimistic...
Posted by: nightgaunt on Apr 10, 2008 2:25 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
We have been in a recession at least since 2001 with job losses over gains. This when an increase in H1-B and L1 work visas were used to cut out highly qualified IT workers(with help from the Administration) and also sending both phone and high tech jobs overseas. Also with the effects of NAFTA caused millions to immigrate from Mexico to the USA for jobs they otherwise wouldn't have had to. The destruction of the middle and lower classes by this criminal administration while hiding the true numbers. Unemployment of 5%? How about 15-25% when all of the people who can't find work (aren't counted after 6 months),applications for unemployment (not everyone can and in Texas 70% are rejected out right)and those in part-time,temporary and contract work are also counted. They need to pars them by quality of job,not in the simple generic listing giving the false impression that the jobs found are all full-time permanent well paying.
I believe for a certain growing segment are islands of depression are accelerating with the general economic decline going on now. Think 1929 only far worse now than it was then. More people have farther to fall. People in their SUVs(they can no longer afford) waiting in line to get food from a foodbank(which are being overwhelmed and in need of donations.) What the oligarchs and disaster capitalists want too. See PNAC.

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Phony
Posted by: willymack on Apr 10, 2008 3:05 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
1. Phony elections ('00 & '04)
2. Phony prezdint, veepee & cabinet (see #1)
3. Phony explanation for 911
4. Phony "war" in Iraq based on phony baloney
5. Phony war on terror
6. Phony war on drugs
7. Phony "no child left behind" initiative
8. Phony "help" given Katrina victims
9. Phony "clear skies" initiative
10. Phony "healthy forests" initiative
11. Phony search for Osama bin Laden
12. Phony buildup for an attack in Iran
13. Phony election for '08 (hell, they got away with it TWICE, and everybody knows three's the charm, right?)
What's real? The death, destruction, pollution, ruined economy, looted treasury, and theft of everything not nailed down or hidden from their rapacious eyes, but they've got nine more months to find and steal that too. Another real thing is our failure to stop these rat bastards, and THAT could be a killer.

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