S. Or Canada today. Regarding the worries about the 'jobless recovery,' Watson believes decreases in employment do not always presage more serious recessions later on.
There are profound differences between today and the 1930s. The difference seem to lie in the political climate: there was widespread support for Franklin Delano Roosevelt's instituting of government programs to help the unemployed and dispossessed. Today, an intransigent Republican minority faction in Congress is stymieing such efforts. Watson's sunny forecast does not provide any advice about how to prevent a similar crisis in the future, he simply advises the reader to watch and wait unemployment figures creep up: "IPA forecast sees the national unemployment rate rising to an average of 8.1% in 2009 -- not good but not catastrophic -- but then falling steadily to 6.4% in 2012. It obviously would be better not to have had such a slowdown. But what awaits us may not be the economic equivalent of blitzkrieg. And if it is -- well, we survived blitzkrieg, we can survive this."
In the short-term, the recession may have abated. But in the long-term, the systemic injustices have not been addressed, such as the wide disparities between rich and poor n America, inadequate regulation of the financial markets, a developed world held hostage by debt and credit, and workers with obsolete educations and jobs.
William Watson, "Lessons from the Great Depression: Not the 1930s all over again," Policy Options, February 2009, p. 41
Watson, p.42
Watson, p.43
Watson, p.44
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