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Stimulation Without the S-WordPosted on Oct 7, 2009By E.J. Dionne So now we know: The economic stimulus plan passed by Congress at the beginning of the year was not big enough. We also know this: Once it secures a health care bill—yes, it will get one—the Obama administration from that moment to the 2010 midterm elections will be all about jobs, jobs, jobs. In the face of persistently high unemployment, the administration’s economic advisers have been reviewing proposals to create jobs, and President Barack Obama’s aides insist they knew all along that the original stimulus, as one of them put it, would “never fill the full gap from the recession.” For political reasons, what comes next will not be called “a second stimulus,” but further stimulation is very much on the mind of an administration that hoped unemployment would be dropping by now. Already, we are seeing the beginnings of a debate that will get us nowhere. It involves those who say that the stimulus worked and those who say it didn’t. This is nonsensical because the stimulus has certainly “worked” as far as it went. Just about every respectable economist believes that without it, the economy would be in worse condition than it is now, and that heavy spending from the stimulus this year will prevent even more severe employment losses. Advertisement Moreover, pretending as Congress did that an expensive fix in the alternative minimum tax was “stimulus” simply wiped away $70 billion that could have been used for programs or tax cuts more likely to put people to work. The White House is in a position of simultaneously defending the stimulus and urging that we do more. While the recovery act “has been a major contributor to stemming job loss and saving and creating jobs,” said one administration official, “we’ve always known that additional measures for job creation were something the administration would support and plan for.” It is a sign of the gravity of unemployment that even liberals who typically see business tax cuts as a highly inefficient way to reduce unemployment are now supporting a tax credit for new jobs—an idea that was knocked out of the original stimulus proposal. Larry Mishel, president of the Economic Policy Institute, a liberal think tank, does not believe that the tax credit is sufficient on its own, and he continues to favor public works jobs, especially in areas of very high unemployment. Nonetheless, Mishel said he now supports the tax credit because unemployment is so stubbornly high. “It’s such a desperate situation,” he said, “that we need to do things that move the dial.” The administration and the Democratic Congress are also likely to move quickly on traditional ways to pump money into the economy by helping Americans most hurt in the downturn. These include extending unemployment insurance, expanding food stamp coverage and offering more help so the unemployed won’t lose health insurance. All have a high economic return because the recipients, because of need, spend the money quickly. With so many states now being forced to cut their budgets and raise taxes at the same time—the exact opposite of a stimulus—more direct assistance to states is also likely to be part of a new jobs package. Like the job-creation tax credit, helping states might find some Republican support. Moreover, 19 of the 37 governorships at stake in 2010 are now held by Democrats, and many of those statehouses are vulnerable to a Republican takeover. By easing the states’ fiscal situations, an infusion of new federal money could also bolster the political standing of the party that holds power. At least some economists, according to administration allies, are also suggesting ways of extending easy credit to American manufacturers and boosting government purchases of American-made products. A more aggressive approach to jobs is inevitable because high unemployment over a long period not only is a social and economic calamity but also stands as the biggest obstacle Democrats face in the 2010 voting. Rarely have an administration’s economic and political imperatives been so closely aligned. Elsewhere: . CommentsAre you a Truthdig member yet? Login now, or register with Truthdig. Add Your Comment
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A Progressive Journal of News and Opinion. Editor, Robert Scheer. Publisher, Zuade Kaufman.
Copyright © 2009 Truthdig, L.L.C. All rights reserved. |
By ocjim, October 11 at 11:06 pm #
With Wall Street’s recovery, fat cats got what they want. Basically it will be “to hell with the workers.” The Democrats are too intimidated by Republican rhetoric to do what is right, and it’s been that way back to Clinton. With the exception of Grayson, Dems are dim and afraid of their own shadow. They are too compromised and ignorant to understand that voters will turn against them in that they have reneged on their promises and sought compromise with the Repuglicans, who don’t understand the word.
Report thisBy bogi666, October 11 at 9:26 am #
Because of the provisions of the New Deal, most notably unemployment, Social Security the magnitude of the current depression has been curtailed because it has kept money in circulation. The 1930’s depression was more severe because the money supply contracted to the point that their wasn’t enough money in circulation to buy just the bare necessities of goods and services just to live. Roosevelt and even Hoover had to start from ground zero to create a system to prevent a recurrence of the magnitude of the 30’s recession. My dad who remembered and studied the 30’s realized this. In fact he knew more about the economy than Greenspan did, knowing that unchecked capitalism was self destructive and he was right and Greenspan wasn’t.The banks should have been allowed to fail and the Wall St.,Wash., DC is the real axis of evil.
Report thisBy willard, October 10 at 12:05 pm #
(Unregistered commenter)
Does anyone remember that all of Roosevelt’s stimulas ideas weren’t enough to pull us out the first republican created disaster. It took WW2 and massive borrowing to get the economy strong again.
however, we’ll not really see a good recovery because American corporations are lazy. They’ve forsaken R&D for large parachuttes to useless CEO’s. CEO’s play musical chairs - sort of like football coaches. The coach was a failure at such and such university or pro team, but we (and the failed coach) have the right ingredients to make a comeback.
Report thisBy bogi666, October 10 at 10:53 am #
The “stimulus” was to stimulate Wall St., after the Wall St. bankers lobbied for a stock market stimulus and got it, paid for by others[American taxpayers] of course. The stimulus word was used to disguise what the money was really for, a Wall St. bailout of THE CORPORATE WELFARE KINGS.
Report thisBy Hulk2008, October 8 at 5:13 pm #
Alternatives to a “2nd” stimulus?:
Report thisSince the stimulus was at least a semi-rush job, how about Congress re-examining the details and tweaking what was already laid out ? Maybe trim some of those do-little earmarks, drop some of the mis-steps, and bump up areas that proved to have some merit along the way? They’ve had some time now to see what worked and what failed.
The hardest part was getting the “wagon” rolling to begin with; seems like oiling the wheels a bit and dumping some ballast might not be a bad idea.
i.e. Create some new cash-for-clunkers plans in OTHER industries:
a. swap out inefficient furnaces b. swap out inefficient water heaters c. swap in CFLs and LEDs for incandescent bulbs d. swap out wasteful water conditioners for kinetic models e. swap out damaging air conditioner gases for enviro-friendly gas f. realistic incentives for home solar heat/light/electric. g. “green” training for laid-off workers (swap new careers for old) h. health industry training for laid-off workers (new nurse practitioners to fill primary care gaps).
There have to be realistic ways to generate NEW jobs - not just encouraging everybody to “get into computers”. As a veteran of the software trenches I can say for a fact that corporations are bringing in offshore folks by the boatload in that industry. Wages for computer types are heading toward the minimum wage arena.
By harpo, October 8 at 11:38 am #
(Unregistered commenter)
Why are people saying that the stimulus hasn’t worked?
Report thisthat $787B was to be spent over the course of 10 years. It hasn’t even been 10
months yet!?