When the two years of government stimulus spending ends, what will there be to replace it unless we have concurrent private investment? The government does not have an obvious answer as to what will be a sustained replacement for the decline in the US housing component (construction, sales, etc.) of the last decade's GDP. Obama's plan to fix roads, bridges, build modern schools, pay teachers higher salaries, make government buildings energy efficient and green America will not provide the necessary historical and consistent long-term per capita US GDP growth that has given the US its high standard of living and has been the envy and despise of the world.
Sustainable high productivity is a sure long-term path to a better standard of living for a country's people and is the result of the technological innovations of private investment and fierce competition. US workers have the highest productivity in the world for many reasons: Ease of bankruptcy, low government share of GDP, low government ownership rate of business, low unionization rate, entrepreneurial wealth incentives, ability to amass wealth through hard work, accessibility to capital, ease of business start-ups, tough competition, lack of price controls, etc.
Recent government efforts to help the financial, automotive and other US industries are doing much to undermine the prospects for future US economic growth for the sake of appearing to help the voting worker, a lesson learned during the Franklin Roosevelt era and forgotten by our current politicians. It took until 1940 for the US economy to return to the height of its 1928-29 production levels and much of that was due to helping the war effort in Europe. Over the next two years, the US employable workforce is expected to grow at 1.1 percent a year, and the US needs to create 3.3 million new jobs in addition to replacing the 2.6 million jobs lost in 2008 and the yet unknown jobs lost in 2009 to have unemployment levels return to pre-recession levels. The US needs to create at least double the number of jobs promised by the new president. Obama's US employment rhetoric and goals of 3 million jobs falls far short of the needs of the US economy for the next two years.
Unfortunately, our politicians see the Roosevelt era through rose-colored glasses. While we call the 1930s, the period of the Great Depression, the slowdown in Europe was not called a Great Depression because it was not as severe and it was shorter lived. In England, it was much milder than in the US and their Great Depression occurred in 1907.
Predicting the future success of new businesses and of new technological innovation is impossible. The US needs a new commitment to fund basic scientific and technological research, a commitment to facilitate business start-ups and business growth and the least obvious, a commitment to allow businesses of all sizes in all industries to fail. Unfortunately, nothing in Obama's plans deal with helping the long-term per capita GDP growth of the US. His instincts, rhetoric and plans are more of the nature of a political animal already planning his reelection than of an economic man who will steer the US economy to long-term prosperity.
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