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Divided We Stand

Divided We Stand
New book about the 2020 election.

Saturday, July 1, 2023

Misery Index

Our most recent book is titled Divided We Stand: The 2020 Elections and American Politics.  Among other things, it discusses the politics of economic policy.

Neil Irwin at Axios:
The White House and its allies are launching a full-court press to celebrate economic gains and set up core themes for President Biden's re-election campaign next year. Beneath the rhetoric, there is a basic observation on which the Democratic pitch rests: The current mix of U.S. unemployment and inflation is entirely consistent with rates that have historically tended to get presidents re-elected.

Why it matters: While inflation is still uncomfortably high, the overall "misery index" — created by adding together the unemployment rate and inflation — has fallen precipitously over the last year.Public opinion on the economy remains quite negative, yet recent history suggests voters can embrace a president seeking re-election, even with worse inflation and labor market conditions than we're experiencing now.

The misery index, invented by economist Arthur Okun in the 1970s as a shorthand for economic discomfort, is a crude measure, though simplicity can be a virtue.

By the numbers: In May, the index was 7.8%. That is lower than the misery indexes in the months that Ronald Reagan (11.4%), Bill Clinton (8.7%), George W. Bush (9%) and Barack Obama (9.5%) were re-elected.Public opinion on the economy has been highly negative throughout Biden's time in the White House, in significant part reflecting high inflation. But there are some early signs that could be changing.
The preliminary University of Michigan sentiment survey for June surged, for example, as respondents' expectations for inflation over the next year plunged to 3.3%, from 4.2%.