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![]() ![]() http://www.foxnews.com/story/0,2933,343671,00.html |
The 'Recession' Is a Media Myth |
| Monday, March 31, 2008
By John R. Lott, Jr. |
During the 2000 election, with Bill Clinton as president, the economy was viewed through rose-colored glasses. According to polls, voters didn’t realize that the country was in a recession. Although the economy started shrinking in July 2000, most Americans through the entire year thought that the economy was fine. But over the last half-year, the media and politicians have said we were in a recession even while the economy was still growing. Gas prices are going up. The economy is slowing. Talk of recession is seemingly everywhere. While the majority of people rate their personal finances positively, consumer confidence in the economy has plunged to a 16-year low, well below what it was during the last year of the Clinton administration when we were in a recession. A
Google search on news stories during the three-month period from July
2000 through September 2000 using the keywords “economy recession US”
produces 1,610. By contrast, the same search over just the last month finds 50,763.
Or, even more telling, take the three months from July through
September last year, when the GDP was growing at a phenomenal 4.9
percent. The same type of Google search shows 7,310 news stories. Over 4.5 times more negative news stories
discussed a recession when the economy under a Republican was soaring
than occurred under a Democrat when the economy was shrinking. A little perspective on the economy would be helpful. The average unemployment rate during President Clinton was 5.2 percent. The average under President George W. Bush is just slightly below 5.2. The current unemployment rate is4.8 percent, almost half a percentage point lower than these averages. The average inflation rate under Clinton was 2.6 percent, under Bush it is 2.7 percent.
Indeed, one has to go back to the Kennedy administration to find a
lower average rate. True the inflation rate over the last year has gone
up to 4 percent, but that is still lower than the average inflation
rate under all the presidents from Nixon through Bush’s father. Gas prices are indeed up 33 percent over the last year, but to get an average of 4 percent
means that lots of other prices must have stayed the same or gone down.
On other fronts, seasonally adjusted civilian employment is 650,000
people greater than it was a year ago. Personal income grew at a strong
half of one percent in just February. Despite all that, this last week, Barack Obama proclaimed
“As most experts know, our economy is in a recession.” Hillary Clinton
made similar staements last fall. Yet, as any economist knows, a
recession is two consecutive quarters of negative growth, and we
haven’t even had one single quarter of negative growth reported. The
economy slowed down significantly during the end of last year, but that
was after a sizzling annual GDP growth rate of 4.9 percent in the third
quarter. Housing has obviously been a big drag on
the economy, but many other sectors of the economy, such as exports,
have been doing well, some extremely well. For example, aerospace
exports increased by over 13 percent last year. The
media’s focus on the negative side of everything surely helps explain
people’s pessimism. In a recent interview Fox’s Neil Cavuto claimed this bias “is all part of the media’s plan to get a Democrat in the White House.” Indeed, research
has indicated that media bias is real. Kevin Hassett and I looked at
12,620 newspaper and wire service headlines from 1985 through 2004 for
stories on the release of official government releasing numbers on the
unemployment rate, number of people employed, gross domestic product
(GDP), retail sales, and durable goods. Even after
accounting for how well the economy was doing (e.g., what the
unemployment rate was and whether it was going up or down), there was
still a big difference in how positive or negative the headlines were.
Democratic presidents got about 15 percent more positive headlines than
Republicans for the same economic news. Yet, the
hysteria created by this coverage can have another cost. It creates
pressure for government to “do something,” even if that rush to do
something actually ends up hurting the economy. For example, Obama's promises
last week “to amend our bankruptcy laws so families aren't forced to
stick to the terms of a home loan” will only further drive down the
value of mortgage-backed securities, making any unstable financial
institutions that hold them even more likely to fail. In the long term,
who is going to want to loan money when the contract can be rewritten
at a later date? The news media have generated a lot of fear. Ben Stein has a point when he says
“The actual economic conditions are not that bad. I think if we have a
recession, if we have a serious recession, a great deal will lie at the
media’s feet.” Hopefully a little perspective will enter the picture
before even more harm is done. |

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