Economy Headlines
| Stimulus Funding Failed to Create Jobs | | Print | |
| Written by Bruce Walker | ||||||||||||
| Monday, 11 January 2010 21:00 | ||||||||||||
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These economists used U.S. Department of Transportation and U.S. Department of Commerce data in their studies. Out of the $21 billion in stimulus funds for transportation construction projects, the impact upon unemployment was negligible. One of those economists, Thomas Smith at Emory University, supported the stimulus package but he now finds that although the funds may have resulted in some people being employed, the stimulus spending in the construction area has not resulted in creating jobs. Another economist compared the impact of federal stimulus funds to employment in the construction industry to trying to move the Empire State Building by pushing it. Almost no county in America received more stimulus funds for construction projects than Marshall County, Tennessee, and yet a local contractor was quoted as saying that federal stimulus funds had not helped the working people of the county at all. The contractor’s business was almost completely dried up, despite the heavy infusion of federal stimulus funds. This analysis of the impact of federal stimulus funds for construction projects shadows the general use of stimulus funding to create jobs. Construction jobs, after all, are “shovel ready,” a term used often by the Obama administration to define exactly the sort of projects expected to help the employment picture. Not only are construction workers hired, often at good pay scales, but construction work is intended to be “multiplier” employment: Construction work also requires cement, lumber, asphalt, and other materials that translate into jobs to make those materials available. The work done by construction teams also is intended to build up the infrastructure of a community. The reality is quite different. Invented construction projects are not good investments. Construction projects also involve the administration of funds by two different bureaucracies — the federal granting agency and the receiving state or local government bureaucracy that uses the funds for the projects. If money spent on government red tape was economically valuable, then the federal government could simply hire everyone unemployed to work as a low-level bureaucrat. Construction projects are also, often, by their very nature onetime expenses. If some county builds a road, when the work is done the employment dries up. If a road should have been built for sensible planning reasons, then it should be built whether or not federal funds are available. Enticement to spend tax dollars almost never produces sound investments. The most fundamental problem, though, is that money spent by tax dollars or money borrowed against the credit of the United States is not spent in a vacuum. These dollars drain up the pool of investment for private enterprise. Businesses take spending much more seriously. For one thing, McDonalds or Walmart does not make investments in new restaurants or stores with an eye to maximizing the number of jobs. Instead these and other successful businesses try to calculate the maximum effective use of what labor is employed. The creation of jobs is a byproduct of sound business decisions, but because a prudent and fair calculation of the costs and benefits of each position are made before people are hired, those jobs are inherently more secure. Employees who work in those jobs learn skills which are needed economically and it makes good sense for employers to advance those employees who master their work, show diligence and honestly, and who are suitable for promotion. Government dollars paid to hire workers for certain economically dubious projects, however, means that the very reason for hiring the people — to “create” jobs — ends just as soon as the federal dollars are gone. Employers relying on federal funds do not even have an incentive to try to make these newly hired workers part of the business structure for later promotion: Tax dollars, not supply and demand, was the reason for hiring the workers. As five economists who reviewed all the federal stimulus funding in the construction agree, this approach does not create lasting jobs.
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Flu-Bird
said:
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So much for stymulus jobs So wheres all those jobs that was suppost be be created by this stymulus pakage deal? I guess the only real jobs is hiring even more buricrats and illegal aliens |
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SCHNORCHEL
said:
The legacy of stimulus funding As the continuing unemployment grows, and the stimulus funding is wasted, the prediction of civil unrest is in the air. Previous workers were funded by unparalleled credit expansion. Now that the credit bubble has burst, these workers are no longer needed. Hence they will become desperadoes and create civil unrest. The result will be a violent revolution, such as occurred in Soviet Russia about 100 years ago. The aftermath of this will be a totalitarian police state. Santayana said, "Those who cannot remember the past are condemned to repeat it." I would liked to add "Those who do not see a Conspiracy are doomed to become slaves." The end result will be a Socialist Police State. The Conspirators who created over-employment followed by unemployment want this to happen. |
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Gerald
said:
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A second American Revolution? Riots and insurrections are predictable, ala the French Revolution and the Russian Revolution, when the people find their situations economically hopeless. Mass unemployment will foster mass civil unrest, crime, anger, riots, revolution, starvation, etc. Future federal nationalization of foreign owned US property and other foreign owned US business assets, ala Mexico, Venezuela, etc., is another topic for discussion on another day. If any future US revolution to overthrow the US government occurs (maybe to change the economic situation), where will all of the food, fuel, water, sanitation, medicine, and other necessities to support the population come from after the revolution? These necessities will not exist after the revolutionary hostilities start. Chaos and total lawlessness will prevail during and long after any US revolution. Only the very meanest and the most evil will survive in this climate. We will have then totally destroyed our civilization. We will live like people in Africa, and we will be made to comply with the will of any and every armed person that we meet. Will all of the city residents starve after a revolution? Most of the US urban population is not intelligent enough to live off of the land anymore. The city dwellers might foray into the country, kill the farmers, and steal the farmer's food to feed their own families? Food might become more valuable than paper money. |
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The Associated Press has conducted an 
As the continuing unemployment grows, and the stimulus funding is wasted, the prediction of civil unrest is in the air. 