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Friday, October 01, 2010

ObamaNomics: Failing both politically and economically.

Phil Gramm, in a scholarly op-ed in the Wall Street Journal Echoes of the Great Depression makes several irrefutable points:

 
  • Under the Obama administration, the US is recovering much more slowly than Europe.
  • The Obama administration resemble to policies of FDR, with equally dismal results.
  • The Obama administration is aping FDR in demonizing business with equally negative results.
  • The Roosevelt administration remained popular while the Obama administration is not.
Some telling quotes:
The chart nearby compares total 2007 employment levels in the United States, the United Kingdom, the 16 euro zone countries, the G-7 countries and all OECD (Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development) countries with those of the second quarter of 2010. There are 4.6% fewer people employed in the U.S. today than at the start of the recession. Euro zone countries have lost 1.7% of their jobs. Total employment in the U.K. is down 0.6%, G-7 average employment is down 2.4%, and OECD employment has fallen 1.9%.


Winston Churchill could say exactly the same thing today as he did in the 1930s:
Winston Churchill gave a contemporary evaluation of the Roosevelt policy by observing, in the April 24, 1935, Daily Mail, "Nearly two thousand millions Sterling have been poured out to prime the pump of prosperity; but prosperity has not begun to flow."
...
Churchill, who was generally guarded when criticizing New Deal policies, could not hold back. "The disposition to hunt down rich men as if they were noxious beasts," he noted in "Great Contemporaries" (1939), is "a very attractive sport." But "confidence is shaken and enterprise chilled, and the unemployed queue up at the soup kitchens or march out to the public works with ever growing expense to the taxpayer and nothing more appetizing to take home to their families than the leg or wing of what was once a millionaire. . . It is indispensable to the wealth of nations and to the wage and life standards of labour, that capital and credit should be honoured and cherished partners in the economic system. . . ."

Read the whole thing!

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