The Morgan Freeman of the Hill, John "appleseed" Conyers is building a plan for the next act of the soap opera called the United States. Here's his latest pwog blueprint to a better America. It includes carved-in-stone targets for national unemployment:
- 9 percent unemployment after 6 months;
- 8 percent unemployment after 2 years;
- 6 percent unemployment after 5 years
- 5 percent unemployment after 8 years
- 4 percent unemployment after 10 years
Of course I like the form, if not the deadlines. We do need employment targets tied to deadlines, with automatic injectors to get us back on course and goose us along this path to the final 4%. Johnny has a "trust fund" for same -- a tax on financial trades!
Gotta love that, eh? Pwogs make soft landings sound so easy. Of course that requires you exist for ever in 1977 -- the year Carter hit the WH and the Dems controlled both houses of Congress; Nixon had been rebuked; the Nambo gig was over, the armed bully-boys chastened, etc. etc. -- and yet, we got the Carter debacle.
Professional pwogs don't seem to realize we've been here before, when we get a '93 or an '09. They act as if it's still the first or real '77 this time, not the same old '77 all over again.
Comments (31)
the pwog time bubble
1977777777777777777
and to think
johnny C
just went thru another 94
and yet here he is raising the old flag
full employment for ever !!!
saluted by pwogs since 1944 ...to no purpose
Posted by op | March 5, 2011 1:24 PM
Posted on March 5, 2011 13:24
johnny and joe
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lZBaklS79Wc&NR=1
Posted by juan | March 5, 2011 4:48 PM
Posted on March 5, 2011 16:48
The timing is pretty good. A reaffirmation of meliorist ideas and goals is a balm to the souls of progressives who have once again been clubbed like baby seals.
Posted by Al Schumann | March 5, 2011 7:14 PM
Posted on March 5, 2011 19:14
I dunno know -- it sounds worse than meliorist to me. A true pwog should demand 6% unemployment in the first year, plus universal literacy. It's just words, anyway!
Posted by senecal | March 5, 2011 10:18 PM
Posted on March 5, 2011 22:18
Too true, senecal.
But you forgot the pony!
Posted by Al Schumann | March 5, 2011 10:40 PM
Posted on March 5, 2011 22:40
1977...all over again?
You mean, like... KC And The Sunshine Band?
Oh, God, kill me now.
Posted by Mike Flugennock | March 6, 2011 3:50 AM
Posted on March 6, 2011 03:50
As part of my never-ending, extremely fascinating quest to understand myself, and how I relate to the larger world, and the funny world of leftist politics in particular, of what cosmic and/or cultural significance is it that I rocked many a dance-floor to the good-time groovings of Harry Casey and his Miami Sound Machine, and
hated
hated
hated
hated
the mealy-mouthed, drug-addled dentistry of the Clash.
Posted by mjosef | March 6, 2011 6:18 AM
Posted on March 6, 2011 06:18
First as tragedy, then as farce... what's the third repetition?
Posted by fwoan | March 6, 2011 10:47 AM
Posted on March 6, 2011 10:47
mjosef
must have to do w/different age, experience and - for part of the 'boogie' period - location.
some kc - http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5nNi2vFttIc&NR=1&feature=fvw
which does overwhelm.
Posted by juan | March 6, 2011 11:07 AM
Posted on March 6, 2011 11:07
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Mt5ggkuQIbc
battle of the bands
let a thousand 197777777777 songs contend
Posted by op | March 6, 2011 11:47 AM
Posted on March 6, 2011 11:47
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hitRhTAGXDA
Posted by FB | March 6, 2011 12:19 PM
Posted on March 6, 2011 12:19
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=N9Ib1SSS058
Posted by CF Oxtrot | March 6, 2011 1:24 PM
Posted on March 6, 2011 13:24
Posted by MJS | March 6, 2011 3:57 PM
Posted on March 6, 2011 15:57
third iteration and after is quite laughless
thus soap opera
Posted by op | March 6, 2011 7:54 PM
Posted on March 6, 2011 19:54
That expression so well describes the unity of Waiting for Godot, which is the highest peak of western literature, that I'd say there could bde no third iteration. Unless it's deconstruction.
Posted by senecal | March 6, 2011 10:57 PM
Posted on March 6, 2011 22:57
the boney hand of mark thoma enters stage right
with his spurious average recovery rate
of between .04 and .05 % per month
"taking a quick, back of the envelope approach, the rate of recovery from the peak unemployment rate of 7.8% in June of 1992 through the trough of 3.8% in April of 2000 was, on average, a -0.04255 change per month. From the peak of 6.3% in June of 2003 through the trough in 4.4% in October of 2006, the average rate of change per month was -0.04750.
Averaged over both periods, the rate of decline was -0.04403 per month.
The resulting forecast is truly scary.
7% unemployment in August of 2015
6% unemployment in June of 2017
5% unemployment in May of 2019
4% unemployment in April of 2021
Thus, if we recover at the same pace as in the last two recessions, .... it will take more than six years to get to 6% unemployment rate, and until June of 2018 to get to 5.5%, "
Posted by op | March 7, 2011 6:56 AM
Posted on March 7, 2011 06:56
why spuriou
no two paths are alike
in rate of climb or contraction
let alone height or depth
context conditions vary
and that becomes the ground of
recovery rates
and policy response will vary
on top of conditions
the conyers mile stone system
sets up a pathway of target "outcomes"
policy instruments must reach
in sort of a last time we gotta do this
schedule
after reaching 4 % one presumes
the target will year in year out be
at some optimum
--- btw 4 % ( itself 1.5 % lower then the thoma final target
is too easy on the corporate wage negotiators
some pwog obvious selected it
to both retain some semblance
of the inmfamous NAIRU
( non accelerating inflation rate of unemployment )
a level of the reserve army that is still high enough to keep only moderate
containable wage increase " up pressure"
on corporate pricing dynamics ---
all this is wired up to a very bad macro model ...of course
one that performs in simulation
as if
it comprehended price and wage formation at the micro level
when even its mimicry requires constant rapsode like mindless "rote" updating
to stick close enough to the record
to pass as explaining it
since the resullt is completely
without any valid claim to that description
but however
embodying the sacred allegory of the marketeering profiteers
ie
an ideologian's beloved
"universal constant " ordained
by mother Clio
as a keystone
to THE laws of motion
for today's cutting edge human society
well errrr...not exactly universal
more like
"for here and now "
Posted by op | March 7, 2011 7:24 AM
Posted on March 7, 2011 07:24
How does someone actually insist that it's factually honest to use any unemployment statistic below 20%?
I'm guessing it's office-chair-bound "analysis" of this type:
"I'm employed, everyone I know is employed, but I've heard here and there -- fourth-hand, fifth-hand -- that some people can't find work. I'll throw 7.6% at it!"
When someone with multiple graduate degrees can't do better than $10/hr, 20hrs/wk despite trying hard to find more suitable work, is that person "employed"?
Is it just based on "any job"? Then what is a "job" and why are we tallying things? Is it because "work" is essential to one's well-being?
Posted by CF Oxtrot | March 7, 2011 10:11 AM
Posted on March 7, 2011 10:11
The Wall Street Journal's famous dart-throwing monkey, which routinely outperformed investment "experts," would produce a more accurate reading of the current unemployment rate.
Posted by chomskyzinn | March 7, 2011 12:12 PM
Posted on March 7, 2011 12:12
the nihilists nibble
oxy :
one can use a lot of definitions for sorting the "working" from the "idle " population
a job versus no job is one
a whole array of definitions and sortings
obviously captures more then just one sorting
no matter how ethically refined
more to the point
its really
the size and direction
of change
in these categories measured against themselves
that produces meaningful information
chom :
your nihilism unlike oxy's
in this case
is silly
itself
not even
a dart thrown by a monkey at a target
the monkey prolly at least
hits the target.... eh ??
Posted by op | March 7, 2011 1:14 PM
Posted on March 7, 2011 13:14
OP, that's what I'm saying: The monkey hits the target. Monkey probably hits 20% +.
Posted by chomskyzinn | March 7, 2011 1:58 PM
Posted on March 7, 2011 13:58
Owen, CZ is referring to the spurious figures, not to your take. Of course it's all moot because the monkey's job was outsourced to the same team that provides Fox's science coverage.
Posted by Al Schumann | March 7, 2011 2:39 PM
Posted on March 7, 2011 14:39
What Al said.
Posted by chomskyzinn | March 7, 2011 3:01 PM
Posted on March 7, 2011 15:01
Al
a wack at moi ??
from cz ??
i never got that sense out of his comment
i must confess i still can't see his point
but i am often much thicker then i think i am
the official numbers may mislead
but they are what they are
they're not made up
just carefully crafted
not the product of randomized arbitrary mischief
but careful calculation
yes the headline UE number
is a tight target number
that fails to measure misery
but several other official numbers tell that tale adequately
but even that UE
in a matter of a pair of years
jumped up by millions
as did all the other UE numbers
including the pinko prefered one
that indeed crawls toward the tartarus of 20%
--------
keeping a fairly accurate set of public books only makes sense
from the wall street point of view
and if they're way off private numbers
gathered somewhere somehow
will go public either there or somewhere else
one thing our elite learned
in the great depression
good numbers drive out bad rumors
in reality official "objective numbers "
usually close enough to double for the truth
correct
networks of word of mouth gathered impressions
almost always of far higher magnitude
gravity etc
folks left to talling each other stuff
love to dramatize it eh ??
generally believable numbers allow
key moments of manipulation
to "pass" public muster
long enough to blunt response
by fourth estate outfits
think "yellow cake "
Posted by op | March 7, 2011 3:18 PM
Posted on March 7, 2011 15:18
http://www.counterpunch.org/roberts03072011.html
a nice case of bottled hysterics
from the privateer skeptics
voila
bonjovi roberts
" There are various reasons that job gains are overstated and losses understated. One is the BLS’s “birth-death model.” This is a way of estimating the net of non-reported new jobs from business start-ups and job losses from business shut-downs. During recessions this model doesn’t work, because the model is based on good times when new jobs always exceed lost jobs. On the “death” side, if a company goes out of business because of recession and, therefore, doesn’t report its payroll, the BLS assumes the previously reported employees are still in place. On the “birth” side, the BLS adds 30,000 jobs to the monthly numbers as an estimate of new start-ups. "
gyro gear loose stuff this
like the cult like rage against
the boskin index tweak
a rope a dope of
the clinton era
that screws SSI recipents in a cumulative way
out of proper cola adjustments
read the details thru the link
its delightful
roberts facts
" there are 8 to 9 million fewer Americans employed today than a decade ago"
bls http://www.bls.gov/news.release/pdf/empsit.pdf
2000 payroll employed non farm 131
2011 payroll employed non farm 137
14 million spread ????
Posted by op | March 7, 2011 4:27 PM
Posted on March 7, 2011 16:27
The monkey's going back in his cage. Let me quote a human instead --- my grandfather or uncle or someone: "Figures never lie, but liars always figure." (To be clear: I am not calling YOU the liar here, OP, but the gummint.)
For no reason other than this just seems right to me (I'm no social "scientist," thank Karl): For the real unemployment figure, take the official one and double. And even that seems conservative to me.
Current suffering across the land, and threat of instability and dislocation, is far greater than the current unemployment figure suggests.
Posted by chomskyzinn | March 7, 2011 4:39 PM
Posted on March 7, 2011 16:39
Roberts might have derived his 9 mil figure backwards, reckoning from the secular decline in the employment/population ratio.
[Still not a good way to argue about unemployment, since the aging demographics affects the employment ratio, too.]
By the way, op, you can count me in as part of the "enraged cult" that would like to give those Boskin types a bit of a "hedonic" attitude adjustment.
Posted by Roland | March 7, 2011 4:45 PM
Posted on March 7, 2011 16:45
the bureau of labor stats [bls] provides a range of unemployment rates, from u-1 to u-6.
u-3 is the official or headline rate while u-6 is the most inclusive [there had been a u-7 until '94 and would likely be ~half point higher than u-6 which, last report and not seasonally adjusted, was 16.7%]
alternative rates:
http://www.bls.gov/news.release/empsit.t15.htm
and, for those interested, the latest ILO Global Employment report {pdf}:
http://www.ilo.org/wcmsp5/groups/public/@dgreports/@dcomm/@publ/documents/publication/wcms_150440.pdf
Posted by juan | March 7, 2011 4:52 PM
Posted on March 7, 2011 16:52
roland
count me in too
its a good cover for a ssi boost
juan
nice link
cz never fear
i know you aren't
btw
i like being called a liar
by some folks
--not u --
means nerves have been hit
Posted by op | March 7, 2011 5:42 PM
Posted on March 7, 2011 17:42
The numbers are carefully crafted, indeed they are!
And why am I a nihilist? I have never said that it doesn't matter what we do. That's clio's job, to show that everything tends to fall apart despite the best intentions of man... isn't it? What's that thermodynamic "law" or principle? Entro-urine? Wasn't that observation made by observing things across the run of history?
Whizzing on the fire hydrant of labor statistics, am I? Indeed. Which makes me not a nihilist, but a cynic, in the literal sense. I bark like a dog, I pee like a dog.
And like a dog, I get bored when my mind and body go underused, and start growling when someone justifies that under-use with statistics.
Posted by CF Oxtrot | March 7, 2011 6:15 PM
Posted on March 7, 2011 18:15
oxy
cynic is a noble profession
Posted by op | March 7, 2011 8:17 PM
Posted on March 7, 2011 20:17