
Why Recovery Will Be Slow,
and What Good May Come of It
BY TIM PROBST is the CEO of the Washington Workforce Association.
December 11th, 2009
The only thing we know
for sure is this: we haven't tumbled into a Great Depression.
The one good guess about the future is this: the recovery will be long
and slow.
The bright spot is this: maybe we'll learn
something.
Those who say recovery
is right around the corner are wrong. It took a decade or more of bad
policies to set us up for this fall, and it will take many years to fix it.
Over the last decade or two, we built an economy based upon consumer
spending. That was a terrible idea.
Who among you believes that
you will get richer if you simply spend more money? A consumption-based
economy relies on convincing people to buy things they don't need with
money they don't have. It relies on debt, personal and public. It
relies on throwing more cash on the fire every time it looks like the
economy might falter.
Economic recovery, if it is to be real and
lasting, must be about our nation as a whole embracing a production-driven
economic model. Our economy will remain fundamentally precarious as long as
it is based on consumption instead of production.
There are
glimmers of hope. In the media, the mantra that "consumer spending
drives the U.S. economy," is heard less and less. That is good.
Although that phrase was entirely accurate for years, it was rarely
followed with the equally accurate addition, "That's the
problem." There are still the occasional calls to "boost consumer
confidence." This seems to imply that a speech or an advertisement can
have long-lasting economic impact, by making Americans confident in the
economy (whether or not they should be) so they will spend whatever money
they have left (whether or not that's in their best interest).
I have faith that the confidence of the American people is not so
cheaply won. Americans will be confident in the economy once that
confidence is truly earned, by changing from a consumption-driven economy
to a production-driven economy. Skill up our workers. Modernize our ports,
rail, and highways to enable commerce. Lead in high-tech manufacturing,
science, and innovation. Encourage business start-ups and help shops stay
open. Teach the work ethic to the next generation.
The
American economy will thrive because it is powerful and deep, not because
it is "stimulated." That's the honest way to restore
Americans' confidence in our economy, in our nation and in
ourselves.
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