The Stimulus Worked

Not that I care all that much, but answer this one for me: what difference is there on the unemployment rate between (1) preventing Jim from being laid off and (2) getting Jim a new job after he gets laid off?
The difference is that since there is no real way to determine how many jobs were "saved" you can claim ridiculously high numbers that will be believed by those in the same party as the claimant especially.
 
The difference is that since there is no real way to determine how many jobs were "saved" you can claim ridiculously high numbers that will be believed by those in the same party as the claimant especially.


Obviously, you get my point hence your dodge.

As I said to SF, no one in this thread has mentioned the Obama Administration's "created or saved" figures except for you and SF. Why is that?
 
Obviously, you get my point hence your dodge.

As I said to SF, no one in this thread has mentioned the Obama Administration's "created or saved" figures except for you and SF. Why is that?
Obviously you get mine, hence the ridiculous straw man argument. The difference is there is no way to prove that Jim's job was "saved" at all so you can just claim it and hacks will especially believe you.
 
I understand the point. What I am waiting for is some analysis by someone somewhere suggesting that everyone else has it completely totally all wrong. I haven't seen it yet.

What other analysis do you need other than the fact that there numbers were significantly wrong? There assumptions on where we might be without the stimulus are no better than there assumptions were a year ago. Nobody knows what the job numbers would look like without the stimulus.
 
What other analysis do you need other than the fact that there numbers were significantly wrong? There assumptions on where we might be without the stimulus are no better than there assumptions were a year ago. Nobody knows what the job numbers would look like without the stimulus.


I disagree. Projecting where the economy and unemployment rate will be year from now is much more difficult that assessing where the unemployment rate would be right now sans stimulus based on observed data.

And really, I'm surprised that no one can come up with anyone anywhere with a credible alternative analysis.
 
Obviously you get mine, hence the ridiculous straw man argument. The difference is there is no way to prove that Jim's job was "saved" at all so you can just claim it and hacks will especially believe you.


As I said, no one is talking about "saved" but you and SF. Congratulations, you won an argument against no one.
 
I disagree. Projecting where the economy and unemployment rate will be year from now is much more difficult that assessing where the unemployment rate would be right now sans stimulus based on observed data.

And really, I'm surprised that no one can come up with anyone anywhere with a credible alternative analysis.
Since they are based on the same assumptive process guessing at where it would be now "if" is the same as predicting where it will be. There is no indication that they are any more accurate at either process and, in fact, much evidence that they are almost invariably wrong on assumptions based on previous performance.
 
As I said, no one is talking about "saved" but you and SF. Congratulations, you won an argument against no one.
Right. You said he "wasn't laid off because" rather than "saved"... The reality is you used four words rather than using "saved"... You have no way of proving he wasn't laid off because of the stimulus except by using CBO assumptions which were shown to be consistently inaccurate.

Congratulations, you've passed Desperate Spin 101.
 
I disagree. Projecting where the economy and unemployment rate will be year from now is much more difficult that assessing where the unemployment rate would be right now sans stimulus based on observed data.

No, it is not. It requires the same sort of predictions and assumptions. In the case of economics, hindsight is never 20/20 because you have no control group.
 
The difference is that since there is no real way to determine how many jobs were "saved" you can claim ridiculously high numbers that will be believed by those in the same party as the claimant especially.
I don't think your really going to see a true indicator on how the stimulus bill is impacting job creation till this spring/early summer when the construction season starts. If the stimulus bill is genuinely working there should be an upswing in contruction jobs.
 
No, it is not. It requires the same sort of predictions and assumptions. In the case of economics, hindsight is never 20/20 because you have no control group.

And that's the only reason right-wing economics still exists, lack of control groups to decisively drive them out of existence.

The fact is, every time America has embraced neoliberalism, we've had a huge depression. Quite a coincidence. But Americans never learn from their mistakes, and I'm sure you guys will drive us into disaster once more in eighty years.
 
Well, there are two assumptions that we can make here:

1. With absolute certainty, we can say that the stimulus directly created a ton of construction jobs. This is obvious; barring nothing else, it put idle hands back to work building things that will be useful for future generations.

2. With less certainty, Keynesianism would predict that raising the effective demand in this way and putting demand on lots of products using the stimulus will prevent a much more catastrophic impact on the economy at large, as demand starts getting back into line.

The trend line was pretty obvious before the stimulus was passed, and the stimulus pretty obviously interrupted this trend line.
 
I don't buy it, there's no way to know the downside. I contend no depression was even possible. During the depression there weren't millions on food stamps and welfare.
We have safety nets that prevent them.
A trillion is a lot of money for our kids to pay back.
 
I don't think your really going to see a true indicator on how the stimulus bill is impacting job creation till this spring/early summer when the construction season starts. If the stimulus bill is genuinely working there should be an upswing in contruction jobs.
Well, there should be this time. I hope. That's if they actually spend stimulus money building things rather than saving public (union members only need apply) jobs.
 
Economists have some good things to say as long as you don't ask them to try and predict anything.

One of the things economists say is that a failure in effective demand can cause great depression like events. The prescription for this is to have some sort of stimulus. We can't "predict" how high unemployment would have gone with any certainty, just that it would've been much higher.
 
A positive change from the baseline. C'mon, SF. You're a bit smarter than that.

LMAO... again you mention a 'baseline'... the numbers are DOWN from where we started. Pretending that 'saved jobs' somehow means positive change is frigging absurd. You are translating 'could have been worse' into 'this is positive'.


We've been through this one before and I have no interest in rearguing the point. Suffice it to say (1) where you project an output gap that will span over a period of two years it makes sense to spread out spending over that period and (2) dumping all the money in the first 6 months of a projected 2 year output gap would dramatically increase the risk of a double dip recession.

This makes absolutely NO sense. By NOT spending the money in 2009, you allowed the situation to become worse. More people were laid off than necessary, more people thus lost homes than necessary, less spending was done, which in turn leads to more people being laid off. The double dip is more likely when you DONT spend the stimulus. That is the WHOLE friggin point of a 'stimulus' bill.... to STIMULATE the economy with SPENDING when the public and corporate spending are tight.


No one is talking about "created or saved" in this thread but you. The issue some of us are discussing is whether the stimulus bill had a positive effect on employment. And everyone agrees that it has except Damo and some others.

Again you are using the tired argument of the administration that somehow 'things could have been worse' means 'POSITIVE' effect. You are only looking at one side of the 'could have' argument. Because it ALSO could have been BETTER. But instead, they hung on to the bulk of the money that was supposed to be used for stimulus.


My point was simply that arguing that the stimulus has not had a positive impact on employment because unemployment is at 9.7% is stupid. What matters is where unemployment would be notwithstanding the stimulus. I used 12% merely for illustrative purposes.

Again... it could also have been at 7% had they actually spent the money. Just because things might have been worse, does not eliminate the fact that they also could have been better. So to say the stimulus was positive simply because the worst case scenario did not occur is ridiculous.
 
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