November 2, 2009
Oh, dear. In my
previous post I used the example of Clinton-era growth to argue that even growth in the mid-3s wouldn’t be enough to bring unemployment down anywhere near quickly enough. And sure enough, many of the comments are along the lines of “Clinton doesn’t deserve credit for the growth” or “It was all the tech bubble.”
Um, I never claimed that it was all Clinton’s achievement. Nor did what I said have anything to do with the sources of the growth (it wasn’t all a bubble, but that’s another issue). I used the Clinton year because they offer a useful example of what growth at the kind of rate we just saw in the 3rd quarter means for employment.
Yes, I had a parenthetical aside about Clinton-era growth being faster than most people realize. So?
But I guess I sort of expected this. Even now, any mention of anything good that happened between the end of 1992 and the beginning of 2001 is like waving a red flag. Amazing.
Here is what I took away from Krugman's previous post:
Krugman's interesting observation on growth, jobs, Clinton and Obama People seem to want to criticize Obama for emulating Clinton while praising Clinton for being Clinton.
Before deciding to support Obama in the primary, I thought about whether he was going to follow in Clinton's footsteps or take a more progressive stance on the issues. I decided to support him because I saw, and still do see, signs that he is going in a progressive direction. Still he has to govern in a political environment that is less than progressive. A significant chunk of the Democratic Party believes the Clintons are the best thing that ever happened to this country. You cannot convince them otherwise. The Clintons are centrist Democrats. Hillary was a member of the DLC leadership. And then there are even more conservative Democrats.
So how does one govern and try to push a progressive agenda in that climate? People think the Clinton machine is just Larry Summers and crowd. They're everywhere, scattered across the political landscape. Want proof: John Podesta and the Center for American Progress, Robert Reich, etc. These people, even when they criticize from the left, are still somewhat loyal to Clinton and anything he does. They have to be to some extent because their own accomplishments are tied to his legacy.