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A hard pill to swallow: is the stimulus turning the economy around?


IN AUGUST, Christina Romer
This page is about the cartographic mechanism called a "Romer" or "Roamer"; for people named Romer see Romer (surname)


A Romer or Roamer is a simple device for accurately plotting a grid reference on a map.
, chairwoman of the White House Counsel of Economic Advisers, suggested that we think of the $787 billion American Recovery and Reinvestment Reinvestment

Using dividends, interest and capital gains earned in an investment or mutual fund to purchase additional shares or units, rather than receiving the distributions in cash.

1. In terms of stocks, it is the reinvestment of dividends to purchase additional shares.
 Act as an extremely expensive course of antibiotics. "Suppose you go to your doctor for a strep throat Strep Throat Definition

Streptococcal sore throat, or strep throat as it is more commonly called, is an infection of the mucous membranes lining the pharynx. Sometimes the tonsils are also infected (tonsillitis).
," Romer said in a speech to the Economic Club of Washington, "and he or she prescribes an antibiotic." If your fever goes up after you take the first pill, just as unemployment rose after the stimulus bill was enacted, that doesn't mean "the medicine is useless," Romer noted. It could simply be that "the illness was more serious than you and the doctor thought."

But it's also possible that your sore throat Sore Throat Definition

Sore throat, also called pharyngitis, is a painful inflammation of the mucous membranes lining the pharynx. It is a symptom of many conditions, but most often is associated with colds or influenza.
 and fever are caused by a virus, not a bacterium, in which case the antibiotic will not help. Eventually, though, you will recover on your own, and you may mistakenly conclude that your doctor's prescription did the trick.

Such erroneous causal inferences are always a hazard when it comes to government spending Government spending or government expenditure consists of government purchases, which can be financed by seigniorage, taxes, or government borrowing. It is considered to be one of the major components of gross domestic product.  aimed at alleviating a recession. Even if most or all of the money is disbursed after the recession has ended (which is typically the case), stimulus advocates can say the recovery would have been weaker without the spending. Since there's no readily available parallel universe in which to test that counterfactual coun·ter·fac·tu·al  
adj.
Running contrary to the facts: "Cold war historiography vividly illustrates how the selection of the counterfactual question to be asked generally anticipates the desired answer" 
 hypothesis, it can never be conclusively disproved. Still, Romer seemed unreason ably sure that Dr. Obama's medicine was already kicking in. Although she conceded that "the evidence from the path of the economy over time can't settle the issue of what the effects of the Recovery Act have been," her answer to the question posed in the title of her speech--"Is It Working?"--was "absolutely."

I guess that depends on how you define "working." No doubt spending billions of dollars in borrowed money has some impact on the economy. But the idea that the stimulus package had much to do with an incipient recovery that may have begun in June is belied by a couple of inconvenient facts.

First, since World War II the length of recessions has ranged from six to 16 months, with an average of 10. The current recession officially began in December 2007, so a recovery by the second half of 2009 is what you would expect.

Second, according to according to
prep.
1. As stated or indicated by; on the authority of: according to historians.

2. In keeping with: according to instructions.

3.
 ProPublica, only $73 billion of the $580 billion in stimulus spending had been disbursed at the time of Romer's speech. Another $37 billion or so had gone out in the form of tax cuts.

Romer conceded the latter portion of the stimulus did not seem to be very stimulating. She said "consumption fell slightly in the second quarter after rising slightly in the first quarter," which "could be a sign that households are initially using the tax cut mainly to increase their saving and pay off debt."

Is it plausible to suggest that $73 billion in stimulus spending over five months had a decisive impact on a $14 trillion economy? I say "decisive" because President Barack Obama, back in February, presented the stimulus package as the only alternative to a never-ending recession, and in August he claimed, "We've rescued our economy from catastrophe."

Even if we accept the Obama administration's numbers, taxpayers do not seem to be getting much employment bang for their buck. Romer estimated that "employment is now about 485,000 jobs above what it otherwise would have been." That comes out to more than $200,000 per job, which seems pretty pricey, especially since many of these jobs are temporary.

Here is where the "reinvestment" part comes into play. Administration officials say the stimulus package is all about putting Americans back to work. When asked whether this is an efficient way to do that, they claim all the work needs to be done anyway. Conversely, when asked whether all the projects are really worth the money spent on them, they cite jobs "created or saved" as a backup justification. Stimulus means never having to admit you're wasting money.

Contributing Editor A contributing editor is a magazine job title that varies in responsibilities. Most often, a contributing editor is a freelancer who has proven ability and readership draw.  Jacob Sullum Jacob Z. Sullum (born September 5, 1965) is a syndicated newspaper columnist and a Senior Editor at Reason magazine. In 2004, he received a Thomas S. Szasz Award. [1]

Sullum is the author of:
 (jsullum@ reason.com) is a syndicated columnist Inc.com defines a syndicated columnist as, "[A] person hired by publications or broadcast organizations to produce written or spoken commentary about specific feature subjects. . [c] Copyright 2009 by Creators Syndicate Creators Syndicate is an independent distributor of comic strips and syndicated columns for daily newspapers. It was founded in 1987 by Richard S. Newcombe, and is based in Los Angeles.  Inc.
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Title Annotation:Columns
Author:Sullum, Jacob
Publication:Reason
Date:Nov 1, 2009
Words:682
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