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New York Times Pushes Tornadoes As Economic Stimulus

By Clay Waters | June 01, 2011 | 15:37

A  A

Are deadly tornadoes really the best "stimulus" to be hoped for from the Obama White House, or is the New York Times just desperately looking for economics green shoots as the 2012 presidential elections approach?

In any case, just 10 days after the deadly tornado hit Joplin, Missouri, Wednesday’s off-lead by Michael Cooper, "Reconstruction  Lifts Economy After Disasters – New Jobs Are Created to Erase the Rubble," pushed tornadoes as economic stimulus.

Yes, it’s the Keynesian "broken window" fallacy – the discredited theory (dissected in this article about the earthquakes in Japan by FreedomWorks Matt Kibbe) that acts of destruction like tornadoes actually stimulate the economy by forcing spending on things like rebuilding and disaster relief. Money that is spent on rebuilding can no longer be spent on other things.

The story's text box read: "Experts say tornadoes and hurricanes can create a catalyst for renewal." Strange that the Times has never used that pump-priming argument when discussing the war in Iraq.

By contrast, the Times in September 2005 saw Hurricane Katrina as an unmitigated economic disaster for President Bush a few days after it hit: "Hurricane’s Toll Is Likely to Reshape Bush’s Economic Agenda."

Hurricane Katrina is about to blow a hole in the federal budget, and it is already jeopardizing President Bush's agenda for cutting taxes and reducing the deficit. Administration officials told Republican lawmakers on Tuesday that relief efforts were running close to $700 million a day, and that the total federal cost could reach as high as $100 billion.....Though it is still too early for accurate estimates, the costs are all but certain to wreak havoc with Mr. Bush's plans to reduce the federal deficit and possibly his plans to extend tax cuts.

But on Wednesday Cooper wrote about the bright side to tornadoes and flooding across the South.

The deadly tornadoes and widespread flooding that have left a trail of death and destruction throughout the South and the Midwest have also disrupted dozens of local economies just as the unsteady recovery seemed to be finding a foothold.

But a new phase is slowly beginning in some hard-hit areas: reconstruction, which past disasters show is typically accompanied by a burst of new, and different, economic activity. There is no silver lining to a funnel cloud, as anyone who survived the tornadoes can attest, but reconstruction can help rebuild local economies as well as neighborhoods.

....

But there are already stirrings of economic activity. Home Depot, whose store in Joplin was destroyed, began selling lumber and other supplies from a parking lot there on Tuesday as it prepared to open a 30,000-square-foot temporary store.

....

No one would suggest that disasters are a desirable form of economic stimulus. But economists who have studied the impact of floods, tornadoes and hurricanes have found that after the initial anguish and huge economic disruptions, periods of increased economic activity frequently follow as insurance money and disaster relief flow in to jump-start rebuilding.

....

Even as the natural disasters eliminated thousands of jobs, the needs of recovery have created others. Companies like Unified Recovery Group, which is clearing storm wreckage in Alabama and Tennessee, are hiring workers and subcontractors to cart off debris. Construction companies are hiring, too. In Tuscaloosa, James E. Latham, chief executive officer of WAR Construction, said his firm had rehired workers who had been laid off during the downturn and had added new employees to prepare for the work ahead, like rebuilding an elementary school.

As insurance claims are paid, a further economic stimulus lies in the shopping that some people will do to replace lost goods.

About the Author

Clay Waters is the director of Times Watch, an MRC project tracking the New York Times. Click here to follow Clay Waters on Twitter.
  • Hurricanes
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Comments

As long as there are

Submitted by robert108 on Wed, 06/01/2011 - 3:50pm.

As long as there are liberals, the "broken window fallacy" will endure. Let's not talk about how Home Depot likes having to do business from a parking lot, with none of their infrastructure available.

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This myth is what underpinned the calculus for GNP

Submitted by Galvanic on Wed, 06/01/2011 - 3:50pm.

As a sum of all products and services, the GNP was an inaccurate measure of economic health.

For example, take an automobile accident. The car collides with a tree, and jobs abound.

-  The tow truck operater gets paid for removing the vehicle from the crash scene.

-  The ambulance crew gets paid for transporting the driver from the crash scene to the hospital.

-  The medical people and hospital get paid for treating the driver.

-  The body shop earns money by fixing the car.

and the list goes on.

Add 'em all up, and it looks like quite a stimulus.

Except for one factor:  The source of the wealth to pay these folks.  Presumably, the insurance companies paid.

If the total came to $50,000, that's $50,000 that wasn't spent on something else. 

That's what we have here with their tornado logic.  It will result in new home construction, infrastructure repair, automobile sakes, etc., but the resources to acquire them aren't  created out of thin air.  If they were, the BP oil spill would've been a boon to the Gulf Coast.

 

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And...it creates a nasty little side effect as well

Submitted by Blonde on Wed, 06/01/2011 - 4:29pm.

For companies who deal in this sort of thing...unrealistic expectations.

A "boon" for waste removal companies, say. All of a sudden, they've had a big increase to their bottom lines after an event like a hurricane or a spate of tornados, like we've had recently. So, they say, well, we had this much income this year...we'll have this much and more next. Not always.

Secondly, the "payer" for all of this waste removal is FEMA, which of course means, we, the taxpayer. So it's basically the same old zero sum game. Less, if you subract the loss of productivity due to governmental incompetence (I'm guessing -50%).

Handy Reference Guide to Obama's Gaffes and Goofs ~ Currently Numbering 200 (and Counting)

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This theory is also a non

Submitted by Beukeboom on Wed, 06/01/2011 - 4:08pm.

This theory is also a non sequitur fallacy as well.

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Yeah, it must be working!

Submitted by jdhawk on Wed, 06/01/2011 - 4:32pm.

Yeah, it must be working! After the economic reports of the last month coupled with the doozies that came out today, the market took a dump. the DOW was down nearly 300 points!

This summer marks the 3d year of the "Summer of Recovery" as duhbama dubbed it. Hopefully, something will happen BEFORE the next summer and the election to follow as I don't think that our economy can take a another "Summer of Recovery."

Meanwhile, the Holy Grail of liberal economics is the Keynes Theory of economic stimulus. Liken it to a swimming pool. Water comes out - in the form of taxes over at the deep end of the pool. Water goes in - in the form of government "stimulus" at the shallow end whether our government even has the money (printing is permissible). Does the pool of water/economy rise? I don't think so. That's Keynes Theory of economic stimulus.

This is a failed presidency. Under duhbama's "leadership" we have a failed economy, a failed foreign policy, a failed energy policy, a failed . . . - you fill in the blanks, here.

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Wealth destruction = Economic Stimulus

Submitted by upcountrywater on Wed, 06/01/2011 - 4:50pm.

New Paradigm: It's all about your ability to go into dept.

New pride: I can go faster N' further; into dept than you can.

Third times a charm QE-3

This is a market completely based on hope.

EPA approved/ shovel ready removal program... O'bama circus

/sarc of sorts.

You Didn't Build That.

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Are These Guys Serious?

Submitted by IrateNate on Wed, 06/01/2011 - 9:41pm.

Also in the "news":

The devastating wild fires in California and Texas are credited for saving or creating millions of volunteer fire department positions. The deaths of 100,000 cattle has proven to be a blessing in disguise for the obese.

The manufacture and sales of coffins in tornado-stricken Missouri has increased by an incredible 350% over this time last year. Funeral home operators are pleased with the sudden increase in profits, and are looking forward to more deaths in the near future.

And finally, the Obama administration will announce its plan to detonate a nuclear weapon over Times Square next week.

"This will not only help reduce our nuclear arsenal, but will create thousands of jobs - the high-tech, green jobs of the future that we need to compete in a global economy," said Obama.

White House economists claim this new stimulus program will have the job creation potential of over one thousand tornadoes, and one hundred times faster than unemployment benefits.

It is not certain when the White House will announce any plans to expand this new job-creation strategy to other parts of the world.

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Well, if the recovery from

Submitted by Chris Norman on Thu, 06/02/2011 - 1:29am.

Well, if the recovery from disasters cause economic stimulus, why doesn't the government just go around and blow up dams and towns and torch neighborhoods?

Let's make the 2012 campaign: "The War on Error"
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You mean like . . .

Submitted by Galvanic on Thu, 06/02/2011 - 8:43am.

. . . when Bush-43 ordered the secret demolition of that levy in New Orleans after Hurricane Katrina?

And how can we be certain that these tornados aren't the creation of the government's orbitting weather satellites? :-)

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→ When the levee breaks

Submitted by Cool Arrow on Thu, 06/02/2011 - 8:49am.

Just this Spring the Obama Administration blew up levees to flood the out the work of several White farmers. It's documented, and there's video.

I'm juz sayin'

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NYT

Submitted by jessieH on Thu, 06/02/2011 - 9:25am.

What a waste of trees!

                                                                                                                                                                    

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