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The Tortoise Economy
Robert Reich
Word from the 12 Federal Reserve Banks, summarized in the Fed's so-called "Beige Book," shows the economy slowing in July and August.
Duh.
But the Fed is quick to point out the economy overall is still growing -- even though it's growing more slowly than in the spring.
Can we have a moment of realism here, please?
In 2008 and 2009 the economy fell into the deepest hole it's been in since the Great Depression. Since then we've been struggling to get out. We're failing big time.
After a typical recession, growth surges until the economy re-emerges from whatever hole it fell into and returns to its normal growth path. Usually that surge isn't difficult to accomplish once the upswing begins because all the assets the economy needs to get back to its old path are readily available -- lots of people who have been laid off or have come into the job market and been unable to find work, unused office and retail space, factories and equipment that had been idled. After the economy returns to normal and almost all these people and physical assets are back to work, growth slows to its normal pace.
But this time it's not happening that way. More than two and a half years after the Great Recession began, many months after we hit bottom and when in a normal "recovery" we'd expect growth to surge, the opposite is happening. Growth is slowing.
We may or may not fall into another hole, but a so-called "double dip" isn't really the worry. The worry is we're not getting out of the giant hole we fell into. Growth is slowing when it should be surging. Think of a tortoise trying to get out of a deep ravine, who's just begun to scale the wall when he gets tired and goes to sleep.
As I keep saying, this isn't your ordinary business cycle. But we're debating fiscal policy as if it were.
Democrats and Republicans are battling over whether the Bush tax cuts should be extended to the richest 2.7 percent of Americans next year. They shouldn't be, of course. The rich don't spend nearly as great a percentage of their incomes as everyone else, and the
Yet even if Democrats win this one, the tortoise might wake up and move several inches up the wall before falling asleep again. Even if
The underlying problem is structural, not cyclical. There will be no return to normal because normal got us into the hole in the first place. And the normal kind of prescriptions can't possibly get us out. Until the economy is restructured so more Americans share in its gains, the economy won't make many gains. We'll be forever trying to scale a wall that can't be scaled, because the vast majority of Americans lack the purchasing power to move upward.
If you'll permit me a commercial, I explain all this in detail -- as well as what must be done -- in "Aftershock: The Next Economy and America's Future," which will be out in a week from Knopf.
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- American Dream of Home Ownership Has Become a Nightmare
- Americans Are Pessimistic About the Economy
- The Tortoise Economy
- Hard Economic Times. When Will They End?
- 5 Traits of the New American Consumer
- Republicans' Tax-Cut Proposals Would Double the Budget Deficit
- A Tale for Hungry Times
- Tax Increases Would Cause More Unemployment
- Don't Extend Bush Tax Cuts for the Rich
- How the New Consumer Bureau Will Help You
- Setting up the new Consumer Financial Protection Bureau
- Dueling Realities on Unemployment and the Economy
- Obama Insists He Made Right Decisions on Economy; Struggling Middle Class Begs to Differ
- The Great Recession's Toll on Higher Education
- Why Cheaper Money Won't Mean More Jobs
- I, Market Economy
- What We Need to Do to Save America's Middle Class
- 5 Key Lessons in August's Jobs Report
- Jobless Uptick Masks Some Positive News
- Economists See More Home Price Declines Ahead
- Another Round of Class Warfare?
- Obama Targets Bush's Tax Cuts for the Rich
- United States Losing Latin America Market Share
- Widening Divide in American-Chinese Commercial Interests
- Election Day Shocker: 10 Percent Unemployment
- Is United States at End of Post-World War II Period of Economic Growth?
- Home Prices Likely to Slide After Sales Plummet
- Housing Demand Evaporates As Stimulus Ends
- What will happen to the housing market?
- Econquotes: By Obama, Samuelson, Becker, Reich, Karlgaard, Magnet, Etc
- Obama's Cronkite Moment?
- Interdependency Theory: China, India and the West
- Detroit's Economic Agony, America's Choice
- John Boehner's Economic Prescription
- Confessions of a Class Worrier
- Home Builders Not Driving Economic Recovery
- National Deficit: The Ticking Debt Bomb
- Third World America
- States Don't Need a Bailout; States Need to Cut Spending
- Federal Reserve Moves to Support Low Mortgage Rates
- Jobs Report Paints a Picture of Nervous Employers
- Why We Shouldn't Keep the Bush Tax Cut for the Wealthy
- Magical Thinking in Washington
- Wake Up Washington
- What Year Is This?
- Germany's Good Fortune Tips the Scales Against its Neighbors
- Housing Market Takes Another Step Backwards
- Some Good News for Job Seekers
- The Great Decoupling of Corporate Profits From Jobs
- Three Key Ways to Drive Job Growth
- America's Worst Job Market: El Centro, California
- Home Prices Improve But May Soon Begin Sliding
- Home Sales Rebound From Record-Low Levels
- Place the Blame Where It Belongs
- Bernanke Carries Extra Burden for Economic Recovery
- Downward Pressure on Home Prices Mounts
- Dirt-Cheap Mortgage Rates: Here for How Long?
- Weak Demand & Tight Credit Keeps Builders On Sidelines
- Obama and Big Business Trade Blame on the Economy
- Why Start-ups Could Make or Break the Job Recovery
- Before the Wall Street Crisis, There Was 'Poverty, Inc.'
- New Finance Bill: Mountain of Legislative Paper; Molehill of Reform
- Financial Reform Another Talking Point for Obama & Democrats
- The Vanishing American Consumer and the Coming Trade War
- Why the Economy Isn't Quite as Bad as It Seems
- 6 Reasons the Housing Market Hasn't Recovered
- Why Everyone Suffers When Job Seekers Give Up
- Depressed About The Economy? Maybe Because You're Earning Less
- Obama's Anti-Business Policies Are Our Economic Katrina
- Republicans' Aversion to Financial Reform Misguided
- Slouching Toward a Double Dip or Lousy Recovery at Best
- 8 Problems That Could Trigger a Double-Dip Recession
- Why Congress Cannot Afford Not to Extend Unemployment Benefits
- Distressed Home Sales to Sandbag Housing Revival
- Home Sales Poised to Drop in Coming Months
- The Economy's Lasting Impact on Your Retirement
- Forget Obama - Fear the Real State Capitalists
- Imperative Need for America to Become an Innovation Nation
- Jobs Bill a Tough Call for Democrats
- What Soldiers at War Can Teach Us About Surviving Financial Warfare
- 5 Things to Know About the Newest Jobs Bill
- New Home Sales Plummet to Record Low
- The Housing Market's Unexpected Drop
- When Obama Trades Jobs for a Higher Priority
- When National Politics and Home-State Economics Collide
- Reasons -- and Ways -- to Splurge This Summer
- What China's Currency Reform Means For Investors
- The Democrats' Economic Vision Problem
- Urban Abandonment
- Coping With China's Financial Power
- Is the Recession Over?
- Managing Debt Remains Key in Face of An Uncertain Economy
- Home Repossessions Hit New Record High
- 2010 Elections Will Turn on Jobs and the Economy
- Chamber of Commerce Aims to Boost Trade With China
- America Has Two Sets of Rules
- Why May Jobs Report is Better and Worse Than it Looks
- Jobless Economic Recovery Remains Issue Number One
- What Financial Reform Means For Consumers
- Financial Reform Legislation Gives Shareholders More Say
- Financial Reform: Win for Wall Street - Cold Shoulder for Main Street
- Fiduciary Provision May Be Most Important Part of Financial Reform Bill
- Unfair Trade Practices Are Wiping Out Jobs
- In a Welfare State How Much Is 'Enough'?
- Should Investors Sit This One Out?
- Why Jobless Teens May Have More to Blame Than the Recession
- What Home Sales Jump Means for Economic Recovery
- Home Prices Have Further to Fall: Here's Why
- Why Housing is Headed for Second-Half Headaches
- Nancy Pelosi Will Lead America to National Ruin
- Financial Reform's Uncertain Promise
- The Way We're Working Isn't Working
- What Gold Can and Cannot Do For You
- Why Some Women Skirt the Wage Gap
- The Crippling Price of Public Employee Unions
- European Union Funding Proposal Is Only the Beginning
- Why Wall Street's Gain Has Been America's Loss
- Euro Crisis has American Fingerprints
- Wall Street Probes: Collateralized Debt Obligations
- Voters See Debt Crisis. Why Doesn't Washington?
- Social Security Inflation Adjustment Debate
- European Debt Crisis Affects Investments
- Greece: Model of Socialistic Excess
- Who Got Hit Worst in the Market Crash
- Expeditionary Economics: Spurring Growth After Conflicts and Disasters
- Why More Diplomacy Won't Keep the Financial System Safe
- Muddling through Greece's Tremors
- Greece Financial Crisis Raises Doubts About European Union
- Bigger Is Better: Case for Transatlantic Economic Union
- European Union: A Fragile Partnership
- Goldman Sachs Testimony Boost for Financial Reform
- A Culture of Criminality on Wall Street
- Greek Debt Crisis May Hurt Latin America Economy
- Why April's Unemployment Rise Shows Workers Hopeful Again
- Smart Moves for Tomorrow's Higher Interest Rates
- Still the Optimist
- The Global Glass Ceiling: Why Empowering Women Is Good for Business
- Life in the Age of 'Much Worse Than We Thought It Would Be'
- What 3.2 Percent GDP Growth Says About Our Contradictory Economy
- Congress Had a Role in the Financial Crisis
- Just a Few Questions for the SEC
- Financial Crisis - Somebody Must Pay!
- Is Latin America Booming? Not Quite Yet
- Guns vs. Butter 2010
- Your Guide to the Goldman Sachs Lawsuit
- Can SEC Beat Goldman Sachs?
- Time to Break up the Big Banks
- Resisting Wall Street Reform
- Shorting The Middle Class: The Real Wall Street Crime
- Obama Edge on Financial Reform
- 10 Cities Facing Double Whammy of Default Risks
- Capitalism vs. Capitalists
- Business Schools' Great Ethics Debate
The Tortoise Economy
(c) 2010 Robert Reich
