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<< Good News for Wisconsin Workers | Main | Sully Wins "First They Came For..." Award >> March 18, 2004Crudele on Why Growth is Not RealThe New York Post's John Crudele weighs in on why the lack of jobs reflects the fact that the growth statistics are wrong. The basic point-- inflation is understated, so growth is overstated: As faithful readers of this column already know, Washington has dramatically changed the way it calculates inflation over the past decades...Look around-- housing prices are still zooming, oil prices are shooting up. The only prices dropping are consumer electronics-- and those aren't made in the US. It's pretty easy to believe that it's the inflation measurement that's out of whack, which means growth is weak and explains why job growth is so pathetic. Posted by Nathan at March 18, 2004 07:59 PM Related posts:
Trackback PingsTrackBack URL for this entry: CommentsGiven the awful state of the job market, might we actually be in a recession? Posted by: Steve C at March 19, 2004 10:28 AM And what raw growth we have IMHO is mostly fat, not muscle, as the economy is no longer being fed by high-quality jobs but instead is on a junk food diet of a low prime rate topped with high government spending. Posted by: a different chris at March 19, 2004 04:52 PM Post a comment
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