|

◊ ◊ ◊ ◊ ◊ ◊
Visit
Buzzflash.com to read news the
Bush junta does not want you to read. |
| |
Presidents And Prosperity
Dan
Ackman, 07.20.04, 3:00 PM ET
The death of Ronald Reagan and the popularity of
Bill Clinton's book have sparked an unusually intense interest in
presidents past.
During the week of his funeral, several commentators
declared Reagan the best president of the 20th century, even better than
Franklin D. Roosevelt, whom Reagan himself admired. A recent Gallup
Organization poll indicates that Americans rank John F. Kennedy slightly
ahead of FDR, and both of them ahead of Reagan. Clinton supporters, meanwhile,
note that he turned large federal deficits into surpluses and presided over a
booming economy.
It's the kind of argument that will never be settled,
like who was a better ballplayer, Willie Mays or Mickey Mantle.
But we took a look at the numbers, and for the money, among presidents since
World War II, Clinton scores highest.
Clinton's two terms in office (1993-2001) were marked
by strong numbers for gross domestic product (GDP) and employment growth and
especially for deficit reduction. His overall ranking puts him first among the
ten postwar presidents--ahead of Lyndon B. Johnson, Kennedy and Reagan,
who were tightly grouped behind the 42nd president and recent autobiographer.
|
Postwar Presidencies Ranked By
Six Measures Of Economic Performance, Where 1 Is Best. |
| President |
Term
|
Years In Office
|
GDP Rank
|
Real Disposable Personal Income
Rank |
Employment Rank
|
Unemployment Rank
|
Inflation Rank |
Deficit Reduction Rank
|
Average Rank |
| Bill Clinton |
1993-2001 |
8 |
3 |
5 |
2 |
2 |
6 |
1 |
3.2 |
| Lyndon B. Johnson |
November 1963-1969 |
5.1 |
1 |
1 |
5 |
3 |
8 |
4 |
3.7 |
| John F. Kennedy |
1961-November 1963 |
2.9 |
2 |
2 |
8 |
1 |
5 |
6 |
4.0 |
| Ronald Reagan |
1981-1989 |
8 |
5 |
4 |
3 |
4 |
2 |
8 |
4.3 |
| Gerald R. Ford |
August 1974-1977 |
2.4 |
6 |
6 |
6 |
10 |
1 |
2 |
5.2 |
| Jimmy Carter |
1977-1981 |
4 |
4 |
8 |
1 |
5 |
10 |
7 |
5.8 |
| Harry S. Truman |
April 1945-1953 |
7.8 |
9 |
9 |
7 |
6 |
3 |
3 |
6.2 |
| Richard M. Nixon |
1969-August 1974 |
5.6 |
7 |
3 |
4 |
8 |
9 |
9 |
6.7 |
| Dwight D. Eisenhower |
1953-1961 |
8 |
8 |
7 |
9 |
9 |
7 |
5 |
7.5 |
| George H.W. Bush |
1989-1993 |
4 |
10 |
10 |
10 |
7 |
4 |
10 |
8.5 |
GDP: Gross Domestic Product. Sources: U.S. Bureau of Economic
Analysis, U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics, White House Office of Management and
Budget
To create our rankings we looked at six measures of
economic performance--GDP growth, per capita income growth, employment gains,
unemployment rate reduction, inflation reduction and federal deficit
reduction--for each of the ten postwar presidencies. For each measure we looked
at whether the situation improved or got worse, and we ranked the presidents
from 1 to 10. We then averaged the ranks to come up with a final score.
Click here for the complete underlying data.
To be sure, there is a sharp debate as to the ability
of any president--or government--to control the economy. But that doesn't
prevent the heads of
Wall Street firms such as Merrill Lynch (nyse:
MER -
news -
people ), Morgan Stanley (nyse:
MWD -
news -
people ) and Citigroup (nyse:
C - news
-
people ) from rooting for one candidate over another based on expectations
of economic performance. Fairly or not, each president was judged by how much
prosperity is delivered on his watch. Some presidents, it seems, have watched a
lot more effectively than others. (We did not rank the current president, whose
term is not yet over.)
Clinton campaigned on the economy and had remarkable
success. GDP growth during his eight years averaged 3.5% per year, second only
to the combined Kennedy/Johnson years and ahead of Jimmy Carter and
Reagan. The economy also added jobs at a faster rate under Clinton than under
any postwar president except Carter. For Carter, however, job growth merely
matched an increase in the size of the labor force, while Clinton had much
better luck curbing the unemployment rate as well. The result: The public's
confidence in the economy hit an all-time high in the summer of 2000, near the
end of Clinton's second term, according to Gallup. In the summer of 1992, before
he was elected, it was at an all-time low.
The key to Clinton's success, says Alice Rivlin, a
Brookings Institution scholar who served as his director of management and
budget, was adhering to the "pay/go" agreement first forged by President
George H. W. Bush and a Democratic Congress, whereby tax cuts or entitlement
increases had to be funded on a current basis. She says Clinton raised taxes at
just the right time--when incomes were starting to rise after years of
stagnation--leading to a surge of receipts. The result was the smallest
government in terms of its percentage of GDP since Johnson, and the first
substantial budget surpluses since Harry S. Truman.
Johnson (1963-1969) ranks second-best overall, slightly
ahead of Kennedy, some of whose economic policies he shepherded through
Congress. LBJ was first in terms of both GDP growth and personal income growth.
He was also among the best in reducing unemployment, lowering the jobless rate
from 5.3% to 3.4%. But his time in office was also marked by a surge in
inflation and government spending, which got worse under his successor
Richard M. Nixon, who instituted wage and price controls with little
success.
"The Vietnam War had the biggest impact [of any single
factor under Johnson] both for good and for ill," says Charles Schultze, an
economist at the Brookings Institution who worked in the Johnson and Carter
administrations. Schultze says the Kennedy/Johnson tax cut helped the economy
continue to grow in 1965 and 1966. But the failure to finance the war led to a
surge in inflation that continued under Nixon. Despite these problems, the JFK/LBJ
era, viewed as a whole, was the best of times.
Kennedy's presidency (1961-1963), truncated by his
November 1963 assassination, ranks third behind LBJ's. Following the prosperous
but slow-growth 1950s, Kennedy, like Clinton, campaigned on the idea of getting
the company moving again. His most well-known economic legislative initiative,
however, his 1964
tax cut, did not take effect until after he was dead.
Without a clear supply- or demand-side explanation for
the boom, Walter Schubert, a finance professor at LaSalle University, suggests
that JFK's impact was largely exhortatory: "My sense of Kennedy is that he
inspired a lot of people to try things." While many businessmen feared his
election, they responded to his energy. In any event, GDP growth averaged nearly
5% during his term and he ranks first in reducing the unemployment rate.
Reagan (1981-1989) ranks just after Kennedy, his
success highlighted by his halving of the inflation rate. Veronique de Rugy, a
research fellow at the American Enterprise Institute, says the key to Reagan's
record was urging spending cuts to finance tax cuts and an increase in defense
spending. "This is the only instance where we see this type of behavior where we
have a president who understands you can't have it all," she says. Reagan's
first term, marred by a nasty recession, was not stellar, despite a sharp
reduction in inflation caused by U.S.
Federal Reserve Chairman Paul Volcker's dramatic shift in monetary policy,
which started under Carter. Reagan's second term, though, was very strong.
The Ford and Carter years (1974-1981) are widely
recalled as a time of economic disaster. But by the numbers they were middling,
not awful. Most surprising is that Carter ranks first in job creation as 10
million jobs were added during his four years in office, more on an annualized
basis than Clinton or Reagan. But because the labor force was expanding at the
same time, led by an increasing number of women working outside the home, the
rate of unemployment barely budged. Gerald R. Ford ranks first for
controlling inflation, cutting 3.4% off the rate during his brief
two-and-a-half-year term.
The situation got much worse under Carter, in large
part because of the oil embargo imposed by the Organization of the Petroleum
Exporting Countries and resultant price shocks. But Carter appointed Volcker,
whose monetary policies at the Fed eventually stemmed the inflationary tide.
Of the ten postwar presidents, the first President Bush
brings up the rear. He ranks dead last for both GDP growth and income growth and
also ballooned the deficit at a rate faster than every president but Ford. His
one modest success was continuing the dramatic drop in inflation that had
started under Reagan. LaSalle's Schubert notes that Bush had "some bad luck," in
that the post-Gulf War recovery was too late and too tepid to aid his reelection
prospects. But Schubert faults Bush for a lack of perceptible economic policy of
any kind, good or bad.
The original article can be found here:
http://www.forbes.com/commerce/2004/07/20/cx_da_0720presidents.html
|