Author Topic: 'Recovery Summer' Ends With Economic Pothole  (Read 603 times)

Soul Crusher

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'Recovery Summer' Ends With Economic Pothole
« on: September 03, 2010, 06:56:46 AM »
'Recovery Summer' Ends With Economic Pothole
by Scott Horsley
www.npr.org
September 3, 2010

________________________ ________________________ ___


President Obama meets construction workers after speaking at a Recovery Act highway project in Columbus, Ohio, in June.

September 3, 2010 Whatever happened to recovery summer?

This was supposed to be the season the economy heated up, thanks to a wave of public works projects, funded by the government's stimulus program. But summer is coming to an end, and the recovery has not taken root. Forecasters are expecting another gloomy employment report on Friday.

And before long, stimulus dollars will be fading like autumn leaves.

None of that is encouraging for President Obama, who launched the summer with a crew in hard hats in Columbus, Ohio, on June 18.

"Today, I return to Columbus to mark a milestone on the road to recovery: the 10,000th project launched under the Recovery Act," Obama said, announcing a $15 million effort to widen a roadway and add bike lanes.

Recovery summer was partly designed to recover the reputation of the government's $787 billion stimulus program. While many economists believe that program has worked to boost employment, the public is unimpressed. Advisers say by front-loading the stimulus with tax cuts and aid to states, they were able to get the money out quickly, but at the expense of visibility.

"As happened with many decisions, pragmatism won out," said outgoing White House economic adviser Christina Romer this week. "We agreed that many of the things that would improve the economy fastest were unglamorous measures ... many of which don't come with Recovery Act signs or easily identifiable links to the act. It has been hard for people to see what the act has done."

Road Projects Span The Horizon

Recovery summer was supposed to change that as more federal dollars were poured into easily recognizable public works, including 15,000 road projects — enough to crisscross the country 10 times.

"There's so many going on you almost can't take a drive this summer without seeing orange cones," said John Horsley, executive director of the American Association of State Highway and Transportation Officials.

All those federally funded road projects have kept an estimated 74,000 construction workers busy this summer.  But that's not enough to patch the country's giant economic pothole. With housing in a deep slump, unemployment in construction still tops 17 percent.

Obama joked back in June that the hungry road crews in Columbus would keep area restaurants busy. But it didn't work out that way for a nearby pizzeria.

"We're third generation — started in 1939," said John Plank of the restaurant he runs with his brother and sister.

Plank said business has been slow this summer, in part because the road construction makes it hard for customers to reach his restaurant. He hoped to at least capitalize on the day of the president's visit, but the expected crowds didn't materialize.

"I hate to say it, but it was our worst Friday we've had in 10 years," Plank said. "I thought there were going to be all kinds of people down there, but I guess there were only 30 to 40 people, and they were all from Washington."


Plank thinks pizza sales will pick up in the fall, especially if the Ohio State Buckeyes have a good football season. But not everyone is so patient.

Sharp Decreases In Private-Sector Hiring

Private-sector hiring dropped off sharply in the United States after the Greek debt crisis. And by mid-August, the president's Gallup approval rating had fallen to a record low of 41 percent. It's bounced back a bit since then, but congressional Democrats still face the prospect of big losses in November.

"There are still 15 million people looking for jobs. There's still a great deal of uncertainty," said White House political adviser David Axelrod, when asked about the president's shaky approval. "You know we have challenges we have to continue to fight through. It's not going to be a straight line. It's not going to be easy."

On Monday, Obama huddled with his economic advisers, looking for new ways the government could promote hiring. But as the president spoke to reporters in the Rose Garden afterward, even a balky White House audio system seemed to be working against him.

"Let me try this one more time," Obama said, tapping on his microphone.

The president might not get many more tries at recovery. This is one summer Obama is probably happy to put behind him.



________________________ ________________________


Obama joked back in June that the hungry road crews in Columbus would keep area restaurants busy. But it didn't work out that way for a nearby pizzeria.

"We're third generation — started in 1939," said John Plank of the restaurant he runs with his brother and sister.

Plank said business has been slow this summer, in part because the road construction makes it hard for customers to reach his restaurant. He hoped to at least capitalize on the day of the president's visit, but the expected crowds didn't materialize.

"I hate to say it, but it was our worst Friday we've had in 10 years," Plank said. "I thought there were going to be all kinds of people down there, but I guess there were only 30 to 40 people, and they were all from Washington."





FAIL! 

Soul Crusher

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Re: 'Recovery Summer' Ends With Economic Pothole
« Reply #1 on: September 03, 2010, 07:23:52 AM »
Summer of Recovery is over, we are now heading into the Fall of Failure. 

The Showstoppa

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Re: 'Recovery Summer' Ends With Economic Pothole
« Reply #2 on: September 03, 2010, 07:40:20 AM »
33, I read a headline today describing the job losses as the "labor pool expanding...."   :-\

Soul Crusher

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Re: 'Recovery Summer' Ends With Economic Pothole
« Reply #3 on: September 03, 2010, 07:48:51 AM »
33, I read a headline today describing the job losses as the "labor pool expanding...."   :-\

more lies, spinning, and propaganda. 

James

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Re: 'Recovery Summer' Ends With Economic Pothole
« Reply #4 on: September 03, 2010, 07:53:25 AM »
Obama is so terrible, he makes Carter look good.


GigantorX

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Re: 'Recovery Summer' Ends With Economic Pothole
« Reply #5 on: September 03, 2010, 08:50:48 AM »
33, I read a headline today describing the job losses as the "labor pool expanding...."   :-\

True in a way, I guess. Jobs are being created a filled but the creation isn't keeping up with population growth/college graduations etc.

This latest report had the U.S. manufacturing sector cutting payrolls as well, that isn't good for the sector that was supposed to "lead" us out of recession and pave the way for our "recovery". I will dig around and see where the job additions actually came from.

Soul Crusher

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Re: 'Recovery Summer' Ends With Economic Pothole
« Reply #6 on: September 03, 2010, 09:09:56 AM »
One thing that is never mentioned is the fact that many of the jobs being lost are decent paying jobs while those that are bbeing hired are at lower wages, so the numbers are very misleading. 

Bottom line - you can't have weekly job losses at 420k - 500k a week and still be at 9.6% UE without massive massaging of the numbers. 

Soul Crusher

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Re: 'Recovery Summer' Ends With Economic Pothole
« Reply #7 on: July 08, 2011, 09:15:49 AM »
bump