In Romney's speech he made some claims, let's look at them.
Middle class 'crushed'
One section in particular drew our attention. Romney declared that "this Obama economy has crushed the middle class," and rattled off some horrible-sounding statistics. But we found some of them to be exaggerated or in need of added context.
Romney: In the richest country in the history of the world, this Obama economy has crushed the middle class. Family income has fallen by $4,000, but health insurance premiums are higher, food prices are higher, utility bills are higher, and gasoline prices have doubled. Today more Americans wake up in poverty than ever before. Nearly one out of six Americans is living in poverty. Look around you. These are not strangers. These are our brothers and sisters, our fellow Americans.
Family income: Family income has not fallen by $4,000 under Obama, as Romney implied. That figure comes from a study by Sentier Research, and while most of the drop occurred after the president took office in January 2009, some of it (the study didn't say exactly how much) occurred in the 13 months before that.
The study measured the drop in family income starting in December 2007, when the recession officially started, and ending in June 2012. The study noted that income has fallen more since the economic recovery officially began (in June 2009) than during the recession itself.
Poverty: It's true that "more Americans wake up in poverty than ever before," as Romney said. But it's also true that there are more Americans, period.
The poverty rate— that is, the percentage of all Americans in poverty — is nowhere near a record, even for the relatively brief historical period since 1959, when the government first started measuring poverty.
The raw number of individuals in poverty in 2010 was 46.2 million, according to the most recent Census figures. And the poverty rate went up that year to 15.1% — the highest since 1993. But as Census noted, that "was 7.3 percentage points lower than the poverty rate in 1959, the first year for which poverty estimates are available." Furthermore, Census noted that the number in poverty had increased for four consecutive years, so the rise started well before Obama took office.
Gasoline: Romney said "gasoline prices have doubled" since Obama took office. That's correct, but only because gasoline prices were unusually depressed when Obama was inaugurated due to the recession and financial crisis.
The average price for regular gasoline was $3.84 last week, according to the U.S. Energy Information Administration, a bit more than double the $1.89 average on the week Obama was sworn in. But the average exceeded $4 a gallon for eight weeks during the summer of 2008, and it has never reached $4 under Obama.
Premiums: Romney said that "health insurance premiums are higher" under Obama. But premiums have been going up for years. Experts say the federal health care law was responsible for only a small part of the recent hike in employer-based plans.
The average cost of an employer-sponsored family insurance plan went up 9% from 2010 to 2011, according to the Kaiser Family Foundation's annual survey. Several independent experts told us that rising medical costs were still the main culprit. The health care law, they said, was responsible for 1 point to 3 points of that 9-point increase.
And the reason for that is improved coverage. Insurance companies are required under the law to include free preventive care, coverage for adult children up to age 26, coverage for children regardless of preexisting conditions, and an increase in annual limits.
Rising premiums are nothing new. Between 2001 and 2011, family premiums for employer-sponsored plans went up 113%. Year to year the size of the change in premiums has varied, but it has always been in one direction: up.
Food: Romney said "food prices are higher" under Obama, and that's also true, though not by a lot. The index measuring the average consumer price of all food and beverages (including restaurant meals) stood just 6.2% higher last month than it was when Obama took office, according to figures from the Bureau of Labor Statistics.
Another middle-class falsehood
Romney said "unlike President Obama, I will not raise taxes on the middle class." But Obama has not raised taxes on middle-income taxpayers, and, in fact, he has targeted tax cuts and credits to benefit them.
Among the president's major tax cuts and credits:
•Making Work Pay Tax Credit. For two years, 2009 and again in 2010, the stimulus law provided up to $400 to individuals earning up to $75,000, and up to $800 to couples earning up to $150,000.
•Payroll tax cut. When the Making Work Pay credit expired, Obama successfully pushed Congress to cut the employee portion of the Social Security payroll tax in 2011 from 6.2% to 4.2%. The tax is applied to the first $110,100 of wages, and it resulted in an annual maximum savings of $2,200. The tax cut was extended through 2012.
•American Opportunity Tax Credit. Also part of the stimulus, this is a college tuition tax credit. It modified and expanded the existing Hope Credit. It was intended for two years, but was extended through 2012. The full credit of $2,500 is available for individuals earning $80,000 or less and families earning $160,000 or less. The Hope Credit maximum was $1,800 in 2008.
The Republican nominee did not explain what he meant by his remarks. But some Republicans have claimed that the president's health care law amounts to a tax on the middle class, because it imposes a penalty on those who do not buy health insurance. But, as we have written before, those arguments are overstated.
The nonpartisan Congressional Budget Office estimated that about 3 million taxpayers earning less than $120,000 will pay an average penalty of $667 by 2016.
Tax exaggeration
Kerry Healey, who served as Romney's lieutenant governor, boasted that Romney "cut taxes 19 times" as governor. But tax rates remained unchanged under Romney, and Club for Growth, a conservative anti-tax group, called his tax record "mixed," because he raised hundreds of millions of dollars by increasing fees and closing loopholes in the corporate tax structure.
The Romney campaign's list of 19 tax cuts includes some business tax cuts and a host of relatively minor cuts and credits — including a couple of two-day sales-tax holidays, which Club for Growth dismissed as "gimmicky." The list also includes such things as a "fire safety tax deduction," a "motion picture tax credit" and a "historic rehabilitation tax credit."
In its white paper on Romney, Club for Growth singled out two tax cuts for praise: legislation he signed to prevent state residents from having to pay $275 million in retroactive capital gains taxes, and another bill that provided property tax relief for seniors.
But Club for Growth called his record "mixed" because of the new revenue he raised. As we have written before, Romney in his first year raised fees by more than $400 million, and generated another $150 million by closing loopholes.
Welfare law 'gutted'
Former House speaker Newt Gingrich dutifully repeated a meritless Romney claim, asserting that Obama "gutted" the 1990s' welfare overhaul, and accusing him of "waiving" the law's work requirement.
Gingrich: Tragically, President Obama gutted this achievement [welfare reform]. …Obama's waiving of the work requirements in welfare reform is just one example of his direct repudiation of President Reagan's values.
Gingrich didn't elaborate or supply evidence of how Obama's actions "gutted" the law. Gingrich would have been particularly qualified to do so — if there was substance to the accusation — since it was he who pushed the welfare bill through Congress when he was speaker and Bill Clinton was president. The fact is, Obama has simply allowed state governors to seek waivers from the law's requirements if they can propose a more effective way to move people from welfare to work, and show that they can produce that result. Nothing has been waived yet.
And as we've noted, states have persistently fallen far short of achieving the law's goal of putting at least half of recipients in jobs or job training. When Obama took office, only 29% of cash assistance recipients nationally were complying with the work requirement, and that had not changed as of the most recent figures.