For What It's Worth

The Hollow Recovery: Where Are the Little Guys?

By Kenneth Eisold
Wed, 21 Oct 2009 20:16:53 GMT

Something is off about the news of our economic "recovery" -- and I don't just mean the fact that unemployment reaches 10 percent just as the Dow climbs over 10,000. That's troubling, but it's not hidden.

In Monday's New York Times, Paul Krugman ("The Banks Are Not All Right") put his finger on part of the problem:
"While the wheeler-dealer side of the financial industry, a k a trading operations, is highly profitable again, the part of banking that really matters -- lending, which fuels investment and job creation -- is not. Key banks remain financially weak, and their weakness is hurting the economy as a whole."
In other words, the part of the financial industry that grabs the headlines is trumpeting their success; the less visible part that actually fuels recovery is not.

This week's Economist ("Slim Pickings, No Appetite") elaborates on the problem:
"Big public firms have relatively easy access to loans and equity once again…. But only a quarter of America's listed companies can tap bond markets. Beneath them is a mass of small and medium-sized firms that collectively employs about half of American workers and is heavily reliant on banks."
Not only is the economy split, so are our minds. That is, we know about the problem with unemployment and we see the soaring profits on Wall Street -- but how do we connect the two? We know that some are thriving -- they are at the top of the heap, the biggest, the richest, the most profitable firms. But who is left out? Who are the losers in this "recovery"?

These articles provided the context for an article in The Wall Street Journal that threw me for a loop in August: "Halting Recovery Divides America in Two" (subscription required). At first I thought they were thinking, as I was, about the gap between the rich and poor, the investors in hedge funds and the unemployed, homeowners and the dispossessed. But the article quickly made clear that they had a different division in mind:
"At one extreme of Corporate America is a cadre of companies and banks, mostly big, united by an enviable access to credit. At the other end are firms, chiefly small, with slumping sales that can't borrow or are facing stiff terms to do so."
I see now the article was a precursor to these more recent accounts of the slow recovery at the lower end of the economy. At first, though, I thought, how could they think that the normal reader would not have the same mistaken assumption I did? What America "divided in two" could they possible assume we had in mind? Do their readers never think about the poor except as a drag on the economy, or the unemployed except as a loss of consumer power?

Now I understand the unspoken assumption: At the top are the ones that matter. Everyone else is split off. Down below are the unemployed, the small firms or family businesses, the dispossessed, those struggling with medical or education bills, the middle class -- you and me.

As we struggle toward recovery, it's hard to keep the little guys in mind.

Do you feel this has been a "hollow" recovery? Does it feel like the economic recovery will leave the little guy behind? Weigh in here.

-- Ken Eisold, Ph.D., is a practicing psychoanalyst and organizational consultant. He has served as president of the International Society for the Psychoanalytic Study of Organizations and as a director of the Organizational Program at the William Alanson White Institute, which he helped to found. For several years he directed the A. K. Rice Institute's National Conference on Leadership and Authority. He lives and works in New York City. For more information visit KenEisold.com.

Editor's Note: This post originally appeared Oct. 21 at KenEisold.com. The opinions expressed are solely those of the author and do not necessarily reflect the views of Comcast.


Message Edited by Kenneth_Eisold on 10-21-2009 04:27 PM

Comment

Wall Street is another ponzi scheme. Only difference is the only ones that will come away unharmed are the ceo's and since they own the politicians they won't EVER be put in prison even thought that is exactly where they belong.

Wed, 21 Oct 2009 23:55:19 GMT | doralyn

Comment

It has been almost two years and the recovery has barely moved. The stimulus is not working even though J. Biden says differently.
What will we do? Have another stimulus? Add to the deficit? Job loss went down 2,000 jobs in September.
Almost at 10% by November. (actually 18% with those who have stopped looking and those that are lucky enough to get a part-time job are not included in the govt 9.8%). Job loss of 500,000 per month will continue.
All jobs have outsourced to China, Mexico and India. There are no mfg. jobs in the US. Customer service jobs, many, are gone there too. ex. Dell, ex. Verizon.,etc.
Where are the green jobs that are suppose to be here and good paying? All I hear about is the expanding government jobs, the Census Bureau - 140,000 so far.
There is no answer at this time. It will be 1 to 2 more years if any jobs arise in this country.
Perhaps the unemployed will just get a welfare check and a debit card for groceries. That's All!

Thu, 22 Oct 2009 02:35:18 GMT | sikki

Comment

Many people talk about jobs and jobs losses but not much is heard about UNDEREMPLOYMENT.
Losing a job in this ecomony is hard enough but even when a job is offered is seems to be a growing trend of less hours .

Thu, 29 Oct 2009 18:06:38 GMT | Pin9540

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