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Can the Obama Economic Plan Boost Your Salary?

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President-elect Barack Obama has made history. He triumphed in a rough-and-tumble campaign to become the first African-American elected to the highest office in the land. Now big questions loom over the Obama economic plan, and what the future of his presidency will look like. More specifically, what are Obama’s plans for job creation and reviving America’s ailing economy? Will he endorse something similar to Bush’s economic stimulus package or propose something different?

It’s clear that our new leaders have a tough job ahead of them. U.S. employment fell by 1.2 million in the first 10 months of 2008. Meanwhile, paychecks dropped by 2.5 percent (adjusted for inflation), according to Heidi Shierholz, an economist at the Economic Policy Institute in Washington, D.C.

So America is ripe for a remedy, but experts caution it’s too early to say with certainty what the new Obama administration will do. Some say there will be both long- and short-term moves in the Obama economic plan to help improve the situation. Others warn, however, that whatever steps he takes will only serve as a cushion for the inevitably bumpy road ahead.

“The Democratic takeover won’t do much in the short run (3-9 months). While stimulus package(s) will soften the current deeply declining economy, we are facing a deep recession, perhaps the worst since WWII,” says Philip Friedman, president emeritus and professor of economics at Golden Gate University in San Francisco. “In the long run, 2-5 years, productivity and innovation will drive growth and thus wage increases.”

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To improve matters in the long-run, Obama’s economic plan should make policy changes to research and development subsidies, education grants and worker-retraining funds, Friedman says. Amit Batabyal, Gosnell Professor of Economics at Rochester Institute of Technology in Rochester, N.Y., says America needs to focus more on economic policies with a long-term payoff, such as education. Making sure workers have the education, skills and training they need for in-demand jobs can reap benefits for two to three decades, Batabyal says.

Shierholz suspects that the Obama economic plan may take steps to expand unemployment insurance, shore up state budgets, and put a job-creation plan in place-all of which could help boost incomes in the short-term. The Obama economic plan aims to create 5 million new jobs by investing $150 billion over 10 years in clean energy, something Shierholz and others see as a long-term step in the right direction.

In addition, stimulating investment in the business community is critical for increasing the number of jobs available, says Maurice Baskin, an attorney who represents employers at Venable LLP in Washington, D.C. Businesses are currently squeezed by the credit crunch, Baskin explains, and they’re sharing the pain with employees; reversing that means keeping a “lid on taxes” and not imposing new regulations on businesses, which can hinder their competitiveness.

Finally, stepping back and taking an even broader view, many experts agree that beyond concrete policies, the Obama economic plan must give workers a better sense of hope than the economic stimulus package does right now. “If you put $500 in workers’ pockets, that’s not going to make the economy right and solve the issues. The issues are solved by leadership inspiring people back to aspirational behavior, which has driven this country all along,” says Bernard Layton, managing director at the Chicago office of Stanton Chase International, an executive search firm.

Related Links:
Rising U.S. Unemployment Rates
Making Sense of a Softening Job Market
Joe the Plumber and the Middle-Class Squeeze


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