I know how the economy works has become a clarion cry in
this presidential election. As Americans look at job numbers the economy has been deemed by some to be a jobless recovery.
In actuality, we are not in a jobless recovery. In fact the Bureau of Labor
Statistics has stated that there are presently over three million jobs left
unfilled. The question is not the creation of jobs but how to fill the ones
that are available. When we add in a
proposal to repair America's infrastructure and to put public employees such as
teachers, firefighters and cops back to
work the answer to bringing the
unemployment rate down lays right before our
very eyes.
The truth of the matter is that we all know how the economy
works. It is not a revelation from on high. Our economy works from a supply and
demand context. When there is demand someone will satisfy it. We all know that capital
is necessary to start or expand a
business . Unfortunately the conversation about the economy has taken an absurd
turn.
When CEOs complain about uncertainty or regulations, red
flags should go up in the minds of Americans. The truth of the matter is that
hiring is slow not because of uncertainty or regulations, but because of
corporate America's ability to fulfill present demand for their products with their present
workforce. The issue is not about uncertainty, it is about demand.
During a time when politicians speak about uncertainty,
Americans should think about how the stock market doubled, corporate profits
reached a record high, CEOs bonuses reach record levels, and even the Congress
itself experiencing tremendous growth in their wealth. Not bad for a time of uncertainty.
Americans must
contend with the fact that the role of corporations is not to create jobs. When
a CEO is hired he or she is not asked how they are going to create employment but
how they will increase profit and market share. For a corporation, employment
is simply the cost of doing business. Whenever
I hear certain presidential candidates speak about the economy as if CEOs are
just waiting to hire more people that is at best laughable and at worse a sign
that those who claim to understand it really haven’t a clue.
It should be noted that during the time when the stimulus
package was being debated, the Obama administration wanted a buy American
clause placed in the legislation. Unfortunately, this was fought tooth and nail
by the United States Chamber of Commerce, the lobbying group for American
business.
Despite the difficulty, from a political perspective, to
change the economic debate, Americans must begin to understand that the economic
climate is not about joblessness there are millions of jobs available as told
to us by the Bureau of Labor Statistics and CEO’s do not cite regulations or uncertainty
in filling these jobs but people not having the right skills.
Secondly, Americans should not accept the idea of American
companies holding on to trillions of dollars with an explanation that they are
uncertain about the future. CEOs have not been uncertain about taking multimillion-dollar
bonuses. Corporation have not been uncertain about their great profitability
over the last three and half years and the stock market has not been uncertain about
the fact that it has almost doubled over the last 3 1/2 years. Americans should
not allow themselves to be blackmailed by political parties who say companies
are willing to invest the trillions of dollars that we have in America if they are
given carte blanche to do exactly what they want to do with an expectation of
taxpayer bailout if they screw up again.
When Gov. Romney says his CEO experience is his sole
qualification for the presidency of the United States, someone must ask the
question wasn’t it CEOs that got us into the financial crisis that the nation
experienced three and half years ago. Despite experiencing the excesses of three and half years ago J.P.
Morgan under CEO Jamie Dimon was still
engaging in risky bets which has cost them up to $7 billion in the last quarter
does that experience really qualify anybody to be president. Apparently the
lessons were not learned.
Americans must understand that the economy is slow but it is
growing. Contrast that with the fact that three and half years ago the economy
was not growing it was actually contracting and jobs were being lost at a rate of 300,000 jobs per month. Now
compare that to take a economy that is growing albeit slowing but growing.
Contrast that to the fact that 4 million new jobs have been created in the last
3 1/2 years.
It is possible that a larger debate is at hand here. One
candidate runs on the simplistic notion of I know how the economy works as if a
revelation has been handed to him from outside. A the problem with this is that
everyone knows how the economy works if the concept that we have known since we
were all in high school as we took economics. The second problem is that the
idea in the context in which one sees the economy is through the eyes of
profit. As proves he stated profit is not contingent upon a company having an
hiring more employees. In fact many companies that are traded publicly are
rewarded on Wall Street by downsizing and streamlining in order to have their
balance sheet in proper order. The second part of this debate however is who
should the economy benefit. In recent decades we all know that the economy has
been benefiting a shrinking sector of the American populace. The question
though is how does the economy benefit an ever-increasing sector of the
American populace.
America does not need a one-dimensional candidate who sees
everything in the American landscape as a function of capitalism and profit.
Capitalism is a part of the American landscape but it is not the whole
landscape. Alexis de Tocqueville once said “As one digs deeper into the
national character of the Americans, one sees that they have sought the value
of everything in this world only in the answer to this single question: how
much money will it bring in? “
To a pure capitalist this quote by Alexis de Tocqueville
explains their whole mentality and approach to life. The question is will the
average American allow this to be the prevailing ideology of a nation that is
built on much more than a profit and loss statement and balance sheet. This election
will answer that question.
Aguilar is the author of E-book Prosperity: Its About Politics available through Barnes and Noble
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