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42 Presidential Stud. Q. 1 (2012)

handle is hein.journals/pstlssqty42 and id is 1 raw text is: 






ARTICLES






                        Editor's Introduction



                                   PAUL J. QUIRK
                               University of British Columbia




     As  the calamitous economic events of the last several years have shown, the role of
the president in governing the economy has become  more complex,  more difficult, and
more critical-not only to the president's political success but, more importantly, to the
economic  well-being of the nation and of the world. Some  of the developments  that
warrant these observations are temporary, connected with a worldwide  financial crisis
and economic  downturn  whose  effects will be manifest for several more years, but not
indefinitely. Other conditions-global warming,  the rise of economic  inequality, the
challenge of achieving long-term  fiscal balance, and the vulnerability of the United
States' position in the world economy, among others-will not fade away in the foresee-
able future. In a word, the economy will be an even larger preoccupation for presidents
in the foreseeable future than it has been in the relatively recent past-even though it has
always been a very large one. If scholars of the presidency want to be relevant to the
institution, therefore, they will need to give far more attention to presidential economic
governance then they have in the past.
     At least since the 1946 Full Employment Act, one of the president's main roles has
been (in the usual, though misleading usage) to manage the economy. The president's
success or failure in this role-and good or bad luck with respect to it-have long been
recognized as the single most important determinant of his political success. Neverthe-
less, scholars of the presidency have not made correspondingly large investments of effort
in studying the president's conduct and performance as manager  of the economy. The
urgency of their doing so, however, has never been more apparent.
     The  period from the beginning of the financial crisis in 2008 to the present has been
an extraordinary, harrowing time for the American economy,  economic  and regulatory
policy makers, and the president in his role in economic governance. The  nation has
witnessed a collapse of the real estate and mortgage markets; a severe retrenchment and
near collapse of financial markets; the worst recession and economic slump since the


     Paul J. Quirk holds the Phil Lind Chair in U.S. Politics and Representation at the University of British
Columbia. He has published widely on the presidency, Congress, public opinion, and public policy.

Presidential Studies Quarterly 42, no. 1 (March)  1
© 2012 Center for the Study of the Presidency

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