The Recovery Act worked
Ross Eisenbrey
February 17, 2010
By Ross Eisenbrey
It is appalling to hear conservative critics of President Obama claim that his policies -- in particular the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act -- have failed because unemployment remains so high and the 8 million jobs lost in the recession have not been replaced. The conservative policies put in place during 8 years of the Bush administration wrecked the economy, helped drive it into the deepest recession in 70 years and caused that unemployment. The figure tracks monthly job losses before and after the Recovery Act.

The recession began in December 2007, during George Bush’s 7th year in office. By the time President Obama was inaugurated, 4.4 million jobs had been lost, and by the time the Recovery Act was passed, 5.9 million jobs had been lost. As the figure makes clear, the job losses that were accelerating before the Recovery Act was passed have been virtually eliminated.
We must not forget the enormity of the damage done to the economy before the Recovery Act. From December 2007 to March 2009, one out of every twenty private sector jobs was eliminated, a rate of destruction 50% greater than even the severe recession in the early 1980s. With unemployment at 9.7% today, it’s hard to appreciate how much more damage the stimulus investments prevented. Without the more than two million jobs generated by the Recovery Act, the unemployment rate would now exceed 11% rather than the 9.7% rate in January.
 
More Snapshots
- Jobs ... but low pay
- Another challenge for the unemployed: Public library budget cuts
- State and local job losses threaten recovery
- Without federal intervention, unemployment would be near 16%
- Another consequence of the recession: Rising federal budget deficits
- Corporate profits have recovered, but job market still depressed
- Running out of steam
- Free Trade Agreement with Korea will cost U.S. jobs
- Another day, one less dollar
- Older men face longer job searches
- Recession takes a slice out of retirement savings
- Unemployment spells in Michigan and South Carolina are the longest in the nation
- Many jobless can not collect unemployment benefits
- Trading test anxiety for job market jitters
- Women now hold close to half of all jobs
- Americans work longer
- Small group takes large slice of capital income
- At the top: Soaring incomes, falling tax rates
- Counting the jobs lost to China
- Health insurance for more Americans
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