Published online by Cambridge University Press: 27 September 2012
How relatively good or bad were the economic performances of our past presidents?The answers to this question remain unclear. Most evaluations of presidentialperformance cloud the issue with partisan bias and subjective judgments or mixeconomics together with other policy areas. To address these shortcomings, thisarticle uses new data from the Measuring Worth Project to calculate the relativeeconomic rankings of the United States presidents who served from 1789 until 2009.It analyzes up to 220 years of data on economic growth, unemployment, inflation,government debt, balance of payments, income inequality, currency strength, interestrates, and stock market returns to estimate an economic grade point average for eachpresident. Then, these estimates are used to test for correlations with othervariables to generate hypotheses regarding the conditions for superior and inferioreconomic performance.