So put yourself in the boss' shoes. If demand for your products and services is still low and the government offers to withhold $2,000 in taxes, that's probably not enough to justify a $60,000 investment in human capital. It's precisely this concern that has critics of the $15 billion bill wondering whether the only employers who will take advantage of this tax credit would have hired anyway.
You can lead a horse to water, but you can't make him drink if he's not thirsty; and you can dangle tax credits in front of employers, but you can't make them bite if there's no demand for what they're selling. So let's take a look at the state of demand. We all know consumer confidence is in the toilet. But Tim Duy crunches some numbers on a relatively obscure economic indicator called "real personal income less transfer payments." Simply defined, this is what people make in income not including all money they get from the government (such as unemployment benefits). The red line is the trend line of rising personal income since 1991. The blue line is the actual data. Personal income has fallen off severely since 2007, about eight percent.
At the same time, overall disposable income -- what people have the ability to actually spend -- has stayed steady over the last two and a half years. Why? Because of government transfers to Americans in the form of tax breaks and automatic stabilizers. Here's what the government's helping hand looks like:
![[Figure C]](http://www.epi.org/page/-/ib265/ib265-figurec.jpg)
Paul Krugman had a nice piece over the weekend explaining why jobless benefits are a "good, quick, administratively easy way to increase demand, which is what we really need." What we really need is jobs. New tax credits might help. Healthy demand would help more.
This article available online at:
http://www.theatlantic.com/business/archive/2010/03/why-the-15-billion-jobs-bill-wont-be-enough/37159/
