Robert Parry | Lessons From America's Lost Decade

by: Robert Parry  |  Consortium News

As the United States takes the measure of Barack Obama's first year in the White House and looks beyond to what could be a difficult new decade, it might be useful to first stop and extract some lessons from the 2000s, which proved to be a lost economic decade for many Americans.

For the first time since the Great Depression, the United States experienced zero job growth in a decade. Zero. And zero is actually worse than it sounds since none of the preceding six decades registered job growth of less than 20 percent.

By comparison, the 1970s, which are often bemoaned as a time of economic stagflation and political malaise, registered a 27 percent increase in jobs. Yet, in part because of that relatively slow rise in jobs – down from 31 percent in the 1960s – American voters turned to Ronald Reagan and his radical economic theories of tax cuts, global "free markets" and deregulation.

Reagan sold Americans on his core vision: "Government is not the solution to our problem; government is the problem." Through his personal magnetism, Reagan turned taxes into a third rail of American politics. He convinced many voters that the government's only important role was funding the military.

Yet, instead of guiding the country to a bright new day of economic vitality, Reagan's approach accelerated a de-industrialization of the United States and a slump in the growth of American jobs, down to 20 percent during the 1980s. The percentage job increase for the 1990s stayed at 20 percent, although job growth did pick up later in the decade under Democrat Bill Clinton, who raised taxes and moderated some of Reagan's approaches while still pushing "free trade" agreements and deregulation.

Hard-line Reaganomics returned with a vengeance under George W. Bush – more tax cuts, more faith in "free trade," more deregulation – and the Great American Job Engine finally started grinding to a halt. Zero percent increase.

Despite the painful statistics of the past three decades, Reaganomics remains a powerful force in American political life. Anyone tuning in CNBC or picking up the Wall Street Journal would think that these economic policies had enjoyed unqualified success.

Though the downward economic spiral can be traced over the past three decades, the facts are especially stark for the 2000s, the so-called "Aughts" or perhaps more accurately the "Naughts."

"For most of the past 70 years, the U.S. economy has grown at a steady clip, generating perpetually higher incomes and wealth for American households," wrote Neil Irwin in a Jan. 2, 2010, review of comparative economic data for the Washington Post. "But since 2000, the story is starkly different."

As the Post article and its accompanying graphics show, the last decade's sad story wasn't just limited to the abysmal job numbers.

U.S. economic output slowed to its worst pace since the 1930s, rising only 17.8 percent in the 2000s, less than half the 38.1 percent increase in the despised 1970s. Household net worth declined 4 percent in the last decade, compared to a 28 percent rise in the 1970s. (All figures were adjusted for inflation.)

Even Worse

As grim as those numbers were, the overall economic legacies of Ronald Reagan and George W. Bush may be even worse.

Not only did the Great American Job Engine grind to a halt in the past decade, but the dire economic numbers were accompanied by massive increases in federal debt, part of a risky right-wing strategy to hamstring the government's ability to ever address domestic problems in the future.

When Reagan took office, the total federal debt was still under $1 trillion ($909 billion). By the end of the 12-year Republican reign of Reagan and George H.W. Bush, the total debt had quadrupled.

The rise in the red ink leveled off under Democrat Bill Clinton. Amazingly, he left office with the federal budget in the black by $236 billion and with a projected 10-year budget surplus of $5.6 trillion.

The budgetary trend lines were such that Federal Reserve Chairman Alan Greenspan began to fret about the challenges the Fed might face in influencing interest rates if the entire U.S. government debt were paid off, thus leaving no debt obligations to sell.

But Greenspan's nervousness was soon quieted. In 2001, George W. Bush seized the White House after blocking a full counting of legally cast votes in Florida, with the help of five Republican partisans on the U.S. Supreme Court.

Then, though lacking a popular mandate – Bush also had lost the national popular vote to Al Gore – Bush governed as if he had won by a landslide. He pushed through a new round of tax cuts weighted in favor of the wealthy and, after the 9/11 attacks, launched two open-ended wars on borrowed money.

By the time Bush left office in 2009, the annual deficit had gone to $1.3 trillion (from a $236 billion surplus). Total federal debt had risen almost $5 trillion to $10.7 trillion. And the projected 10-year budget outlook called for $8 trillion more in red ink.

Despite this record of economic failure – trillions more in debt but no net increase in jobs – many Americans appear to have learned no lessons from either the Bush-II presidency or the legacy of Reaganomics. Any thought of raising taxes, addressing long-term problems like health costs, or investing in a stronger domestic infrastructure remains anathema to large segments of the population.

Indeed, across the news media, it is hard to find any serious – or sustained – criticism of the Reagan/Bush economic theories. Far more blame is heaped on Obama for not having fully turned around the financial and economic crisis that he inherited.

Less than a year into Obama's presidency, voters in Massachusetts may be on the verge of electing a conservative Republican in a special Senate election, according to some polls. That result would enable the GOP to filibuster every significant Obama initiative, from health care to job programs. Many pundits anticipate Republican victories in congressional elections next November.

Who's to Blame?

Some of the fault for these Democratic political troubles can fairly be laid at Obama's door, though surely not all.

Fearing a new Great Depression, Obama did continue Bush's policies for bailing out large banks whose greed and recklessness contributed to the 2008 financial meltdown. Obama also alienated his "base" by rejecting calls for investigating Bush-era national security crimes, expanding the Afghan War, and accepting compromises on health-care reform.

Tactically, Obama was played for a sucker when he let health-care negotiations with "moderate" Republicans like Olympia Snowe of Maine drag on past his initial deadline of August. By slow-rolling the process, the Republicans bought time to organize right-wing populist opposition to the reform package and then marched the GOP (Snowe included) in lockstep behind a Senate filibuster of the legislation.

The unified Republican filibuster forced Obama and the Democratic leadership to make deals with conservative Democrats and Sen. Joe Lieberman, an Independent who seemed to enjoy bedeviling the legislative process. To get Lieberman's support, the public option and other popular elements were jettisoned, causing many on the Left to denounce Obama as a sell-out.

Because of all the legislative delays, the health-care bill now hangs on the outcome of the Massachusetts election to fill the late Ted Kennedy's Senate seat on Jan. 19.

More generally, few Americans appear to be paying any heed to the lessons of the past three decades. Instead, many are simply reprising the same mistakes.

Republicans and the Right are determined to protect the Reagan-Bush legacies by blocking Democratic domestic legislation that might take the country in a different direction. To stop that possibility, they continue to whip up anti-tax, anti-government furies.

Meanwhile, the Democrats still come across as flaccid protectors of an Establishment that many Americans understandably hate. And the American Left mostly sits in the bleachers booing all the players, rather than getting into the game.

As this new decade dawns, the U.S. political process seems resistant to the one of most obvious lessons of the past three decades: Simply put, Reaganomics didn't work. As George H.W. Bush once commented – when he was running against Reagan in the 1980 primaries – it is "voodoo economics."

Yet, the fact that the United States has embraced "voodoo economics" for 30 years and refuses to recognize the statistical evidence of Reaganomics' abject failure suggests that the larger lesson of this era – and especially this past lost decade – is that the U.S. political process is dysfunctional.
 

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Robert Parry broke many of the Iran-Contra stories in the 1980s for the Associated Press and Newsweek. His latest book, Neck Deep: The Disastrous Presidency of George W. Bush, was written with two of his sons, Sam and Nat, and can be ordered at neckdeepbook.com. His two previous books, Secrecy & Privilege: The Rise of the Bush Dynasty from Watergate to Iraq and Lost History: Contras, Cocaine, the Press and 'Project Truth' are also available there.


Comments

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Voodoo economics? Seems

Voodoo economics? Seems like Pat Robertson missed the boat on deals with devils.



Yes, America runs on voodoo

Yes, America runs on voodoo economics since Reagan. Since the secret goal of these voodoo economics was to create oligarchs, by transferring the wealth of the nation into the pockets of the richest, there is nobody now to denounce the process, the oligarchs being in control over pretty much everything, only their voices are now being heard and they won't allow themselves to speak against their own interests.

Thank you Reagan for the tax cuts to the rich, thank you George W.H. Bush for deregulating the financial sector by permitting that one stockholder to detain more than 10% of a bank's stock and for a bank to own more than 10% of a company's stock and thank you George W. (43) Bush for punishing us all because it didn't work.

Kennedy was assassinated because he wanted to bring change in favor of the population, Clinton was impeached for the same reasons and Obama does as being told and hasn't so far been impeached nor assassinated.

The only predictable thing in all this is that these voodoo economics won't work, oligarchs or not, and the whole thing will blow up.

Let's hope sooner than later because the damage done to keep the house of cards together will grow higher and higher as time passes. And the oligarchs with their indecent bonus will the last to notice.

So, the next time some rich people complains that the rich are not rich enough and should be spared taxes to save the country or something, I hope somebody will be able to decipher the message before it's too late and before this kid and his friends own the whole country.

George Bush (43), Cheney, Rove and their friends tried to take ownership of the whole word with claims of "inherent" power of the commander in chief to run the country as if it was the President's private property, without any accountability.

That's what was being attempted during the dreaded Bush (43) first mandate. It failed during his second mandate because it's such a doomed idea that anybody with half a brain would've ever tried to ride on that road.

What's really frightening is it been tried at all.

The more the voodoo economics problems get obvious and the more the oligarch get richer, the more we should expect frightening contraptions to maintain the status quo.

Greed, greed, greed..... That's all there is to expect from these oligarch's voodoo economics.



Reagan's voodoo economics +

Reagan's voodoo economics + George Bush 43's unitary executive theory took only 4 years to fail.

I wonder what's coming next to keep the oligarchs' house of cards together.



To repeat an old

To repeat an old oft-repeated adage, Those who fail to learn from the past are condemned to repeat it. Americans are slow learners.



Well I hope them dim bulb

Well I hope them dim bulb tea baggers understand...Trickle Down = Pissed On



"Yes, America" started out

"Yes, America" started out his comments in the right direction -- that it's all about the oligarchs taking control. But then he (and several others) think that the voodoo economics/pro-oligarch strategy has or is "failing" in some sense. I'd say it isn't failing at all.

Reaganomics is one of the tools of oligarchy. "Simply put, Reaganomics [ *did* ] work." And deregulation worked just fine, too. And so does "empire" ('free trade', the IMF, etc).

The oligarchs are achieving exactly what they want. The only way it appears to "fail" is in the eyes of the peasants who are being bled dry. The oligarchs may eventually "fail" in the sense that the whole economy/country may collapse, but that's not "failure" in their eyes -- it's just collateral damage. When things get too bad here (up to and including bloody revolution), the oligarchs can simply use their vast wealth to move somewhere else on the planet and avoid the grim realities on the ground in the USA. They'll find another country with some wealth and begin anew the process of bleeding it dry.

I learned something from history.... Things have gone this way since the time of ancient Greece and Rome.



You can't underestimate the

You can't underestimate the power of the corporate media. If only one side of an issue is repeated over and over again it's quite clear what will happen. Americans simply aren't educated well enough to understand that they were lied to over and over.



agree with general position

agree with general position presented but not that on health care reform. True health care reform is dead, the current bill(s) or whatever emerges from conference will not be real health care reform. It will be nothing but a license to gouge for the health insurers that's being granted by members of Congress & apparently will be signed by the president.



@John Cutler: This is "Yes

@John Cutler: This is "Yes America".

If the voodoo economics work right for the oligarchs and

If you learned from history.... and "Things have gone this way since the time of ancient Greece and Rome."

.... could you tell me where the ancient Greek and Roman empire have gone?

What I was trying to say is that these modern oligarchs on the move in America right now are just repeating what other oligarchs did before when empires of their time were falling. And what these oligarchs did to keep their privileges and positions in society did not work. Their Emprires failed whatever they did to keep the status quo.

Those oligarchs are trying to get a free lunch: That is: to own an Empire without having to buil it.

It doesn't work that way. There's no free lunch. If you want to enjoy Empire, you have to build it.

Right now that means taking care of global warming and of oil depletion.

There's not one major Corporation who brought us things like Electricity, radio, tv and other things, who wants to rise to the challenge.

So they will diseappear, the oligacchs will diseappear, just like the dinosaurs did. And maybe we'll all follow them.

So, no. The strategy of the oligarchs are using are not doing them any favors. They are just buying (good) time before, either someone defeats them and human race maybe will survive, or maybe no one beats them and we're up for a thousand years or two of a new Middle-Ages period.

The bets are on.