Stimulosis: recovery act failure.

AuthorCavanaugh, Tim
PositionCitings

A KEY difference between the Great Depression and the current stagnation is the rapid dissemination of more accurate economic data in our own time. Depressive economic policies whose effects remained masked during the Herbert Hoover and Franklin Roosevelt administrations, are given fuller and speedier judgment in the Bush-Obama era. While this improvement in intelligence has not yet completed the discrediting of Keynesian economics, it is making the task easier.

A new study of spending under the $787 billion American Recovery and Reinvestment Act (ARRA) estimates that President Obama's signature stimulus program "created/saved 450 thousand government-sector jobs and destroyed/forestalled one million private sector jobs." The working paper, written by the Ohio State University economist Bill Dupor and the University of Western Ontario economist Timothy Conley, examines stimulus spending on the state level. It finds that ARRA had no positive employment effects in the private sector. In the best-case scenario, Dupor and Conley write, the stimulus bill created or saved "a net 659 thousand jobs, mainly in government."

So what happened to ARRA's $499 billion in...

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