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Author Bio:
Before starting his popular political column for the New York Observer, Joe Conason worked as editor-at-large for Conde Nast's Details magazine. ...
Read more about Joe Conason.
Before starting his popular political column for the New York Observer, Joe Conason worked as editor-at-large for Conde Nast's Details magazine. ...
Read more about Joe Conason.
Why Obama Must Spend More
Joe Conason
The latest signals from the White House suggest that President Obama
now realizes he must do more -- and quickly -- to ease the economic
suffering of working families. He knows that most Americans believe
his administration and Congress have so far provided more help to
major banks and Wall Street investment firms than to workers and small
companies, as a survey released by pollster Peter Hart reported
recently.
If voters still feel the same way a year from now, the midterm consequences for the Democrats will be severe, and deservedly so. Yet that same poll, conducted for the Economic Policy Institute, showed that most Americans would support the only action that might relieve the lingering pain of recession: more and faster spending.
The conventional viewpoint -- repeated incessantly on talk radio, cable television and newspaper columns, as well by politicians of both parties -- is that the country cannot afford to further increase the public deficit. According to those savants, the stimulus package passed last winter spent too much and achieved too little; the deficit and debt are just too high; and there is simply nothing more that can be done except to wait for jobs to return sometime next year -- or the year after that, or maybe someday in the distant future.
Among the respondents to the Hart poll, however, 53 percent named unemployment as the nation's most serious economic problem, with only 27 percent saying that the most serious problem is the federal budget deficit. The poll found that support for a continuing policy of public investment in job creation, energy independence and improved education is even more emphatic. Fully 73 percent believes that investment should be the first priority, and only 24 percent said that cutting government spending should take precedence.
In short, public spending in bad times is good politics. But is it good policy?
The same think tank that sponsored the Hart poll insists that the answer is yes. The economists at Economic Policy Institute say that spending now will not only provide relief in the near term but improve America's economic prospects long into the future, as well. Armed with copious data, they argue that the negative impact of substantial, prolonged unemployment is broad, deep and enduring -- and that the issue of the deficit recedes when measured on that scale.
The institute's study, released last week, shows how lost jobs and income are simply ruinous to families struggling to find their way into the middle class, because of the effect on children's educational progress.
Meanwhile, diminished economic demand cuts investment, leading to reduced productive capacity that can hinder growth for years -- and delay the introduction of new technology even as competitors abroad surpass us.
Although the Obama stimulus package stopped the worst recession from turning into a global depression, the nation's working families and small businesses have gotten too little help so far. Even if Congress is not yet ready to pass a second stimulus, which will ultimately prove necessary, the president should propose other actions.
Extending current unemployment, food stamp and health insurance benefits past the year's end is the first and most obvious step. The second is to extend federal assistance to first-time homebuyers and to families facing mortgage foreclosures and evictions.
Beyond that, the president should employ conservative means to meet progressive ends. He should increase the Small Business Administration's lending programs by billions of dollars, redirect stimulus and bailout funds toward public services and demand a "payroll tax holiday" on the first $20,000 of income, as suggested by Robert Reich, the former labor secretary.
All of those objectives could be achieved without passing a second stimulus bill. All of them would advance the public interest as well as the political interests of the president and his party. And none of them would be so easy for the Republicans to reject with their usual petulant "no."
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Joe Conason writes for the New York Observer (www.observer.com). To find out more about Joe Conason, visit the Creators Syndicate website at www.creators.com.
Copyright 2009 Creators Syndicate Inc.
This news arrived on: 10/08/2009
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Posted Comments:
11-17-2009 19:40
Kevin Beck wrote:
Steal from the Rich?
Fedzilla does nothing but steal and redistribute. If the imperial US government would just step aside, this country would grow and inure benefits to all. Instead, the goof-ups in Washington will just muck everything up so that no benefits will come to the populace. Now, if standing aside would be to the detriment of the Democrat party: That's what I call a free market for politics at work.
10-16-2009 17:41
JCE wrote:
True. But things are improving, and would do better if the money that was meant to spend on the good things were. But what amazes me is how if you suggest that the government just say, ok, it was wrong to give all the money to the very rich, or to allow them to take it, the people are up in arms about how wrong that is, how illegal, to take the money from someone. Yet they allowed it to happen to them without threatening to revolt. But just suggest that you hit them all with huge fines for their robbery, and that is so wrong, and defended by the people. Kind of like the rape victim being made to believe that it is all their fault, and they best be quite or they will suffer more. What would happen if people went and sat in front of buildings like they do for concerts or black friday? Just camp out, peacefully, by the 1000s, with signs, saying "Give the money back" or "NO BONUSES"? Why can't they just all go to the capital and sit, with signs saying "We are waiting for (fill in the blank)? No astroturf is organizing it is the problem. An estimated 305 1/2 million people can't get their heads out of their assses to take on 535 congress idiots. Leaving out the less than 2 million in Alaska and Hawaii, that still leaves 303 million in the lower 48 to deal with it. And of those millions, somewhere between 40 and 75 million don't have jobs. There is something seriously wrong with this picture. Now, we did get rid of our governor, and things are picking up, but we had some luck there. She was a quitter. But still.
10-14-2009 08:18
JK wrote:
Jce Not one dime of new spending will be spent on the things you named in your last post. If they did it might make some real difference. Niether party have enough common sence to fill a thimble.
10-12-2009 14:19
JCE wrote:
Now, be fair to the democrats. They can't help it if they aren't as good at being crooks as the republicans. Nor that the voters don't vote for as crooked of democrats as they do republicans.
The democrat politicians try as hard as the republicans, they just aren't as good at doing it, or getting away with it.
It would cost money to do that which is needed. Tax breaks for those who make American goods, make American plants, and who provide green jobs, or building infrastructure. It would cost to close the borders, and cancel all the work visas, and to round up all the illegals and foreigners, and ship them home. It would cost to gather the info on who makes American, and who sells American, and who doesn't. And to run online sites with all the info. Bar codes are supposed to tell where things were made, if you have that info. One of the big things would be to run a site that showed how all the politicians voted, who got what bribes, who had what crimes committed, or allegations. Info technology needs to be used here. Someone needs to provide info on what can be gotten in this country, and if it costs more, spend money on helping make it affordable. Raise taxes on all imports, especially on items that can be purchased in this company. And publish the info on the companies who punish the people by passing on the taxes to the people. Only by making more cost effective to buy and produce American will people do so. As long as they feel they can't afford to be patriotic, most won't.
The democrat politicians try as hard as the republicans, they just aren't as good at doing it, or getting away with it.
It would cost money to do that which is needed. Tax breaks for those who make American goods, make American plants, and who provide green jobs, or building infrastructure. It would cost to close the borders, and cancel all the work visas, and to round up all the illegals and foreigners, and ship them home. It would cost to gather the info on who makes American, and who sells American, and who doesn't. And to run online sites with all the info. Bar codes are supposed to tell where things were made, if you have that info. One of the big things would be to run a site that showed how all the politicians voted, who got what bribes, who had what crimes committed, or allegations. Info technology needs to be used here. Someone needs to provide info on what can be gotten in this country, and if it costs more, spend money on helping make it affordable. Raise taxes on all imports, especially on items that can be purchased in this company. And publish the info on the companies who punish the people by passing on the taxes to the people. Only by making more cost effective to buy and produce American will people do so. As long as they feel they can't afford to be patriotic, most won't.
10-12-2009 08:57
JK wrote:
Throw more money down the drain. The first stimulus package sure helped the ceo's pocket book and created zero jobs. Millions to GM and they still went bankrupt. They still havent spent it all and Conason wants to spend more. Bring the jobs back by passing laws taxing companys that move jobs overseas. It's all about money and if it costs the ceo's to move jobs they wont. Throw out the illegals so that the jobs that are left go to Americans. Buy things made here if you can still find them even if they cost more. Its American jobs you are paying for.
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