Gold9472
01-30-2006, 09:50 AM
Many regular Americans don't share Bush's assessment of economy
http://seattletimes.nwsource.com/html/politics/2002770594_webecon29.html
By Mark Silva
1/28/2006
ST. LOUIS — Angie Totten was 19 when she started on the night shift at Ford Motor Co. She met her husband on the mini-van assembly line. They had two children. In the good years, with overtime, they made close to $100,000 a year.
Now Totten, 39, and husband Jeff, 40, have no clue about the future for them or their kids, ages 9 and 7. The Tottens, along with more than 1,300 others, lost their jobs last week when Ford announced it would idle the old Hazelwood assembly plant outside St. Louis in March and close it in 2008.
It is against a backdrop of bad news from U.S. manufacturing giants such as Ford and General Motors — companies that once empowered an American middle class and now struggle for survival — that President Bush will deliver his State of the Union address Tuesday.
The president will trumpet the nation's economic successes, with unemployment down and productivity up, crediting his tax cuts and calling on Congress to make them permanent. But the gap between the president's view and that of many working Americans is a yawning one, and quite apparent in this once proud but dramatically shrunken middle-American city where good-paying work is hard to find.
Throughout Missouri and across the nation, people tell pollsters that the economy they confront every day is not so promising and they see little hope for improvement. New jobs may be opening in America, people on the streets of St. Louis say, but those jobs don't carry the wages and benefits that make for a comfortable living.
"I know 1,300 people who would disagree with Bush's view of the economy," said Angie Totten, seated at the smoky Hazelwood Bowl, across from the Ford plant where an SUV painted in an American flag motif revolves on a turntable.
That countervailing view is supported in numerous national surveys, including a poll published Friday by the Los Angeles Times/Bloomberg News Service that found only 37 percent of Americans approving of the president's handling of the economy.
The perception gap could make it difficult for Bush to secure support for the agenda he unveils Tuesday night, including proposals to make health care more affordable.
Bush "and the people around him believe that if you tell people the same story over and over again they'll believe it," said Totten, who voted against Bush. "There is so much that's construed as truth. But it's not real."
Across Missouri, few more people are employed today than when Bush became president — 2.86 million in January 2001 and 2.88 million in December 2005, according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics. The agency counts 36,000 more people as unemployed — 155,500 across Missouri in December. The population has grown by about 160,000, roughly 3 percent, since 2000.
And for those working, the increasing cost of health insurance — or absence of insurance — weighs heavily, as do the regular reports of major companies abandoning their pension plans.
Bush touts a national unemployment rate of 4.9 percent, the lowest in three years. "Our economy is growing, it is strong," Bush said last week, acknowledging too "that it is changing" and that American workers must vie for business "in a competitive world."
Bush inherited a recession, says Al Hubbard, his chief economic adviser. But Bush pressed for tax cuts in 2001 and 2003 "and the results have been spectacular," he says: "4.5 million new jobs have been created. Productivity is at record levels."
To press that case, Bush recently campaigned for his tax cuts in the burgeoning northern Virginia exurb of Loudoun County, where unemployment is 2 percent, the lowest in the state.
"We have plenty of business in this area. The problem is finding the work force," said Charles Kuhn, president of JK Moving and Storage, where Bush staged his appeal. Kuhn is happy to credit the president — since Bush took office, his company's revenue and profits have doubled, his employment of 509 people has gone up by 161 percent.
But that area is riding a trend bigger than any tax cut: a housing explosion fueled by the growing federal government and tech industry. Loudoun County already had the fastest-growing employment among all major counties in the nation, 12 percent in one year before Bush's election.
In the old urban enclave of St. Louis, in contrast, unemployment runs at 8.3 percent in a shrunken city of about 345,000 that has lost nearly two-thirds of its population since the 1950s with an exodus of the auto, airplane and shoe manufacturing that once made it hum.
Here and nationally, experts say, the government and many prominent economists gloss over how many people have stopped looking for work and how many are "underemployed," working below their ability in the low-wage and often no-benefit jobs of a burgeoning service economy.
Nationally, the government reports 4.1 million people are working part-time, unable to find full-time work. Another 1.6 million are "marginally attached" to the work force — they had looked and not found work last year but hadn't searched recently — including 451,000 "discouraged workers" who have quit looking.
For many, the average weekly wage also has failed to keep pace with inflation; While average earnings were up 3.1 percent last year, they effectively declined by 0.4 percent. Add to that the rising costs of health care, fueling a car and heating a home, and take-home pay has diminished further.
"I don't think the average person is seeing the economy in such great shape," said Ken Warren, a political scientist at St. Louis University. "They are seeing it in terms of what they pay for gas, they're seeing it in terms of what they pay for health care. Bush can talk about an upturn. There are indicators that show there is an upturn. But these aren't things that people deal with every day."
The problem for Bush is evident in polls. Just 34 percent of Americans surveyed by the Pew Research Center earlier this month rated the economy as good or excellent, and 64 percent called conditions fair or poor.
St. Louis, of course, has its particular problems. Calvin Miller, who once ran five dry-cleaning shops in St. Louis, pulled out years ago and has settled in Granite City, Ill.
"It got so complicated — robberies, break-ins," Miller said. "Pistols, I didn't mind. But shotguns, I didn't like."
A city that was home to nearly 1 million in the early 1950s now appears barren in many places, with the baronial lion statuaries at the manses of Hortense and Lenox Place standing as reminders of a lost past.
Now the biggest employers are hospitals and universities.
"How far can your economy travel on that?" asked Joseph Heathcott, professor of American studies at St. Louis University. "Not to mention what the average worker in a hospital is making compared to what workers made on the assembly line."
The average wage of health-care support workers is $12.50 an hour, the Bureau of Labor Statistics reports. Assembly-line workers at Ford made $26 an hour here.
Angie Totten, who started part-time at Ford to get a foot in the door in 1985, started at $10.90 an hour. As a team leader in the body shop last year, she was making $27 an hour.
Last week, she and fellow workers were called into the plant, following weeks of pre-Christmas layoffs, for a Detroit-based video feed to announce closings eliminating up to 30,000 jobs companywide by 2010.
"We've kind of really dodged the bullet for a long time," Totten said. They had been warned of the eventual closing in 2002, she said, and "I was holding out hope that these words wouldn't come.
Copyright © 2006 The Seattle Times Company
http://seattletimes.nwsource.com/html/politics/2002770594_webecon29.html
By Mark Silva
1/28/2006
ST. LOUIS — Angie Totten was 19 when she started on the night shift at Ford Motor Co. She met her husband on the mini-van assembly line. They had two children. In the good years, with overtime, they made close to $100,000 a year.
Now Totten, 39, and husband Jeff, 40, have no clue about the future for them or their kids, ages 9 and 7. The Tottens, along with more than 1,300 others, lost their jobs last week when Ford announced it would idle the old Hazelwood assembly plant outside St. Louis in March and close it in 2008.
It is against a backdrop of bad news from U.S. manufacturing giants such as Ford and General Motors — companies that once empowered an American middle class and now struggle for survival — that President Bush will deliver his State of the Union address Tuesday.
The president will trumpet the nation's economic successes, with unemployment down and productivity up, crediting his tax cuts and calling on Congress to make them permanent. But the gap between the president's view and that of many working Americans is a yawning one, and quite apparent in this once proud but dramatically shrunken middle-American city where good-paying work is hard to find.
Throughout Missouri and across the nation, people tell pollsters that the economy they confront every day is not so promising and they see little hope for improvement. New jobs may be opening in America, people on the streets of St. Louis say, but those jobs don't carry the wages and benefits that make for a comfortable living.
"I know 1,300 people who would disagree with Bush's view of the economy," said Angie Totten, seated at the smoky Hazelwood Bowl, across from the Ford plant where an SUV painted in an American flag motif revolves on a turntable.
That countervailing view is supported in numerous national surveys, including a poll published Friday by the Los Angeles Times/Bloomberg News Service that found only 37 percent of Americans approving of the president's handling of the economy.
The perception gap could make it difficult for Bush to secure support for the agenda he unveils Tuesday night, including proposals to make health care more affordable.
Bush "and the people around him believe that if you tell people the same story over and over again they'll believe it," said Totten, who voted against Bush. "There is so much that's construed as truth. But it's not real."
Across Missouri, few more people are employed today than when Bush became president — 2.86 million in January 2001 and 2.88 million in December 2005, according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics. The agency counts 36,000 more people as unemployed — 155,500 across Missouri in December. The population has grown by about 160,000, roughly 3 percent, since 2000.
And for those working, the increasing cost of health insurance — or absence of insurance — weighs heavily, as do the regular reports of major companies abandoning their pension plans.
Bush touts a national unemployment rate of 4.9 percent, the lowest in three years. "Our economy is growing, it is strong," Bush said last week, acknowledging too "that it is changing" and that American workers must vie for business "in a competitive world."
Bush inherited a recession, says Al Hubbard, his chief economic adviser. But Bush pressed for tax cuts in 2001 and 2003 "and the results have been spectacular," he says: "4.5 million new jobs have been created. Productivity is at record levels."
To press that case, Bush recently campaigned for his tax cuts in the burgeoning northern Virginia exurb of Loudoun County, where unemployment is 2 percent, the lowest in the state.
"We have plenty of business in this area. The problem is finding the work force," said Charles Kuhn, president of JK Moving and Storage, where Bush staged his appeal. Kuhn is happy to credit the president — since Bush took office, his company's revenue and profits have doubled, his employment of 509 people has gone up by 161 percent.
But that area is riding a trend bigger than any tax cut: a housing explosion fueled by the growing federal government and tech industry. Loudoun County already had the fastest-growing employment among all major counties in the nation, 12 percent in one year before Bush's election.
In the old urban enclave of St. Louis, in contrast, unemployment runs at 8.3 percent in a shrunken city of about 345,000 that has lost nearly two-thirds of its population since the 1950s with an exodus of the auto, airplane and shoe manufacturing that once made it hum.
Here and nationally, experts say, the government and many prominent economists gloss over how many people have stopped looking for work and how many are "underemployed," working below their ability in the low-wage and often no-benefit jobs of a burgeoning service economy.
Nationally, the government reports 4.1 million people are working part-time, unable to find full-time work. Another 1.6 million are "marginally attached" to the work force — they had looked and not found work last year but hadn't searched recently — including 451,000 "discouraged workers" who have quit looking.
For many, the average weekly wage also has failed to keep pace with inflation; While average earnings were up 3.1 percent last year, they effectively declined by 0.4 percent. Add to that the rising costs of health care, fueling a car and heating a home, and take-home pay has diminished further.
"I don't think the average person is seeing the economy in such great shape," said Ken Warren, a political scientist at St. Louis University. "They are seeing it in terms of what they pay for gas, they're seeing it in terms of what they pay for health care. Bush can talk about an upturn. There are indicators that show there is an upturn. But these aren't things that people deal with every day."
The problem for Bush is evident in polls. Just 34 percent of Americans surveyed by the Pew Research Center earlier this month rated the economy as good or excellent, and 64 percent called conditions fair or poor.
St. Louis, of course, has its particular problems. Calvin Miller, who once ran five dry-cleaning shops in St. Louis, pulled out years ago and has settled in Granite City, Ill.
"It got so complicated — robberies, break-ins," Miller said. "Pistols, I didn't mind. But shotguns, I didn't like."
A city that was home to nearly 1 million in the early 1950s now appears barren in many places, with the baronial lion statuaries at the manses of Hortense and Lenox Place standing as reminders of a lost past.
Now the biggest employers are hospitals and universities.
"How far can your economy travel on that?" asked Joseph Heathcott, professor of American studies at St. Louis University. "Not to mention what the average worker in a hospital is making compared to what workers made on the assembly line."
The average wage of health-care support workers is $12.50 an hour, the Bureau of Labor Statistics reports. Assembly-line workers at Ford made $26 an hour here.
Angie Totten, who started part-time at Ford to get a foot in the door in 1985, started at $10.90 an hour. As a team leader in the body shop last year, she was making $27 an hour.
Last week, she and fellow workers were called into the plant, following weeks of pre-Christmas layoffs, for a Detroit-based video feed to announce closings eliminating up to 30,000 jobs companywide by 2010.
"We've kind of really dodged the bullet for a long time," Totten said. They had been warned of the eventual closing in 2002, she said, and "I was holding out hope that these words wouldn't come.
Copyright © 2006 The Seattle Times Company