Reckoning: The Economic Consequences of Mr. Bush
When we look back someday at the catastrophe that was the Bush administration, we will think of many things: the tragedy of the Iraq war, the shame of Guantánamo and Abu Ghraib, the erosion of civil liberties. The damage done to the American economy does not make front-page headlines every day, but the repercussions will be felt beyond the lifetime of anyone reading this page.
I can hear an irritated counterthrust already. The president has not driven the United States into a recession during his almost seven years in office. Unemployment stands at a respectable 4.6 percent. Well, fine. But the other side of the ledger groans with distress: a tax code that has become hideously biased in favor of the rich; a national debt that will probably have grown 70 percent by the time this president leaves Washington; a swelling cascade of mortgage defaults; a record near-$850 billion trade deficit; oil prices that are higher than they have ever been; and a dollar so weak that for an American to buy a cup of coffee in London or Paris—or even the Yukon—becomes a venture in high finance.
And it gets worse. After almost seven years of this president, the United States is less prepared than ever to face the future. We have not been educating enough engineers and scientists, people with the skills we will need to compete with China and India. We have not been investing in the kinds of basic research that made us the technological powerhouse of the late 20th century. And although the president now understands—or so he says—that we must begin to wean ourselves from oil and coal, we have on his watch become more deeply dependent on both.
Up to now, the conventional wisdom has been that Herbert Hoover, whose policies aggravated the Great Depression, is the odds-on claimant for the mantle "worst president" when it comes to stewardship of the American economy. Once Franklin Roosevelt assumed office and reversed Hoover's policies, the country began to recover. The economic effects of Bush's presidency are more insidious than those of Hoover, harder to reverse, and likely to be longer-lasting. There is no threat of America's being displaced from its position as the world's richest economy. But our grandchildren will still be living with, and struggling with, the economic consequences of Mr. Bush.
Remember the Surplus?
The world was a very different place, economically speaking, when George W. Bush took office, in January 2001. During the Roaring 90s, many had believed that the Internet would transform everything. Productivity gains, which had averaged about 1.5 percent a year from the early 1970s through the early 90s, now approached 3 percent. During Bill Clinton's second term, gains in manufacturing productivity sometimes even surpassed 6 percent. The Federal Reserve chairman, Alan Greenspan, spoke of a New Economy marked by continued productivity gains as the Internet buried the old ways of doing business. Others went so far as to predict an end to the business cycle. Greenspan worried aloud about how he'd ever be able to manage monetary policy once the nation's debt was fully paid off.
This tremendous confidence took the Dow Jones index higher and higher. The rich did well, but so did the not-so-rich and even the downright poor. The Clinton years were not an economic Nirvana; as chairman of the president's Council of Economic Advisers during part of this time, I'm all too aware of mistakes and lost opportunities. The global-trade agreements we pushed through were often unfair to developing countries. We should have invested more in infrastructure, tightened regulation of the securities markets, and taken additional steps to promote energy conservation. We fell short because of politics and lack of money—and also, frankly, because special interests sometimes shaped the agenda more than they should have. But these boom years were the first time since Jimmy Carter that the deficit was under control. And they were the first time since the 1970s that incomes at the bottom grew faster than those at the top—a benchmark worth celebrating.
By the time George W. Bush was sworn in, parts of this bright picture had begun to dim. The tech boom was over. The nasdaq fell 15 percent in the single month of April 2000, and no one knew for sure what effect the collapse of the Internet bubble would have on the real economy. It was a moment ripe for Keynesian economics, a time to prime the pump by spending more money on education, technology, and infrastructure—all of which America desperately needed, and still does, but which the Clinton administration had postponed in its relentless drive to eliminate the deficit. Bill Clinton had left President Bush in an ideal position to pursue such policies. Remember the presidential debates in 2000 between Al Gore and George Bush, and how the two men argued over how to spend America's anticipated $2.2 trillion budget surplus? The country could well have afforded to ramp up domestic investment in key areas. In fact, doing so would have staved off recession in the short run while spurring growth in the long run.
But the Bush administration had its own ideas. The first major economic initiative pursued by the president was a massive tax cut for the rich, enacted in June of 2001. Those with incomes over a million got a tax cut of $18,000—more than 30 times larger than the cut received by the average American. The inequities were compounded by a second tax cut, in 2003, this one skewed even more heavily toward the rich. Together these tax cuts, when fully implemented and if made permanent, mean that in 2012 the average reduction for an American in the bottom 20 percent will be a scant $45, while those with incomes of more than $1 million will see their tax bills reduced by an average of $162,000.
The administration crows that the economy grew—by some 16 percent—during its first six years, but the growth helped mainly people who had no need of any help, and failed to help those who need plenty. A rising tide lifted all yachts. Inequality is now widening in America, and at a rate not seen in three-quarters of a century. A young male in his 30s today has an income, adjusted for inflation, that is 12 percent less than what his father was making 30 years ago. Some 5.3 million more Americans are living in poverty now than were living in poverty when Bush became president. America's class structure may not have arrived there yet, but it's heading in the direction of Brazil's and Mexico's.
The Bankruptcy Boom
In breathtaking disregard for the most basic rules of fiscal propriety, the administration continued to cut taxes even as it undertook expensive new spending programs and embarked on a financially ruinous "war of choice" in Iraq. A budget surplus of 2.4 percent of gross domestic product (G.D.P.), which greeted Bush as he took office, turned into a deficit of 3.6 percent in the space of four years. The United States had not experienced a turnaround of this magnitude since the global crisis of World War II.
Agricultural subsidies were doubled between 2002 and 2005. Tax expenditures—the vast system of subsidies and preferences hidden in the tax code—increased more than a quarter. Tax breaks for the president's friends in the oil-and-gas industry increased by billions and billions of dollars. Yes, in the five years after 9/11, defense expenditures did increase (by some 70 percent), though much of the growth wasn't helping to fight the War on Terror at all, but was being lost or outsourced in failed missions in Iraq. Meanwhile, other funds continued to be spent on the usual high-tech gimcrackery—weapons that don't work, for enemies we don't have. In a nutshell, money was being spent everyplace except where it was needed. During these past seven years the percentage of G.D.P. spent on research and development outside defense and health has fallen. Little has been done about our decaying infrastructure—be it levees in New Orleans or bridges in Minneapolis. Coping with most of the damage will fall to the next occupant of the White House.
Although it railed against entitlement programs for the needy, the administration enacted the largest increase in entitlements in four decades—the poorly designed Medicare prescription-drug benefit, intended as both an election-season bribe and a sop to the pharmaceutical industry. As internal documents later revealed, the true cost of the measure was hidden from Congress. Meanwhile, the pharmaceutical companies received special favors. To access the new benefits, elderly patients couldn't opt to buy cheaper medications from Canada or other countries. The law also prohibited the U.S. government, the largest single buyer of prescription drugs, from negotiating with drug manufacturers to keep costs down. As a result, American consumers pay far more for medications than people elsewhere in the developed world.
You'll still hear some—and, loudly, the president himself—argue that the administration's tax cuts were meant to stimulate the economy, but this was never true. The bang for the buck—the amount of stimulus per dollar of deficit—was astonishingly low. Therefore, the job of economic stimulation fell to the Federal Reserve Board, which stepped on the accelerator in a historically unprecedented way, driving interest rates down to 1 percent. In real terms, taking inflation into account, interest rates actually dropped to negative 2 percent. The predictable result was a consumer spending spree. Looked at another way, Bush's own fiscal irresponsibility fostered irresponsibility in everyone else. Credit was shoveled out the door, and subprime mortgages were made available to anyone this side of life support. Credit-card debt mounted to a whopping $900 billion by the summer of 2007. "Qualified at birth" became the drunken slogan of the Bush era. American households took advantage of the low interest rates, signed up for new mortgages with "teaser" initial rates, and went to town on the proceeds.
All of this spending made the economy look better for a while; the president could (and did) boast about the economic statistics. But the consequences for many families would become apparent within a few years, when interest rates rose and mortgages proved impossible to repay. The president undoubtedly hoped the reckoning would come sometime after 2008. It arrived 18 months early. As many as 1.7 million Americans are expected to lose their homes in the months ahead. For many, this will mean the beginning of a downward spiral into poverty.
Between March 2006 and March 2007 personal-bankruptcy rates soared more than 60 percent. As families went into bankruptcy, more and more of them came to understand who had won and who had lost as a result of the president's 2005 bankruptcy bill, which made it harder for individuals to discharge their debts in a reasonable way. The lenders that had pressed for "reform" had been the clear winners, gaining added leverage and protections for themselves; people facing financial distress got the shaft.
And Then There's Iraq
The war in Iraq (along with, to a lesser extent, the war in Afghanistan) has cost the country dearly in blood and treasure. The loss in lives can never be quantified. As for the treasure, it's worth calling to mind that the administration, in the run-up to the invasion of Iraq, was reluctant to venture an estimate of what the war would cost (and publicly humiliated a White House aide who suggested that it might run as much as $200 billion). When pressed to give a number, the administration suggested $50 billion—what the United States is actually spending every few months. Today, government figures officially acknowledge that more than half a trillion dollars total has been spent by the U.S. "in theater." But in fact the overall cost of the conflict could be quadruple that amount—as a study I did with Linda Bilmes of Harvard has pointed out—even as the Congressional Budget Office now concedes that total expenditures are likely to be more than double the spending on operations. The official numbers do not include, for instance, other relevant expenditures hidden in the defense budget, such as the soaring costs of recruitment, with re-enlistment bonuses of as much as $100,000. They do not include the lifetime of disability and health-care benefits that will be required by tens of thousands of wounded veterans, as many as 20 percent of whom have suffered devastating brain and spinal injuries. Astonishingly, they do not include much of the cost of the equipment that has been used in the war, and that will have to be replaced. If you also take into account the costs to the economy from higher oil prices and the knock-on effects of the war—for instance, the depressing domino effect that war-fueled uncertainty has on investment, and the difficulties U.S. firms face overseas because America is the most disliked country in the world—the total costs of the Iraq war mount, even by a conservative estimate, to at least $2 trillion. To which one needs to add these words: so far.
It is natural to wonder, What would this money have bought if we had spent it on other things? U.S. aid to all of Africa has been hovering around $5 billion a year, the equivalent of less than two weeks of direct Iraq-war expenditures. The president made a big deal out of the financial problems facing Social Security, but the system could have been repaired for a century with what we have bled into the sands of Iraq. Had even a fraction of that $2 trillion been spent on investments in education and technology, or improving our infrastructure, the country would be in a far better position economically to meet the challenges it faces in the future, including threats from abroad. For a sliver of that $2 trillion we could have provided guaranteed access to higher education for all qualified Americans.
The soaring price of oil is clearly related to the Iraq war. The issue is not whether to blame the war for this but simply how much to blame it. It seems unbelievable now to recall that Bush-administration officials before the invasion suggested not only that Iraq's oil revenues would pay for the war in its entirety—hadn't we actually turned a tidy profit from the 1991 Gulf War?—but also that war was the best way to ensure low oil prices. In retrospect, the only big winners from the war have been the oil companies, the defense contractors, and al-Qaeda. Before the war, the oil markets anticipated that the then price range of $20 to $25 a barrel would continue for the next three years or so. Market players expected to see more demand from China and India, sure, but they also anticipated that this greater demand would be met mostly by increased production in the Middle East. The war upset that calculation, not so much by curtailing oil production in Iraq, which it did, but rather by heightening the sense of insecurity everywhere in the region, suppressing future investment.
The continuing reliance on oil, regardless of price, points to one more administration legacy: the failure to diversify America's energy resources. Leave aside the environmental reasons for weaning the world from hydrocarbons—the president has never convincingly embraced them, anyway. The economic and national-security arguments ought to have been powerful enough. Instead, the administration has pursued a policy of "drain America first"—that is, take as much oil out of America as possible, and as quickly as possible, with as little regard for the environment as one can get away with, leaving the country even more dependent on foreign oil in the future, and hope against hope that nuclear fusion or some other miracle will come to the rescue. So many gifts to the oil industry were included in the president's 2003 energy bill that John McCain referred to it as the "No Lobbyist Left Behind" bill.
Contempt for the World
America's budget and trade deficits have grown to record highs under President Bush. To be sure, deficits don't have to be crippling in and of themselves. If a business borrows to buy a machine, it's a good thing, not a bad thing. During the past six years, America—its government, its families, the country as a whole—has been borrowing to sustain its consumption. Meanwhile, investment in fixed assets—the plants and equipment that help increase our wealth—has been declining.
What's the impact of all this down the road? The growth rate in America's standard of living will almost certainly slow, and there could even be a decline. The American economy can take a lot of abuse, but no economy is invincible, and our vulnerabilities are plain for all to see. As confidence in the American economy has plummeted, so has the value of the dollar—by 40 percent against the euro since 2001.
The disarray in our economic policies at home has parallels in our economic policies abroad. President Bush blamed the Chinese for our huge trade deficit, but an increase in the value of the yuan, which he has pushed, would simply make us buy more textiles and apparel from Bangladesh and Cambodia instead of China; our deficit would remain unchanged. The president claimed to believe in free trade but instituted measures aimed at protecting the American steel industry. The United States pushed hard for a series of bilateral trade agreements and bullied smaller countries into accepting all sorts of bitter conditions, such as extending patent protection on drugs that were desperately needed to fight aids. We pressed for open markets around the world but prevented China from buying Unocal, a small American oil company, most of whose assets lie outside the United States.
Not surprisingly, protests over U.S. trade practices erupted in places such as Thailand and Morocco. But America has refused to compromise—refused, for instance, to take any decisive action to do away with our huge agricultural subsidies, which distort international markets and hurt poor farmers in developing countries. This intransigence led to the collapse of talks designed to open up international markets. As in so many other areas, President Bush worked to undermine multilateralism—the notion that countries around the world need to cooperate—and to replace it with an America-dominated system. In the end, he failed to impose American dominance—but did succeed in weakening cooperation.
The administration's basic contempt for global institutions was underscored in 2005 when it named Paul Wolfowitz, the former deputy secretary of defense and a chief architect of the Iraq war, as president of the World Bank. Widely distrusted from the outset, and soon caught up in personal controversy, Wolfowitz became an international embarrassment and was forced to resign his position after less than two years on the job.
Globalization means that America's economy and the rest of the world have become increasingly interwoven. Consider those bad American mortgages. As families default, the owners of the mortgages find themselves holding worthless pieces of paper. The originators of these problem mortgages had already sold them to others, who packaged them, in a non-transparent way, with other assets, and passed them on once again to unidentified others. When the problems became apparent, global financial markets faced real tremors: it was discovered that billions in bad mortgages were hidden in portfolios in Europe, China, and Australia, and even in star American investment banks such as Goldman Sachs and Bear Stearns. Indonesia and other developing countries—innocent bystanders, really—suffered as global risk premiums soared, and investors pulled money out of these emerging markets, looking for safer havens. It will take years to sort out this mess.
Meanwhile, we have become dependent on other nations for the financing of our own debt. Today, China alone holds more than $1 trillion in public and private American I.O.U.'s. Cumulative borrowing from abroad during the six years of the Bush administration amounts to some $5 trillion. Most likely these creditors will not call in their loans—if they ever did, there would be a global financial crisis. But there is something bizarre and troubling about the richest country in the world not being able to live even remotely within its means. Just as Guantánamo and Abu Ghraib have eroded America's moral authority, so the Bush administration's fiscal housekeeping has eroded our economic authority.
The Way Forward
Whoever moves into the White House in January 2009 will face an unenviable set of economic circumstances. Extricating the country from Iraq will be the bloodier task, but putting America's economic house in order will be wrenching and take years.
The most immediate challenge will be simply to get the economy's metabolism back into the normal range. That will mean moving from a savings rate of zero (or less) to a more typical savings rate of, say, 4 percent. While such an increase would be good for the long-term health of America's economy, the short-term consequences would be painful. Money saved is money not spent. If people don't spend money, the economic engine stalls. If households curtail their spending quickly—as they may be forced to do as a result of the meltdown in the mortgage market—this could mean a recession; if done in a more measured way, it would still mean a protracted slowdown. The problems of foreclosure and bankruptcy posed by excessive household debt are likely to get worse before they get better. And the federal government is in a bind: any quick restoration of fiscal sanity will only aggravate both problems.
And in any case there's more to be done. What is required is in some ways simple to describe: it amounts to ceasing our current behavior and doing exactly the opposite. It means not spending money that we don't have, increasing taxes on the rich, reducing corporate welfare, strengthening the safety net for the less well off, and making greater investment in education, technology, and infrastructure.
When it comes to taxes, we should be trying to shift the burden away from things we view as good, such as labor and savings, to things we view as bad, such as pollution. With respect to the safety net, we need to remember that the more the government does to help workers improve their skills and get affordable health care the more we free up American businesses to compete in the global economy. Finally, we'll be a lot better off if we work with other countries to create fair and efficient global trade and financial systems. We'll have a better chance of getting others to open up their markets if we ourselves act less hypocritically—that is, if we open our own markets to their goods and stop subsidizing American agriculture.
Some portion of the damage done by the Bush administration could be rectified quickly. A large portion will take decades to fix—and that's assuming the political will to do so exists both in the White House and in Congress. Think of the interest we are paying, year after year, on the almost $4 trillion of increased debt burden—even at 5 percent, that's an annual payment of $200 billion, two Iraq wars a year forever. Think of the taxes that future governments will have to levy to repay even a fraction of the debt we have accumulated. And think of the widening divide between rich and poor in America, a phenomenon that goes beyond economics and speaks to the very future of the American Dream.
In short, there's a momentum here that will require a generation to reverse. Decades hence we should take stock, and revisit the conventional wisdom. Will Herbert Hoover still deserve his dubious mantle? I'm guessing that George W. Bush will have earned one more grim superlative.
Anya Schiffrin and Izzet Yildiz assisted with research for this article.
Joseph Stiglitz, a leading economic educator, is a professor at Columbia.
Copyright © 2007 CondéNet
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26 Comments so far
Show AllRedjeff, fortunately anyone who Matthews gushes over starts falling in the polls shortly after that. He called Bush and Rummy 'tough guys' and they dropped. He also got dreamy-eyed over McCain's toughness and his poll numbers went south. Now, and I can't wait, Il Duce Giuliani is the next mean dude to be ground up in the Matthews Meter. It's the curse of Tweety Bird!
"so huge it's difficult to comprehend."
Debt and deficits should be compared to GDP. Looking at the raw number in isolation has little real meaning, but people do this all the time.
Horrifying beyond belief. Stiglitz sums it up very well. Our debt problems--governmental and consumer debt--are so huge it's difficult to comprehend.
We are going to have to spend the ensuing century just being world-class cheapakates, after blowing our wad on World War Forever, oil-plundering, and doodads for the rec room.
When the bad times hit, they will hit hard, I think, because there is so much denial in the Washington establishment. I hear Pat Buchanan call global warming a "scam". Then Chris Matthews keeps gushing over Giuliani because he's a "tough guy" and "decisive". Seven years of "tough guy" in the White House and Matthews still hasn't had enough? I could be a better pundit with a bag over my head and electrodes clipped to my genitals; but, under those conditions, so could Matthews and Buchanan.
LUCKY LEFTY: Powerfully insightful stuff.
For your continued interest in why perhaps so many people feel the need for MASTERs, please consider this comment here that I wrote, about how we so often dis-empower ourselves (and thus need "masters").
Namaste
We must be the change we wish to see in the world __ Gandhi
>>We have not been educating enough engineers and >>scientists, people with the skills we will need to >>compete with China and India.
Oh, horse-hockey. To paraphrase Dorthy in Oz: China, India, and Bears, oh my!
In this country, students are free to pick whatever they choose to study. And, to compete with China and India in what? The development of weapons systems and consumer toys? It seems every journalist is free to toss out this platitude and slap educators, not to mention the rest of the world, in the face without a footnote. Unless we "learn" to cooperate and limit population, all the engineers and All the Kings Men won't be able to stop the everlasting war for limited resources. Maybe we need journalistic education to include a course in avoiding "no cliche left behind".
LUCKLEFTY__ Good discussion, I agree, two choices. Either we can wait to slowly be bled to death by the religious torturing great leaders, or we can make a run for it and risk a quick
end to get our country back and give everybody a chance again.
The only question is how bad does it have to be for people to decide to take action?
The web of debt article suggested by solutions2 is great. I propose a solution to our dire straits. Try peace and inclusiveness in 2008, support Dennis Kucinich.
You get two choices: You get an Oligarchy or you get Your Country - nobody ever gets both, and just in case anybody wasn't looking, we've got a nasty case of Entrenched Oligarchy.
Anybody wants to disagree with the premise, read a little history. For 3-4000 years they all operated the same, wanted the same thing: Everything, Forever, and all of them were willing to perpetrate any abomination in order to build, maintain, or expand their wealth, power, and privilege over us. I do mean Any Abomination. Even False Flag operations intended to place the country on a War footing - forever.
Historically, there are two ways to get rid of Entrenched Oligarchy. The French & Russians exemplify the first solution. They cut off the offending heads and the heads of anyone associated with them including their children. The 2nd solution came from the Roosevelt Legacy. We taxed them into near oblivion. That process produced the greatest distribution of wealth ever seen in the history of the species. By 1964 the end of poverty in this country was in sight and lifetime stable employment was on the horizon. Full stop.
One other piece was necessary to achieve those two last items: We had to make a place for everyone at the table (no more excluding folks for economic or social advantage) and we had to reject war and conquest as a Way of Life. It was 1964 and by 1968 we had chosen - First we chose exclusion and war – then, within 20 years, we tore down the Roosevelt Legacy - 90% tax on earned income over $6mn (adjusted for inflation); 52% tax on unearned income; 50+% on mega-estates; corporate taxation & regulation with teeth; Glass-Seagal separating the banks and the brokerage houses; Support for the Wagner Act (right to unionize); & a social safety net. All gone. Dead as last Tuesday's pike.
Our enemies oppose anything that will benefit the general population - you and me. They will commit any crime, perpetrate any atrocity. They want you silenced. They want you in chains. They want you strapped to into the profit machine until you drop dead. You get NOTHING. They get EVERYTHING, including the marrow from your bones and the bones of your children. Just like in our old slaughterhouses, nothing left but the squeal. That's their Heaven. Nothing left but the Squeal.
So there it is: Full Restoration of the Legacy + everybody gets a place at the table (no more ethnic cleansing in New Orleans or anywhere else) + no more war and conquest as a way of life. How tough could that be? What price would you pay to make a world, a world without Fear? For us that is. For the Nancy Pelosi animals and those they serve, FEAR should be their daily aperitif. They should be deafened by the screams that follow them day and night. Nowhere to hide. Not a moment of peace until they do what they were elected to do, REPRESENT US.
It ain't rocket science. You design things, you make things, you pay middle class wages, and people buy those things. Then the people turn the broken, used, or obsolete 'things' in to re-processors who take things apart, pay middle class wages, and recycle materials to make other 'things'. Or maybe it's a service. Who says you can't pay $15/hour plus UNIVERSAL SINGLE PAYER MEDICARE FOR ALL (including dental/chiro/shrink) to burn burgers. Or that Latino gent who mows the lawn? Yeah, him too. What if you could support a family of four, and buy a house, and put a room on the house, and take four weeks of vacation a year, with cradle to grave free public education, on a single earner income of $40k a year – and no Oligarchy and no WAR MACHINE and no EMPIRE (and no 'at will' employment ever again).
Do you think we could work out a way of decentralizing energy distribution using scalable dumpster sized hydrogen batteries for commercial, rental, and residential properties, plus all the other real alternatives to Monopolistic energy control by mega-elites, all the while paying middle class wages?
Most people think we can, we just can't do it with an Entrenched Oligarchy with their cold dead fingers on the levers of monopolistic power. Hydraulic Despotism.
Some people actually think that we NEED Masters. Some people believe that we are born with saddles on our backs and somebody's flat-earth blood god ordained that these monsters were born with spurs, that they were born to RULE US. That it is wrong for us to direct our own lives. Selfish we are to cry FREEDOM!!! FREEDOM!!! FREEDOM!!!
What do you think? Do you think the traitor Nancy Pelosi deserves a moment's peace? Or Conyers? Or Waxman? Or any of the LYING FILTH? Who will bring back the Roosevelt Legacy? Who will repeal NAFTA/CAFTA and the rest of IMF/WTO/ World Bank imposed slavery? Who will repeal the Quick Death & Anti-Terrorism Bill/Patriot/MCA/PAA and all those psychotic Executive Orders and Signing Statements?
Who will make a place for everyone at the table? Who will reject War & Conquest as a Way of Life? Do we need a leader who can be corrupted, bribed, ritually defamed, falsely imprisoned, or just executed (by a lone gunman)? Or do us 'nobody's' take matters into our own hands? Whooo…scarey…
Or maybe it's just hopeless and the whole country will just have to burn to the ground. You know what I'm saying. You can smell it. Total melt-down. Panic. Chaos. Could happen. Not 10 years ago but now it could. We are totally atomized as a country and we have the single most heavily armed civilian population on the planet and we didn't forget the bullets.
Whaddayathink, if the old USA goes caput, will you see the best in people, or the worst? Or maybe both. So many mysteries. Much better if we work a way to take this country back from our Oligarchy, but task one is know your enemy better than you know your friends. Who are the richfilth in your town? Where do they live? What businesses do they own? What local politicians are in their fist? What are you willing to do to stop them? How about local mega-estate taxes, say 50+%? When they scream – that's when you know you're doing good. When they howl bloody murder – that's when you know you tapped a nerve. When they put a price on your head or ask the government to kill you – that's when you know you are achieving things.
That's that game. Not civilized. Not polite. Nobody's playing fair. Nobody's taking prisoners. The monsters didn't take any when they butchered the dissidents in this country over the last century. They aren't taking prisoners in this one either. Neither are we. No Freedom, No Peace. No Justice, No Peace.
There are a lot of true statements in the Stiglitz article.
I know I couldn't borrow every week for years and not make payments on the loan and still keep a roof overhead. As far as the 10,000 letters to Pelosi, Thom Hartmann called her office in the middle of his Air America radio show when a caller told him the same thing and Pelosis office denied that the 10 k letter statement was made. So I didn't write that one.
If the big one hits, recession wise, and I think some size is on the way, can you imagine how 20,000,000 disgruntled Americans might feel about the wealthy, Crawford Ranch and the village idiot that misled us into the mess? It might well be Crawford/Blackwater Ranch by then, and he might need them..... A friend of mine had the brief thought today of splitting California into two states and then giving Texas to Mexico to keep an even 50 States. Hmmmm. That's where all the Mexican workers could go and you idiots that want to build a fence wouldn't have to. Just a discussion, remember.
All current statistics out of the bush administration are suspect,
there fore things are probably a lot worse than stated above.
Lets remember to thank those responsible for the bush administration.
The faith based bribe , returned the vote of the mindless christian
and that vote elected this faith based fool to the white house, barely/
The 4.6 % unemployment rate is a lie.
Anyone who is unemployed for more than 6 months is no longer counted in the U.S.- unlike other countries unemployment percentages which count ALL not working and a certain % added for the "underemployed".
I wish I could remember the source but I can't: somewher I read that if our unemployment was calculated in the same manner, it would exceed 15%.
Wealth isn't just about money, it's about well being, about good organisations by the people for the people. Sweden is a model of how a nation should be and the USA is a model of how no to be. Whenever a system is based on dog eat dog some dogs eat and others don't when it's quite easy to organise a society where every dog eats.
Anybody who thinks the USA is the richest country in the world is very much deluded. When I drive around Florida all I see is poverty and despair not because i want to see it but because it sticks out like a sore thumb.
Mr Stiglitz is hustling to get around in front of an economic/political model which, even when better managed, is headed in the wrong direction.
Yes, solutions 2, "a world that works-for humans and the planet."
Bush & co have nearly upset the apple cart and these guys are really sweatin' it out.
cheers
I would suggest Mr. Stiglitz look at Ellen Brown's book, Web of Debt.
www.webofdebt.com And in addition, this very timely piece from Los Angeles lawyer Ellen Brown is a clear explanation – with much documented evidence - for our seemingly irrational policy towards Iran.
PS: Recommended article: BEHIND THE DRUMS OF WAR WITH IRAN: NUCLEAR WEAPONS OR COMPOUND INTEREST? http://www.webofdebt.com/articles/war-with-iran.php
Ellen started an intense 4-year investigation of our monetary system after attending FF events with Bernard Lietaer and Thomas Greco. The products of her efforts are in this article and in her extraordinary new book: Web of Debt.
After you read this, then proceed to read Riane Eisler's Real Wealth of Nations...creating a caring economics. This gives us an option for finally creating a world that works--for humans and the planet. www.rianeeisler.come www.realwealtheconomy.com
Unfortunately, most of what Mr. Stiglitz has written here is meant to distract--don't get fooled by this article.
"When it comes to taxes, we should be trying to shift the burden away from things we view as good, such as labor and savings, to things we view as bad, such as pollution."
The highly premiated Prof. Stiglitz, by knowingly telling us only PART of the truth has put himself in the dock along side the murderous criminally insane leaders of the corporate governance of the United States and morally complict upper class collaborating corporatists around the world.
In the Afterward of "The Enemy of Nature - The End of Capitalism or the End of the World", author Joel Kovel writes:
"What has been proposed here is a line of reasoning to help us come to grips with a great crisis. ... All that has been striven for here is to face things squarely - to alter the perception of an impending disaster, to meet it actively instead of passively submitting to the terms of understanding dealt our by the dominant system. And surely it is better actively to comprehend rather than
numbly submit to the logic of one's destroyer."
"Is it not liberating to realize that the mighty capitalist system is at heart a trick played upon us? The delegitimation of its principle of exchange, the revelation of how human possiblilities are stunted under its regime - all this opens a path to the intrinsic beauty of the world and lets us join with others of like mind. "
"If capital is a delusion, then private ownership of the globe is part of that delusion. ..."
Unfortunately, those who pretend credentials for the insane to rule, like Stiglitz appear to be the most pathetic of human beings - would he plead insanity in a court of common law.
Jay Janson
the author writes "There is no threat of America's being displaced from its position as the world's richest economy."
what a laugh. veto health care of children. squander the lives of the poor in an illegal war. yeah, real rich!!! it's this brainwashed mentality that keeps people from seen the truth that america is the most morally destitute, greediest, and most unfair in it's distribution of so called "wealth". what a joke!!!
Great article, and interesting comments.
It strikes me that, throughout the 20th century and into the 21st, Republicans generally made the economy a mess and weakened the military, while Democrats generally made the economy prosper and strengthened the military.
Just an observation.
Wouldn't it be great if Bush got in Air Force One for another of his wasting vacations from the job he is incapable of handling, and disappears forever? Just wiped off the map of history and no retinue of secret service people to be paid to escort him around year after year. Just a quick goodby and good riddance. Maybe we can forget him just as non-believers try to forget the holocaust. There it is, two historical disasters...Bush and the holocaust. And Bush's policies have and will continue to effect more millions than the Nazis.
A sobering portrait of what is in store.
Makes one venture to ask: Why does not the Congress of the US require that individuals such as Dr. Stiglitz be invited to present evidence of research/study of actions that the CinC anticipates taking such as the "cakewalk into Iraq" and "bringing freedom to Afghanistan".
The first issue to be addressed would be " where in the US Consitution is the American taxpayer mandated to pay for regime change and or the promotion of democracy in foreign lands. And if it is determined that it is within the Constitutional rights of the CinC demand that a special budget be formalized and a total approved prior to the undertaking of any miltary action. Once the action[s] costs exceed 15% over the budgeted amount no more monies are allocated period.
Given Dr, Stiglitz thesis it becomes incumbent on GWB to declare the USA as an insolvent nation and file bankruptcy and auction off parts of the country as the 20 million americans that are unable to pay their bills.
One can still dream....
Gee the economy is bad. I thought the republican guys were so sharp about the economy according to their campaign speeches. They are how ever good at graft and corruption, they said they would fight it.
I see a pattern. Anything the Repubs say they are against they will do. Anything they are for they won't do. They love the troops, hence send them off to a hopeless war to be killed and maimed and then abandon their subsequent medical and psychological needs.
I think this is why the Repubs won't abandon Bu$h the inferior. He is just what they aspire to be.
First, I am grateful to CommonDreams for collecting these articles and making them available with easy access to those of us who are concerned about the damage being done to our country in so many areas by this Administration, not the least of which is financial.
I also appreciate the many thoughtful and well informed posts on these articles from my fellow readers.
One question. Other than posting online, what are we DOING, other than complaining or agreeing, to MAKE A CHANGE?
I learned that Nancy Pelosi would allow the Cheney impeachment to be heard in the House if she received 10,000 hand written letters requesting that it happen. I wrote that letter and faxed it immediately to her San Francisco office. What I did not do was contact my friends and relatives who could have done the same. I could have done more.
Each week, I watch for pertinent legislation and contact House and Senate members via phone or email. I belong to organizations that send me templates and "click to send" messages; often I do that, BUT I believe the personal, hand written document or phone call may be more effective, and can be done in tandem with the others.
I have volunteered to be a neighborhood representative for the Democratic Party in a 70% Republican precinct. My job will be to contact my Democratic neighbors face to face and find out issues they are concerned about, and then make sure they get out to vote.
I still feel helpless, like swimming in peanut butter. How do we stop this tidal wave?
I am puzzled why people are not taking to the streets; organizing, writing letters to the editor, etc.
Lastly, I am using great self-restraint when talking with those who support the current Administration. Rather than blasting them and arguing, I listen, and use the approach, "I understand we both have strong feelings about these issues, let's put our feelings aside for the moment, and just look at the facts." This way, there is a chance to examine the FACTS (such as in the article by Mr. Stiglitz).
I am open to contact with ideas of what else we can DO at lbaugh47@qwest.net.
Although most Americans will never read Stiglitz's excellent article they know -- just as their forebears in the 1930s knew -- that the economy is in serious trouble and swirling the drain.
Over the years I've talked to people from all walks of life and they basically have the same complaint -- they are afraid of losing their good paying job; they have lost that job and replaced it with one earning much less (hence the misleading employment statistics); or they've dropped off the employment radar entirely.
Our economy in trapped in a conundrum: Only those with good-paying jobs can afford to buy things, but the good-paying jobs are going overseas or being eliminated by computerization and automation, so that lessens the ability of the average American to buy consumer goods, shrinking our economy and our tax base, so that the government must borrow money overseas to falsely maintain our standard of living. But that can only go on for so long and it's now coming to an end. We are reaching the bottom of this cycle as the national debt is at an all-time high, the housing market collapses and credit card debt explodes.
Twenty million people unable to pay their bills and we have a depression -- it's right around the corner.
It's difficult for the average American to sift through economic blah blah and understand that he/she is being given the shaft by the wealthy. We all dream of improving our financial situation, there's always the hope that we too will be one day one of the "fortunate."
What a load of crap, eh? Those who "have" will fight tooth and nail to keep it. We are the descendants of germanic barbarian tribes, and interestingly enough we have not lost the basic "raid and grab--if you resist you die" mentality that characterized their behavior thousands of years ago.
This is a great (though depressing) report on our ecomomy and our Nation by Mr. Stiglitz. As he stated, many if not most of this generation will not see a return to the conditions we had just a few years ago, and who can predict what is ahead for the younger citizens down the road? Maybe this article would make a wonderful Christmas card to send to some of our right-wing Republican friends who are so happy with everything they have accomplished for all of us! Many of them will suffer eventually also, but with their blinders on, they do not realize what is coming for them as well as the rest of us. Oh, well, off to shop and put up the decorations.
"Anyone who is unemployed for more than 6 months is no longer counted in the U.S.- unlike other countries unemployment percentages which count ALL not working and a certain % added for the "underemployed".
"I wish I could remember the source but I can't: somewher I read that if our unemployment was calculated in the same manner, it would exceed 15%."
I wish you could remember too. Anyone? This is often repeated, so I think it would be good to know where it comes from.