Still Too Little and WAY TOO REPUBLICAN

hooverbuttonThe Financial Time’s Martin Wolf adds his voice to the growing number of economists saying the Obama financial plan is a dud.

“Last week, President-elect Barack Obama duly unveiled his American recovery and reinvestment plan. Its title was aptly chosen, for Mr Obama spoke, astonishingly, as if the policies of the rest of the world had no bearing on the fate of the US. He spoke, too, as if a large fiscal stimulus would be enough to restore prosperity. If that is what he believes, Mr Obama is in for a shock. The difficulties he confronts are much deeper and more global than that. “

His criticisms echo many of those I’ve mentioned before as well as those you’ve read if you’ve followed Dr. Krugman’s op-ed pieces, blog, or my cites of his comments here.  Wolf warns that the U.S. could face the same type of ‘lost decade’ suffered by the Japanese after the Asian Financial Crisis of the 1990s.  The Japanese experience is well documented and studied.  Wolf cites a book by Richard Koo of the Nomura Research Institute that points to the combination of downward asset prices combined with high indebtedness in the private sector that forces both households and businesses to stop spending to pay down debt.  In *The Holy Grail of Macroeconomics: Lessons from Japan’s Great Recession (Wiley, 2008), Koo documents that the government winds up being both the lender and the borrower of last resort.  Recognition by the government of these theories of depression economics led the Japanese government to take action that led to a prolonged slump instead of a prolonged recession.

The Obama administration is holding on to the tax cut portion of its plan despite decades of economic research showing that tax cuts are not as efficient as government spending in aggregate-demand led recessions.  Now the Financial Times is no ‘liberal’ rag.  Its closest U.S. counterpart is the Wall Street Journal.  Wolf not only argues that the spending portion of the package is too small, but that the bigger the tax cut portion of package, the bigger the fiscal stimulus must be.  I’ve highlighted some of his relevant arguments below.

Any complacency about US recovery prospects is perilous. Moreover, the fact that the US has a structural current account deficit has bearing on the second point Mr Obama’s advisers must make. Fiscal stimulus is a necessary palliative for a debt-encumbered economy afflicted by falling asset prices. But the likely longevity and scale of the needed fiscal deficits are quite scary.

“The Congressional Budget Office forecasts that US output will be 7 per cent below potential over the next two years, on unchanged policies. If so, the actual deficit should now be much larger than the structural one. It is easy to see, therefore, why the critics argue that the Obama plan for an additional fiscal stimulus of 5 per cent of GDP over two years is too small, even though the CBO forecasts a baseline deficit of 8.3 per cent of GDP this year. It is also easy to understand why many object strongly to tax cuts, since the more likely cuts are to be saved the larger the package must be – and, in addition, taxes will clearly have to rise in the longer term.

The bigger point, however, is not that the package needs to be larger, although it does. It is that escaping from huge and prolonged deficits will be very hard. As long as the private sector seeks to reduce its debt and the current account is in structural deficit, the US must run big fiscal deficits if it is to sustain full employment.”

Obama’s tax cuts, at this point, seem clearly aimed at placating Republicans in the Senate to achieve some magical, happy, consensus vote of 80 that says yes, he can.  I’m trying hard right now to determine if this is some weird need to look popular and right or an even weirder need to be able to say “see, everyone thought it the right thing to do, it wasn’t just my policy” if and in this case WHEN it fails miserably.  I’m tempted to say both and probably more right up to and including the weird fetish Obama seems to have with Republican Presidents like Lincoln and Reagan, himself.

David Sirota clearly points to continual inconsistencies in Obama’s campaign rhetoric in his column.

“The veto is the legislative equivalent of a nuclear warhead – a rarely used instrument of devastating force that singularly vaporizes the votes of 535 elected representatives. So when a president-elect issues a veto threat before being sworn into office, it sets off a particularly big explosion because it is a deliberate agenda-setting edict about priorities for the next four years.

That’s why every American who isn’t a financial industry executive should be nervous.

After President Bush this week asked Congress to release the bank bailout fund’s remaining $350 billion, Obama pledged to veto any bill rejecting the request, meaning he is beginning his presidency not by “turn(ing) the page on policies that have put the greed and irresponsibility of Wall Street before the hard work and sacrifice of folks on Main Street,” as he once pledged. Instead, he is promising a mushroom cloud unless lawmakers let taxpayer cash continue flowing to the biggest of Big Money interests.

Amid paeans to “new politics,” we’re watching old-school paybacks from a politician who raised more Wall Street dough than any other – a president-to-be whose inauguration festivities are being underwritten by the very bankers who are benefiting from the bailout largesse. Safely distanced from electoral pressure, Obama has appointed conservative economists to top White House positions; floated a tax cut for banks; and is now trying to preserve corporate welfare that almost exclusively benefits the political donor class.

This isn’t much-ballyhooed “change” – it’s money politics by a different name. How do we know? Because neither Obama nor anyone else is genuinely trying to justify the bailout on its merits – and understandably so. Even the most basic queries prove such merits don’t exist.”

I think I’ve indicated as strongly as possible that these are truly perilous economics times.  We need leadershipreaganbutton with a bold vision based on knowledge of what works.  FDR didn’t have much economic theory  when he confronted the Great Depression.  Barrack Obama does and yet continues to make the same kinds of mistakes that Hoover made in the name of “new politics”.  I know how much taking a stand in the PUMA corner lands one in La La Land in the eyes of many progressives/liberals. So many voices in the wilderness of spam shout that I’m just not giving Obama a chance because I hate him so much because Hillary lost.  I’d also bet that these same folks believed in Santa Claus way pass the normal age.  If you think it’s wrong because it’s coming from a PUMA site, then I’m just going to ask you to look at the facts here and look at the voices of dissent.  Krugman and Sirota are icons of the left.  Wolf is British.  These folks are saying the same things that I have said for months.  The guy isn’t who he said he was and you can tell a lot by the actions he’s taking now. There is a lot at stake here and it’s time to stop hiding behind the feel good historic nature of this president and expect something more than repackaged trickle-down economics.

Note:  You’ll have to be patient with me for a bit since this is the beginning of a semester and I’m also facing some publishing deadlines.  I’m afraid my focus will be elsewhere so I won’t be as consistent as usual in my blogging efforts.


7 Comments on “Still Too Little and WAY TOO REPUBLICAN”

  1. Steven Mather's avatar Steven Mather says:

    dakinikat,

    Because I read your work, I was unsurprised when the Canadian right wing touted tax cuts as the way to economic recovery. I believe they view tax cuts like Monty Python views SPAM. Tax cuts, to a Tory, are like apple cider vinegar. They cure everything.

    I love your work.

    s

  2. BK's avatar BK says:

    1) What’s republican about it? Surely you realize that there’s not a dime’s worth of difference between the two parties. It might even be more accurate to say that we live in a one-party state with two factions.

    2) I was driving through “Metry” when this popped into my head – so much of this country has become a rat’s nest of disgusting shallowness, beggar-thy-neighbor politics, pettiness, and corruption (not just political), all tied together by the shared belief in the soteriological value of spending money, and topped off with a rotten creamy scum of sex and death-worship (turn on the tube if you wanna see what I mean). What’s the value of saving it? Why save it? I think a serious argument can be made that rather than trying to reinflate the boom, one should be damn glad that it’s dead. Here’s something I would be interested in seeing: how M3 tracks against obesity in children seven to eleven years of age.

  3. dakinikat's avatar dakinikat says:

    Actually, there’s not a lot of difference between the parties other than the social values scraps they throw at their bases. It’s all about ensuring their place at the table and enriching themselves.

    and i’m not one for crass consumerism and this massive dependence on stupid things for existance … give me a sweet little farm, a few animals, a source of clean water, my own little solar generator and I’d be happy … I worry about a country whose populace is so dependent on stuff of little substance that it can’t survive a few days on its own without electricity, mcdonald’s and government bailouts… and big business is the worst, the last thing they want is competition, they’re all about being monopolies who want to privatize their profits and nationalize their losses, all while skimming the revenues to a bunch of old men that couldn’t manage a day care efficiently.

  4. BK's avatar BK says:

    I remember when I went to New Brunswick (the province in Canada, not the city in New Jersey.) I was really favorably impressed by it – sure they’re all a bunch of pinkos (heh,) but it seemed despite the relative poverty it suffers, it was better than richer areas in quite a few ways. In the few days that I was there, I saw maybe 2 cops (contrast that to a rural area in America, where one would see far, far more, and they’d all be engaged in running speed traps or checkpoints) and none of the poverty that one sees in places like the Mississippi delta where the top of a hill will be covered with HUGE mansions, and the bottom will feature shacks that sometimes only have a blanket as a door.
    I’ve rambled a bit, but my point is this: what’s better, a relatively well-off place where people drop off their aged parents at the hospital on thanksgiving and christmas to get rid of them, or a down-at-the-heels place with actual people?
    Without a solid social fabric filled by fairly benevolent, open people who possess a large degree of personal liberty, economic circumstances are largely an ephemera, and no point in worrying about reviving them.
    So, and perhaps this is controversial, let it fall. Because it doesn’t seem like the deeply entrenched problems in this country will go away of their own accord.

  5. daki-

    you’ve been tagged in our PUMA meme.

    http://thepetuniapolitikposts.blogspot.com/

    get to it, woman!

  6. Jmac's avatar Jmac says:

    The Financial Times printed my letter-to-ed this week:

    Sir, Clive Cook (“Obama’s shot in the arm is too small”) bemoans the fact that Barack Obama is not going to get a quick stimulus plan through Congress.
    He could, Bill Clinton got his first economic plan through without one Republican vote. It hurt him in the mid-term elections, but it got the economy started in the right direction.
    Mr. Obama still wants to be all things to all people. He wants the plan to pass with 80 votes in the Senate. That might help him politically, but the stimulus package should be about one thing and one thing only – jobs, and not just Mr. Obama’s job.

  7. dakinikat's avatar dakinikat says:

    Jmac: very very kewl!!!