Texarkana Gazette

Media bad-mouths the economy like it did in 1992

- Larry Elder

As it did in 1992, the anti-Republican media is covering Trump’s economy as negatively as possible while keeping a straight face. After all, unemployme­nt is at historical lows, most Americans feel optimistic about their own economic future, and most credit Trump with the growing economy. Trump’s predecesso­r was the first president since 1949 to preside over an economic recovery without a single year averaging at least 3% gross domestic product growth.

But Democrats, the media and Trump-hating pundits seem almost giddy at the prospect of a recession.

Last year, multimilli­onaire comedian and HBO talk show host Bill Maher openly rooted for it: “Can I ask about the economy? Because this economy is going pretty well. … I feel like the bottom has to fall out at some point. And by the way, I’m hoping for it. Because I think one way you get rid of Trump is a crashing economy. So, please, bring on the recession. Sorry if that hurts people, but it’s either root for a recession or you lose your democracy.” In August, Maher doubled down: “I’m just saying we can survive a recession. We’ve had 47 of them. We’ve had one every time there’s a Republican president!” said Maher. “They don’t last forever. You know what lasts forever? Wiping out species! … Yes, a recession would be very worth getting rid of Donald Trump and these kinds of policies.”

After a less-than-expected number of jobs were created in August, many in the media spoke enthusiast­ically at the notion of a recession. Newsweek, for example, wrote, “The U.S. added just 130,000 jobs in August, falling short of economists’ expectatio­ns and stoking more fears of an impending recession.”

The National Bureau of Economic Research, the government’s official keeper of the business cycle, defines a recession as “a significan­t decline in economic activity spread across the economy, lasting more than a few months, normally visible in real GDP, real income, employment, industrial production, and wholesale-retail sales.” Others, like economist Lee Ohanian of the University of California, Los Angeles, define a recession as at least two consecutiv­e quarters of negative economic growth. By either definition, the economy is not close to a recession.

But recently, The Washington Post eagerly noted: “Only one president since the Civil War has been reelected with a recession taking place in the two calendar years before facing voters a second time … William McKinley in 1900. Since then, all four presidents running for reelection who had such a recession lost: William Taft, Herbert Hoover, Jimmy Carter and George H.W. Bush.”

One slight problem: By election day in November 1992, George H.W. Bush’s economy was on its 19th consecutiv­e month of positive economic growth. The economy was nowhere near a recession. According to the National Bureau of Economic Research, the recession began in July 1990 and ended eight months later, in March 1991 — a full 19 months before Clinton’s election. Yet, as Investor’s Business Daily pointed out, in October 1992, over 90% of the economic news in newspapers was negative. The next month, Clinton won the election. And that month, only 14% of the newspapers’ economic news was negative. A 1992 Gallup poll found that a majority of Americans thought we were in a recession.

How big a role did the media play in this mispercept­ion?

In the 1997 book “Lessons From the Recession: A Management and Communicat­ion Perspectiv­e,” the authors write, “It is difficult to avoid the conclusion that the highly negative view of economy in 1992 was due in large part to widespread mispercept­ions about its performanc­e and prospects, and that unduly negative coverage on network television played some major role in forming those mispercept­ions.” In short, the media’s bad-mouthing of Bush 41’s economy shaped Americans’ perception of it.

How strong was the economy Bill Clinton inherited? On Jan. 29, 1993, seven days after Clinton took office, a New York Times article headlined “U.S. Says Economy Grew at Fast Pace in Fourth Quarter” said, “The economy grew at a faster-than-expected annual rate of 3.8 percent in the final quarter of 1992, the strongest performanc­e in four years, the Commerce Department reported today.” Three-point-eight percent! Not bad for a “recession.”

Had Hillary Clinton won the 2016 election and presided over an economy performing this well, the media would call her an economic maestro who “jumpstarte­d the economy” and whose reelection was all but a foregone conclusion.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States