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Joe Conason
Joe Conason
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Stimulus Skeptics Wrong (Again)

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Mythology is overshadowing history in the debate over President Barack Obama's plan to stimulate the depressed economy. Excessive airtime is devoted to the prejudices of cable hosts and radio personalities who regurgitate ideas they barely understand (and who haven't entertained an original thought since the Reagan era). Urgent action that could prevent enormous suffering is delayed by all the same old agendas that have dominated Washington for the past three decades.

So let's dismiss the myths and get back to the facts.

At the top of the myth list is the Republican faith in tax cuts, particularly those designed to benefit wealthy investors. Anyone who has been paying attention knows that for every problem, conservatives have a consistent solution that involves reducing corporate or capital-gains taxes, or lowering the top rate, or instituting a regressive flat tax or consumption tax. (They like spending, too, on certain favored contractors, notably in the defense sector, that donate generously to Republican and right-wing causes.)

But the argument for tax cuts — unless they are targeted toward lower-income workers, who will spend them immediately — is contradicted by recent history and basic economics. As Moody's forecaster Mark Zandi has pointed out repeatedly, what creates the greatest stimulative effect is putting cash in the hands of people who must spend that money immediately, namely the poor and working families. The smallest stimulus is created by tax cuts, and in particular the capital-gains and corporate tax reductions most beloved by conservative Republicans.

It is worth recalling that the last time Congress debated these fundamental questions came during the winter and spring of 1993, when Republican members unanimously rejected President Bill Clinton's first budget. Back then, Dick Armey, a Republican representative from Texas and former economics professor, warned that Mr.

Clinton's proposed increase in the top tax rate would lead to economic disaster. Those predictions were echoed by every right-wing politician and talking head and soon proved utterly wrong by the historic growth rates of the Clinton years.

Now we hear Armey offering the same kind of predictions about the Obama stimulus plan — and he is treated as a sage rather than a dolt who bet the ranch on his ideology and lost.

Another persistent myth denigrates spending on food stamps, unemployment insurance, tuition aid and similar programs as "welfare" that doesn't promote growth. According to this argument, assistance to the poor doesn't qualify as "stimulus" because it doesn't create public assets such as roads or bridges. But the real purpose of fiscal stimulus is to boost demand in the economy and prevent the bottom from dropping out under prices for goods and services — in short, to forestall a deflationary spiral. Giving money to families that will purchase things immediately is the best kind of boost, as both Moody's and the Congressional Budget Office have noted in recent studies.

It is true that we need to make real investments in transportation, energy, education and technology for the future — and that our future fiscal difficulties will be eased if we make those investments now. Yet the most immediate need is to promote demand, which will restore confidence and encourage investment.

What we ought to learn from this episode is that extreme inequality reduces national economic stability. The falling wages of working families forced them to rely too much on credit to maintain and improve their standards of living. Restoring the American dream means putting a floor under family incomes and reducing the gap between the richest and poorest, not only for the sake of simple justice but because that is the most reliable economic policy for the nation as a whole.

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 2008 CREATORS SYNDICATE, INC.


Comments

2 Comments | Post Comment
Joe, you obviously have not bothered to read what the "rescue package" includes. Calling it anything other than a pork bill is simply foolish. Tax breaks for movie producers or money for sex education put nothing in the hands of those you support.
Comment: #1
Posted by:
Thu Feb 5, 2009 5:13 AM
Joe, Joe, Joe! You can say whatever you like, and there are many liberals out there who will cook the statistics right along with you. However, when the sun comes up tomorrow, you and your liberal friends will still be 180 degrees wrong and the evidence that proved it yesterday will continue to prove it today. All the way back to JFK tax RATE cuts have been PROVEN to stimulate the economy. Giving money to deadbeat supporters, dead supporters and doctrinaire liberals like you has NEVER helped the economy. No society has ever taxed itself out of a negative economy and we will not be the first to do so. Your socialistic ideas have been discredited over and over, yet you cling to them as so much flotsam from the wreck you have made of our economy. Barney Frank, Christopher Dodds and the rest of the profligate spendthrifts who with their "congressional oversight" helped to force us to the precipace upon which we now stand, in a truly just world would be in prison and people with your callow or intentional misunderstanding of reality would be clerking at Wal-Mart, or Dollar General Store. What I cannot figure out is: Do you really believe what you are writing, in which case you are intellectually stunted, or are you saying what you say out of plain stubborness and wishful thinking?
Comment: #2
Posted by: Jobe
Mon Feb 9, 2009 11:24 AM
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