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Corporate Accountability and WorkPlace

Note to Obama: Thinking Small Will Lead to Disaster

By Robert Kuttner, AlterNet. Posted January 12, 2009.


As he crafts an economic recovery plan, Obama faces the danger of being too "post-partisan" and doing too little too late.

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There are three serious dangers in the debate about the stimulus package. The first is that President Obama will think too small. The second is that he will think too bipartisan. The third is that the public will be swayed by myths, such as the claim that infrastructure spending just takes too long to gear up, or that the deficit is the paramount problem.

The economy is now collapsing at an accelerating rate. With the 2008 job loss at the worst annual level since 1945, and even sound businesses unable to get ordinary credit from a traumatized banking system, this will quickly become a classic downward depression spiral unless government acts at a very large scale, and fast. The GDP probably shrank at a rate of at least five percent in the fourth quarter of 2008, and the nosedive will be worse this quarter.

There is simply no good news anywhere in the economy, as the costs of the financial crash keep reverberating. Yet a stimulus in the range of $400 billion a year is less than three percent of GDP. (It's bizarre that the incoming administration uses two-year numbers. They only make the figure sound too large, rather than too small.)

The reality is that we need additional spending of at least a trillion dollars a year for at least two years. The only encouraging sign is that more and more mainstream economists and Democratic politicians are starting to say that the greater risk is that we will aim too low rather than too high. Even Martin Feldstein, who chaired Ronald Reagan's Council of Economic Advisers, is a born-again Keynesian.

My educated guess is that the first stimulus package will be too small, and that as the economy-wide collapse deepens, we will be back for a second one by April or May. That would be a shame. It would be far better to have adequate stimulus now.

 

The Perils of Post-Partisanship

In the past week, the incoming administration has sounded almost desperate in its eagerness to enlist Republicans. First, Obama offered huge concessions in the form of business tax write-offs. Then he signaled a willingness to negotiate limits on Social Security and Medicare. While it may make some sense to reward businesses for creating jobs or for not cutting them, the idea of allowing corporations to write off more past years' losses on their current taxes is mainly a reward to the same banks that got us into this mess. Tax cuts should be part of the package, but they should go to working families.

Politically, the likelihood is that the Republicans will take whatever concessions they can get from Obama, and then try to block the spending parts of the package. Obama genuinely hopes to reach across partisan divides--it's part of his make-up--but he may have to get bloodied a few times before he realizes the folly of this approach. It would be far better for him to draft the stimulus package that he wants and that the country needs than to compromise with implacably opposed Republicans going in.

The fact is that he has a much stronger hand than the Republicans do. Families and businesses, mayors and governors, are hurting in red states as much as they are in blue states. If a trillion-dollar stimulus package is pending before Congress and unemployment is rapidly heading towards double digits, he should dare the Republican leadership to try to block it. In such circumstances, it should not be difficult to peel off the two or three senate Republicans he needs to break a filibuster.

Every reformist president has faced an early test of resolve, usually a partisan one. John Kennedy has to win a fight, by three votes, to enlarge the House Rules committee, which had been a graveyard of liberal legislation. Bill Clinton won his first budget vote, raising taxes on the top two percent, by one vote in the House with Vice President Al Gore breaking a tie in the Senate, and Republicans united in opposition. FDR needed all of his persuasive powers to rally the country and the Congress behind the fifteen great bills of his first hundred days, as did Lyndon Johnson on civil rights.

Nothing would enhance the credibility of the president-elect as much as a decisive win on the stimulus, over the opposition of conservative Republicans. If sensible Republicans want to vote with the new president, more power to them - and to Obama.

But this victory will take all of Obama's skills of leadership, and then some. He needs to explain to the people why public outlay of this scale is urgently needed, and increase the pressure on Congress to support it. At this point, however, the cause and effect are running the other way. Progressives in Congress are urging Obama to think bigger, and not to cave in to the Republicans in the name of a hollow bipartisanship.

Rep. Barney Frank recently told me, "The said this post-partisan stuff was just for the campaign. I think maybe he believes it." But Obama is no fool. Post-partisanship will last only until it's clear that Republicans will try to wreck his presidency--and they will.

Yes, We Can Spend It Well.

The most disabling myth, which you hear over and over again, is that the government can't competently spend large sums of money fast enough, and will end up building bridges to nowhere. "Infrastructure," as the main supposed form of public spending, is getting far too much attention, and is being used as a straw man to discourage adequate outlay.

Here is a trillion dollars of stimulus that can take effect instantly, and another trillion that can take effect over the course of eighteen months. For Part I, the only planning process necessary is for government to start writing checks. The estimated costs are approximations:


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See more stories tagged with: republicans, obama, economic crisis, stimulus package, financial crisis

Robert Kuttner is co-editor of The American Prospect.

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View:
Krugman just made the same point
Posted by: fanny666 on Jan 12, 2009 11:09 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Krugman just made the same point

"Bipartisanship" is a lovely concept, but what's the average of one good idea and one bad idea?

[« Reply to this comment] [Post a new comment »] [Rate this comment: 1 - 2 - 3 - 4 - 5]

» RE: Krugman just made the same point Posted by: Direct Democracy
Obama "just doesn't get it.."
Posted by: TJColatrella on Jan 12, 2009 11:45 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
We need real bold dramatic change if we are to rescue our nation and economy from what the Republicans have wrought..and so far this ain't it..!

President elect Obama has 100 days to make it happen and push through a new new deal if not then we will face a modern version of the Great depression..and so far these half measures just don't cut it..!

Doesn't he understand he has the nation with him why is he clinging to the advice of those who helped create this mess who were literally not figuratively in the room for all these irresponsible reckless decisions such as Geithner and now this Schapiro woman among others.?

If we do not Nationalize certain major entities then we will go down slow or maybe even plummet to the bottom never to really ever again rise up from the ashes of the Bush Mafia and Phil Gramm's poison pills that have lead to the destruction of our economic system..!

We must take what is best from both systems and create a system that works for the America people..balance is key it is the secret of the universe...why not follow John Stuart Mills advice and direction..?

Call it whatever you like Socialism of the major infrastructure or just Nationalization if we do not act in this manner then we will never again be able to truly compete in the global market..

Simple as that...

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Beware a tepid approach
Posted by: SlyGuy on Jan 12, 2009 12:45 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
to either the politics or the economic needs of our current situation. Yes, Obama promised to change the way things are done in DC, but easier said than done. Partisan roadblocks and intransigence may not be managed with persuasion and post-partisan discussion. If as it seems many Republicans are hell-bent on frustrating the efforts to deal with the economic meltdown, there may not be a way to do things in a genteel way. He will need both tact and direct appeal to the people to mount a progressive challenge to the "old ways." If the first act of the new POTUS is a success, it puts the Republicans on the defensive for the rest of the term, and they know it well.

A public and forthright condemnation of trickle down economics is due. Use the bully pulpit of the president to tell the people he knows what they do, that ground up stimulus and wealth building is the only way to put the wheels back on the economy so that it can begin a transition to one not so dependent on fossil fuel, military spending, and war.

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I have two problems with Kuttner ....
Posted by: mmckinl on Jan 12, 2009 12:52 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
~ Kuttner never acknowledges that we have a a structural problem in our economy. 70% of our economy was consumption. This is over and the jobs that enabled our consumption economy are going to be drastically cut, well over 10 million. Infrastructure and "green" jobs won't come close to filling that gap ... We need the Feds to take over heath care through Medicare for All and a shorter work week than 40 hours, say 36 or 32 ...

Why Single-Payer Health Care Can't Wait

~ All Kuttner's Plans will amount to dust if the banks aren't put through a bank holiday. These zombie banks will suck all the blood out of any recovery trying to capitalize their toxic debt ...

Economists and Financial Writers Newest and Biggest Failure ...Our Banking System is Insolvent yet Mum's the Word!

The fact is that almost All Wall Street Banks are insolvent, broke, bust ! ~~~ As most economists and writers missed the housing bubble, now almost all are missing the gaping hole in our solvency and indeed in the trust necessary for the proper operation of financial marklets. This can only be restored with tough transparent audits.

FDR did it successfully, as did Sweden and Norway. What is it ? Bank Balance Sheet scrubbing that restored trust and solvency to the system. It is called the Swedish Plan or a Bank Holiday

As it stands now we can't even get any answers on the $9 Trillions in Tax Payer Money that has been loaned or used as underwriting for our financial system.

William Greider wrote in The Nation over 6 weeks ago about this whole situation. Well it has only gotten geometrically worse. At that time , we, the tax payers were only on the hook for a couple of trilllion dollars. Now just weeks later , we, the tax payer are on the hook for over $9 trillions and counting.

Time for a Bank Holiday by William Greider @ The Nation

Here is what Greider wrote 6 weeks ago :

"From the outset of the crisis, the essential fallacy shared by governing influentials has been a wishful assumption that quick interventions with tons of public money would somehow restore the system to "normal" without disturbing free-market principles. Replenished banks would start lending again and lead us to recovery. "Normal" is not going to happen. If the new president does not break free of the denial and act decisively, his administration will be dangerously compromised from the start.
Obama can begin by declaring a "bank holiday" like FDR's in 1933--an opportunity to put the hard facts on the table and assume temporary control of the entire financial system. Nationalizing the banks sounds more radical than it is, since banking law already empowers regulators to impose extraordinary controls and close supervision over troubled institutions. Facing facts will be painful, but it's better than continuing a costly charade."

And yet, here we are, six weeks later, with a deafening, damning silence including the economists and financial reporters from the left.

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Brenda Kay Winters
Posted by: brenniewinters on Jan 12, 2009 3:01 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Was so shocked and saddened by California's economic woes. In the future, why do not American's stop working two jobs? Stop the overtime. Buy Government Bonds again. Shorten the school days and government job days. Stop American monies that are illegally sent out of this country. The stock market is still good for investments. And remember, you (or anyone else for that matter), can't take it with you when you go.

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Post Representative Democracy
Posted by: Direct Democracy on Jan 12, 2009 6:05 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
There's no such thing as post-partisan politics.

There's only relevancy and irrelevancy.


FREE AMERICA

REVOLUTIONARY (DIRECT) DEMOCRACY

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Does all this remind anyone else of Post-Reconstruction?
Posted by: hagwind on Jan 12, 2009 7:02 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
When the Northern white-men-in-charge made common cause with the Southern white (barely) reconstructed plantation owners?

Former slaves were trying to make a go of farming plantations that their previous owners had deserted. The Northerners gave the forfeited land back to the former slave owners. Turned out that white skin trumped ideology when it came to making deals.

I swear, this crew would see nothing wrong with letting the defeated Nazis run the Nuremberg trials.

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RE: Obama
Posted by: Mystery Solver on Jan 12, 2009 9:52 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Obama Says Recession Requires Scaling Back Promises

President-elect Barack Obama said reviving the U.S. economy will require scaling back on his campaign promises and personal sacrifice from all Americans.

“I want to be realistic here, not everything that we talked about during the campaign are we going to be able to do on the pace we had hoped,” Obama said in an interview on ABC’s “This Week” program broadcast this morning.

Perhaps you didn't know but Obama's "lip service" beagn long before he was elected.

"CHANGE WE CAN BELIEVE IN"

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Surprise!
Posted by: Mystery Solver on Jan 12, 2009 9:54 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Obama Says Recession Requires Scaling Back Promises

President-elect Barack Obama said reviving the U.S. economy will require scaling back on his campaign promises and personal sacrifice from all Americans.

“I want to be realistic here, not everything that we talked about during the campaign are we going to be able to do on the pace we had hoped,” Obama said in an interview on ABC’s “This Week” program broadcast this morning.

"CHANGE WE CAN BELIEVE IN"

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Kutter still believes Obama is a Progressive....
Posted by: tony12000 on Jan 13, 2009 2:24 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Hmmmmm....When will people learn? He is going the moderate route because he's a moderate. Moderates are always playing safe. I am still trying to figure out why people did not see it earlier. Actually, I think that progressives got so worked up over Hillary Clinton that they blindly followed Obama's rhetoric. Serves you right. Chicken Little Politics: Moderate Obama Causes Progressive Panic

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This article is pure BS
Posted by: kackermann on Jan 13, 2009 5:52 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Angela Merkel refuses to indulge in a fiscal policy soften the recession there. Why thow away money at the inevitable, she asks.

People just don't get it. We have to deleverage. We are in the process of a large unwind from the credit bubble.

We wrote checks in the past against our future, and the future is here. Why leave the mess to our kids?

If we re-inflate the bubble, we are screwed.

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