Who creates most jobs? Hint:
It’s not the government. Almost everyone seems to grasp that the private sector
is the true jobs machine. But here’s a notable exception to the consensus: the
editorial page of The New York Times. The other day, its lead editorial was “The Myth of Job Creation: The government does in fact
create jobs, important jobs, millions of them.” In 35 years, I can’t recall ever
writing a column refuting an editorial. But this one warrants special treatment
because the Times’ argument is so simplistic, the subject is so important and
the Times is such an influential institution.
Let’s examine the Times’
argument. First, it quotes both Mitt Romney and President Obama as embracing
the consensus. Obama says: “This notion that I think government creates jobs,
that that somehow is the answer. That’s not what I believe.”
Completely wrong, says the
Times. Government does create jobs, including “teachers, police officers,
firefighters, soldiers, sailors, astronauts, epidemiologists, antiterrorism
agents, park rangers, diplomats. ...” There are 22 million federal, state and
local workers, notes the Times.