Derek Thompson - Derek Thompson is a staff editor at TheAtlantic.com, where he writes about economics, business, and technology. Derek has also written for BusinessWeek, Slate and The Daily Beast.
Masket is tracking income between the third quarter in the year before the election and the second quarter of the election year. If if divide Q3-2009 into Q2-2010 figures, we get 0.015 -- or 1.5 percent income growth. On the X-axis, that would put 2010 between Reagan 1982 and Clinton 1994.
You might be wondering why real disposable income figures aren't even worse, considering the severity of the recession and the stickiness of our high unemployment. First, the government has sent hundreds of billions of dollars in checks to Americans to keep them spending, through the stimulus and unemployment insurance and Census payrolls. Second, consider the "real" in real disposable income means adjusted for inflation. In the 1970s and early 1980s, high inflation gnawed at families' buying power. Today, inflation is so low we're worried it might turn negative. Low inflation is bad for the economy because it means families and companies are slow to spend money. But low inflation is OK if you've got money to spend because it keeps prices down.
As my colleague Dan Indiviglio recently reported, the latest income statistics add insult to injury, with government money winding down and private incomes slow to pick up the slack.
Of course, no two elections are alike, and one statistic -- even one key statistic -- in an election just an ingredient in a very large stew. But as you watch the returns tomorrow, remember this indicator as evidence that Democrats are running into a strong headwind. It is the number that best gets at the question, "Are you better off now than you were a year ago?"
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