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Hillary Embraces "Rubinomics"; Market Fundamentalism Lives

By Thomas Palley, AlterNet. Posted October 10, 2007.


At their heart, Hillary Clinton's economics, like Bill's before her, are based on the false premise that America can't afford a robust social safety net.
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Editor's note: An earlier version of this article appeared in The Nation.

With Senator Hillary Clinton firmly cemented as the front-runner for the Democratic Party's nomination, Rubinomics--named after former Treasury Secretary Robert Rubin, who shaped economic policy under President Clinton--has re-emerged as a critical issue. This is because Senator Clinton has firmly embraced it. Rubinomics rests on faulty economics and embodies bad politics. Progressive Democrats and the nation need to understand this. Here's an explanation.

The central proposition of Rubinomics is that budget deficits reduce saving and increase interest rates, thereby reducing investment and lowering future living standards. However, the record shows that interest rates fell to historic lows over the past several years, a time of large deficits. That fits the common sense observation that the Federal Reserve largely determines interest rates contingent on economic conditions. Meanwhile, a flood of savings has poured into financial markets from wealthy individuals and pension funds, and corporations have been net buyers of stock on the back of record profits.

Nor does the "twin deficit" argument--that budget deficits cause trade deficits--make sense, as evidenced by the fact that in the late 1990s the United States ran record trade deficits as the budget moved into record surplus. Japan and Germany also disprove the argument as they have run large trade surpluses and budget deficits for many years. Rather, the U.S. trade deficit is due to undervalued foreign currencies and export-led growth strategies by many countries that look to grow by selling to the United States while restricting purchases of American-made goods.

Despite these logical failings, Rubinomics still has great appeal because Rubin's tenure as Treasury Secretary coincided with the 1990s boom. That appeal is misplaced. The rooster crows at dawn but does not cause the sunrise. Rubin was Treasury Secretary during the boom, but budget surpluses did not cause it.

The political origins of Rubinomics trace back to the 1970s, when conservative charges about big government and "tax and spend" liberals took deep hold on America's political consciousness. Throughout the 1980s Democrats struggled to respond, eventually settling in the 1990s on a strategy of "fiscal responsibility." That strategy was always transitional and defensive, aimed at blunting Republicans' relentless attack on government and plutocratic tax cuts. The long-term goal was always an alternative narrative to free-market mythology.

The tragedy is that once a myth takes hold it must be lived out to be disproved. That is the price paid for losing the war of ideas. This process has now worked itself out, and America is finally grasping the fallacies of market fundamentalism. That creates a historic opportunity, but Rubinomics risks a tragic second act. Rubinomics worked brilliantly as a political strategy in the 1990s. But its success was political, not economic. However, its supporters have lost sight of this and now credit it with causing the late-'90s boom. Consequently, they argue for sticking with Rubinomics, thereby missing the opportunity created by the dismal failure of Bush's presidency.


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Thomas Palley is the founder of the Economics for Democratic & Open Societies Project. Read more of his work at www.thomaspalley.com.

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Of course we can afford it......
Posted by: BuckFush on Oct 10, 2007 8:36 AM   
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If we stop wasting our money and soldiers lives in the middle East, we could afford all kinds of things. It doesn't take a rocket scientist to understand that the money we are wasting in Iraq will not be repaid with cheap oil [cheap oil is a thing of the past], it will not be repaid in actual dollars, and the cost of this war reaches into every household in America.

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Voodoo Economics
Posted by: peacelf on Oct 10, 2007 11:57 AM   
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Why is it that economists make wondrous predictions, then when their predictions fail, make all kinds of excuses why they were right , but everything else went wrong.

That's because economics is like voodoo. It only works if both parties believe in it. Economists should not pretend that a magical formula of interest rates and Wall Street activity exists to make the economy run perfect. Economics is not that complicated. It goes something like this:

We have wealthy owners and workers. The wealthy owner class is making too much money, so you tax the shit out of them; if they refuse to create jobs, the government uses the rich people's tax dollars to create public works jobs and social programs to protect the poor and working people from unemployment. It all balances out in the end.

As for Hillary?
Vote Kucinich!

peace

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Um... I'm missin' sumpin
Posted by: DaBear on Oct 11, 2007 10:21 AM   
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Why did the MSM declare Hillary the front-runner again?

I'd love to vote for a woman candidate, but give me a real woman like Winona LaDuke, Patricia LaMarche, Elaine Brown, or any other woman with an ounce of integrity, a spine, principles, ehtics, guts, a chick willing to wage peace at any cost and stand up to the hyper-masculine males and boot-lickin' cheerleaders, not this sick twisted soldier-cult war-lustin', faux feminist goon named Clinton. A vote for this Clinton lady is a vote for Rudy. Both of 'em deserve a full career in hell.

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Hillary will take
Posted by: Constitutionalist75 on Oct 11, 2007 10:37 AM   
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the Democratic Party nomination because Fortune Magazine listed her candidacy as "safe to swim", meaning she herself will not deliberately "rock the boat". Of course, the big business boat may rock from its own lack of stability, all the more apparent today as the rampant expansion of debt enslaves too many beyond their ability to pay in their lifetimes.

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Hillary is not for real change
Posted by: Democritus on Oct 11, 2007 11:56 AM   
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After listening to Hillary Clinton expound on her health-care plan, it struck me that she is not keen on getting rid of the middlemen who call the tune on our medical care; i.e., our health insurance companies. The only way to have medical decisions made by qualified physicians, not insurance company bean counters, is to break the stranglehold that these private insurers have on who gets what in health care, and how much.

The way out of this debacle of continuing privatization of public responsibilities in medicine is to adopt a single-payer plan, such as what Canada and most of Europe have. Put everyone under Medicare. By increasing taxes on the upper 2% of those in the highest income brackets, we can benefit the other 98%. Of course, the insurance companies will kick and scream and spend millions to defeat such a plan--millions that they have to spend because of the exorbitant profits they have enjoyed under the Bush Administration.

In some areas privatization does a less efficient job than government. Social Security, Medicare, and the Veterans Affairs Department are three examples of government programs that have proved that they do not need anyone skimming profits off the top. Dennis Kucinich understands this very well, which is part of the reason that money Democrats, of which Mrs. Clinton is one, and their money media, are not eager to give Mr. Kucinich's plan any publicity.
The very wealthy don't need such a plan, and they grudgingly advocate health care for others only if private companies can cash in on it. So let the insurance companies cater to the very wealthy, providing for their every need; but for the rest of us, give us a plan that promotes health and not someone else's wealth.

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Criticizing Rubin
Posted by: Urgelt on Oct 12, 2007 1:50 PM   
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Hmm, I would have hoped for a somewhat deeper look at Rubin's ideas than is present in the article.

Well, I can skim the surface, too.

This attack on Rubin sounds like an apology for continuing deficit spending. If you're going to make such an apology, by all means, support your case.

The problem with that thinking is the national debt has climbed so high, and so much money has been injected into the financial system as a result, that financial markets are literally sloshing with excess liquidity. This is dangerous. Too much liquidity leads to risky behavior, as too many dollars chase too few solid investment opportunities. Excess liquidity contributes to "froth" and "bubbles" in the markets, and could even cause markets to fail at some point. Rubin is quite right to desire to restrain excess liquidity by generating a government surplus and reducing debt. Hell, even Alan Greenspan is nervous about it.

If you want to attack Rubin, you're on firmer ground to fault his weak approach to regulating markets. He's not a lot stronger on regulation than the neocons. He's "business friendly."

And that's a problem.

Unregulated markets don't lead to more competition, they lead to more consolidation. This principle of economics has been understood since the 19th Century, and it's why Teddy Roosevelt (a Republican) went trust-busting.

Monopolies are once again thriving in America. We see this in nearly every market sector: heatlh care, banking, mass media, retail, telecommunications, energy... nearly everywhere. This trend really took off during the latter Reagan years, it was hardly slowed at all under William Jefferson Clinton, and George W. Bush pulled out all the stops.

Monopolies are a vehicle for concentrating wealth in the hands of the few at the expense of the many, and that, too, is a visible economic trend. The very richest Americans are the only ones who are profiting; everyone else is treading water or slipping backwards.

That is the front on which Rubinomics is vulnerble to criticism, and it's the key complaint I have about Hillary Clinton. Of all the Democrats, no-one is more in bed with corporate interests than Clinton. It's the Clinton trademark: Democrats who are "business-friendly."

It's an oxymoron, though. Favoring economic policies which provide structural support for monopolization is not compatible with Democratic values. Why isn't the Democratic base rejecting her? I can only surmise it's because most progressives don't grasp enough basic economics to understand how Clinton's friendliness to unregulated markets threatens their interests.

We've never needed regulation more than we need it now. Crazy financial packaging innovations are bubbling up everywhere. Lending practices have not been this predatory in over 80 years. Liquidity is out of sight. Mergers and consolidations are forming ever-vaster corporate empires with rising market and political clout. Safeguards put in place after the last depression have been dismantled. We're sprinting toward a wall wearing a blindfold.

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Though better than Bush, Hillary is just another business as usual corporate Democrat.
Posted by: yellow on Oct 13, 2007 11:12 AM   
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The focus on the budget deficit is sorely misplaced. Reagan was elected on the platform of eliminating budget deficits and it was in 1981 that the US national debt first surpassed the $1 trillion mark. The Keynesian stimulous provided by the massive government spending in conjunction with his massive tax cuts resulted in a sudden upturn for the next seven years with extraordinarily high average annual rates of GDP growth. This is no argument for Reaganomics. If his record is examined from one business cycle peak to another (1981/III to 1990/III) we see very modest average annual GDP growth of less than 3% over the course of his presidency. The point is that deficits don't necessarily cause the problems Bob Rubin attributes to them. This is borne out by history.

The kind of return to Keynesian demand stimulous that Palley advocates is long overdue. Let it return in the form of federal spending on massive projects which will improve the overall efficiency and productivity of our society like mass transit, universal health care, renewable energy research and infrastructure repair. These things will help productivity while saving costly, depleting resources while increasing employment and contributions to the public till.

Let us remember that the limiting of workers to a forty hour week through the New Deal reforms nearly doubled employment rates in the post WWII era without increasing inflation. High productivity kept inflation in check until the credit boom of the late 1960s, itself a consequence of, and temporary palliative for, the gradual slowdown in economic growth. The dumping of supply side folly is needed now more than ever. Decades of trillions in tax cuts for the very rich with very little real economic stimulous should be sufficient proof of this claim. Keynesian income redistribution and restorative programs at the federal level could be the answer.

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