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Race to declare victory for stimulus

When you spend $787 billion, there's a lot of pressure to show results. So, there's no surprise that success is being proclaimed across the country. States are saying that they've used the federal stimulus package money to create or save more than 388,000 jobs this year. Teachers, construction workers and other professions have realized the upside of stimulus cash according to reports from 33 states and Puerto Rico, with the remainder of the results being released on Friday.

Of course, the numbers "should be taken with a grain of salt," says Ethan Pollack of the Economic Policy Institute. The states were tasked to count the jobs created or protected, but the results have been of dubious accuracy. This doesn't mean the stats can't provide fodder to people on both sides of the aisle.

Columbia Business School's Frank Lichtenberg says the data shows a solid economic impact, and the Obama administration's Council of Economic Advisors believes the stimulus spending has taken care of between 600,000 and 1.1 million jobs.

And, there are those who disagree.

Continue reading Race to declare victory for stimulus

Paulson's job growth forecast may underperform, economists' survey says

U.S. Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson's prediction that the 2008 tax rebate will create 500,000 jobs may come up a tad short, if a Bloomberg News survey is telling.

The median estimate of economists surveyed by Bloomberg News forecasts a stimulus package-induced job increase on 158,500 -- far short of Paulson's forecast, Bloomberg News reported Friday.

Paulson and other Bush Administration officials are hopeful the stimulus package will create jobs both directly and via spin-off effect -- for example, jobs created in manufacturing when goods are purchased; and jobs created in feeder industries to the manufacturing sector, etc.

The administration views the tax cut as intrinsic to jump-starting a U.S. economy slowed to a crawl (or perhaps already in negative growth) by its worst housing recession in more than 15 years, and by record-high oil and gasoline prices. (Oil traded Friday up $2.21 to $133.02 per barrel. Oil is up about 100% in 12 months.)

Economic Analysis: Analysts and economists vary regarding the tax rebate's job creation potential, and the 158.5K Bloomberg survey estimate is most likely on the mark. It's possible the tax rebate could create 500,000 new jobs, but the U.S. economy would have to experience an extraordinary boost in GDP growth in 2H 2008. The more likely scenario: only modest GDP growth in 2H 2008, which will make the Bush Administration the first administration to preside over a net drop in payrolls since the Eisenhower Administration in 1960, according to the Economic Policy Institute.

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Last updated: May 28, 2012: 03:32 AM

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