Thursday, October 15, 2009

They Call This Success?

Talk about audacious:

The Associated Press is touting an estimate posted on the federal government'sRecovery.org website that $16 billion in stimulus contract spending has created or saved 30,000 jobs. So using the White House's own numbers, this comes to $533,000 per job saved or created. Instead of expressing embarrassment at a policy of spending $533,000 per job — about ten times the median income — the AP quotes White House economic advisor Jared Bernstein, stating that while it is early, "the early indications are quite positive.Despite these "positive" indications, the unemployment rate has surged to nearly 10%, despite an earlier report by Bernstein predicting that unemployment would peak at 8% with a stimulus bill.

Even this data should be taken with a grain of salt. The administration figures make sense only until one 
asks where the government got the money to spend. Before Washington could spend $16 billion employing contractors, they had to borrow that $16 billion out of the private economy, which now has that much less to spend supporting jobs. The White House merely shifted this spending power from the private sector to the government. And its safe to assume that had the private sector kept and spent this $16 billion rather than lent it to Washington, it could have done better than $533,000 per job.

If they think that $533,000 per job is successful, it's no wonder they're recklessly bankrupting the nation.  The thing that we've got to do is be ready to point on on things like this the fact that this is such a ridiculously low rate of return on taxpayer investment that it needs to be cut of right now.  Don't let the liberal spin -- look at all the jobs we've saved! -- distract from the fact that this is hideously wasteful and counterproductive to our economy.

Barack Obama -- through his radical Leftist agenda -- is killing this country, and we're going to feel some serious negative consequences before it's all over and done.

There's my two cents.

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