Common reasoning in politics, in my experience, is to claim that changes in economic policy don't show their effects for 4-8 years; in other words, up and downturns in the economy should be traced to the previous guys in charge. In this case, the economic troubles of today are the fault of the Clinton administration, according to this theory.
I tend to think it's bunk and the president, hell the government in general, doesn't hold enough sway on economics to have so potent an effect, they can just amplify or dampen existing trends via taxes, unemployment efforts, etc etc. Really I think the current economy of... well, the world really, is due to raw idiocy on the parts of business owners. They decided that it would save them money (and thus increase their profits) to use the cheapest labor possible, and as such have slashed the income of the people buying their products (both by underpaying them and by outsourcing jobs, much as I hate to use a buzzword here), leading to a spiral of fail that lands us in today. Admittedly, I'm probably heavily influenced by being in Michigan and thus seeing the effects these tactics had on the auto industry, but I don't htink it's outlandish to think this was a large trend whose repercussions are finally being felt. Basically, the invisible hand doesn't work, these days you make more money short term by screwing over the overall economy in the long term.