Unlike the federal response to every modern economic downturn, policymakers’ response to the Great Recession has featured one idea that’s been equal parts conservative and ridiculous: we’ve allowed the job market to deteriorate, on purpose, by allowing the public sector to shed hundreds of thousands of jobs.
As became clear on ABC’s “This Week” yesterday, it’s a detail Sen. Rand Paul (R-Ky.) neither knows nor understands.
Hoping to challenge Paul Krugman, the Kentucky Republican asked incredulously, “Are you arguing that there are fewer government employees under Obama than they were under Bush?”
Told that the facts are incontrovertible, Paul responded, “No, the size of government is enormous under President Obama.”
It’s unsettling, to put it mildly, to see such conspicuous ignorance play out on national television. The truth really isn’t that hard to understand — state and local governments, strapped for cash, felt compelled to lay off legions of public-sector workers, including teachers, police officers, and firefighters. All told, since the economy bottomed out, America’s private sector has added 4.6 million jobs, while the nation’s public sector has shed 571,000 jobs. Since the start of the recession, we’ve lost more jobs in government than any other sector of the economy.








