A lot of liberals like to look back on the 90s like it was a Golden Age (though, compared to what we've had the past three years, it's unsderstandable). But were the 90s really all that great? It's not like we had 8 years of high growth and low unemployment. That was only towards the end, after the East Asian markets collapsed and money started flooding into the U.S. looking for a safe haven for investment.
For the first haf of the Clinton years, the job market was stagnant, wage growth was stagnant, things weren't all that great, though they were better than the Ford-Carter-Reagan-Bush years. Back in the 90s we were talking of a jobless recovery (as opposed to today's jobloss recovery).
But now the money's fled, the jobs are gone, unemployment's up, and it's feeling a lot like the 80s all over again.
Were the 90s a blip, and now we're back to normal? Or is this the blip?
For the first haf of the Clinton years, the job market was stagnant, wage growth was stagnant, things weren't all that great, though they were better than the Ford-Carter-Reagan-Bush years. Back in the 90s we were talking of a jobless recovery (as opposed to today's jobloss recovery).
But now the money's fled, the jobs are gone, unemployment's up, and it's feeling a lot like the 80s all over again.
Were the 90s a blip, and now we're back to normal? Or is this the blip?
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