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A tax cut has only one-quarter of the value of a spending increase of the same size, in terms of expanding the economy. Every dollar spent on unemployment benefits is worth $1.63 of quick economic expansion. Food stamps boost the economy even more. The overarching goal -- and promise -- of saving or creating 3.5 million jobs is built on vagaries such as these. Job creation is counted in different ways, but none that can isolate the stimulus package from the multitude of forces shaping the economy. And there's no reliable way to measure how many jobs the stimulus will stop from disappearing. Companies don't report layoffs avoided by federal aid. Instead, forecasters estimated how low the economy might have sunk without the stimulus, and how high that would drive unemployment up. The idea is to have about 3.5 million more people working than might have been the case if the government had done nothing. Economists on Obama's team projected that the stimulus will mean an unemployment rate nearly two points lower at the end of next year than it would have been absent the plan. Far below the theoretical, in the grounded world of road repairs, health technology projects and all the other contracts made possible by the federal spending, actual jobs will be created. Those building blocks of employment will be tracked. But under White House guidance to federal departments, they are not to be reported. The reasoning: They are "likely to be inconsistent with macroeconomic estimates." "Uniform reporting requirements for estimates of job creation will be specified at a later time," said a February memo from the White House Office Management and Budget. By the end of Obama's term, the true effects of the stimulus might best be measured family by family, in the way famously posed by Ronald Reagan days before the election that brought him to office: "It might be well if you ask yourself: Are you better off than you were four years ago?"
[Associated
Press;
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