On June 22, 2012, Lisa Mascaro writes in the Los Angeles Times that the parties in Congress showcase rival proposals, but they seem to agree on little that could quickly increase employment.
“With the economy and jobs remaining voters’ top priority, almost every bill in Congress is now declared a “jobs” bill.
“The problem is, there is little … this divided Congress can agree on that would help reduce the nation’s stubbornly high unemployment rate.
“Gone are any hopes for Depression-style jobs programs in this period of anxiety over the federal debt. Even extending unemployment benefits, which had been a routine recession-era move to put money in the hands of the jobless and spur the economy, has become a tough political task.
“Even if Republicans and Democrats could set their partisan gibes aside long enough to pass legislation, most of the bills on the table would not substantially change the immediate jobs outlook.
“Polls have shown neither party has a clear advantage when it comes to the question of who can best handle the economy and create jobs. That ambivalence is driving the parties to great lengths to convince voters they are working to improve the economy.
“The reality, however, is that Congress is mostly passing bills in one chamber that will be ignored in the other. But the marketing of so-called jobs bills has been robust.”
What is consistently missed by our so-called leadership in both parties is the realization that the economists and analysts advising them should recognize that there are two factors of production: people (labor workers who contribute manual, intellectual, creative and entrepreneurial work) and capital (land; structures; infrastructure; tools; machines; computer processing; certain intangibles that have the characteristics of property, such as patents and trade or firm names; and the like owned by capital workers). Fundamentally, economic value is created through human and non-human contributions.
http://www.latimes.com/news/nationworld/nation/la-na-congress-jobs-20120622,0,3043529.story