O.K., I’ll bite — although as I’ll explain shortly, the “jump-start” metaphor is part of the problem.
First, Mr. Obama should scrap his proposal for $150 billion in business tax cuts, which would do little to help the economy. Ideally he’d scrap the proposed $150 billion payroll tax cut as well, though I’m aware that it was a campaign promise.
Money not squandered on ineffective tax cuts could be used to provide further relief to Americans in distress — enhanced unemployment benefits, expanded Medicaid and more. And why not get an early start on the insurance subsidies — probably running at $100 billion or more per year — that will be essential if we’re going to achieve universal health care?
Mainly, though, Mr. Obama needs to make his plan bigger. To see why, consider a new report from his own economic team.
On Saturday, Christina Romer, the future head of the Council of Economic Advisers, and Jared Bernstein, who will be the vice president’s chief economist, released estimates of what the Obama economic plan would accomplish. Their report is reasonable and intellectually honest, which is a welcome change from the fuzzy math of the last eight years.
But the report also makes it clear that the plan falls well short of what the economy needs.
According to Ms. Romer and Mr. Bernstein, the Obama plan would have its maximum impact in the fourth quarter of 2010. Without the plan, they project, the unemployment rate in that quarter would be a disastrous 8.8 percent. Yet even with the plan, unemployment would be 7 percent — roughly as high as it is now.
After 2010, the report says, the effects of the economic plan would rapidly fade away. The job of promoting full recovery would, however, remain undone: the unemployment rate would still be a painful 6.3 percent in the last quarter of 2011.
Now, economic forecasting is an inexact science, to say the least, and things could turn out better than the report predicts. But they could also turn out worse. The report itself acknowledges that “some private forecasters anticipate unemployment rates as high as 11 percent in the absence of action.” And I’m with Lawrence Summers, another member of the Obama economic team, who recently declared, “In this crisis, doing too little poses a greater threat than doing too much.” Unfortunately, that principle isn’t reflected in the current plan.
So how can Mr. Obama do more? By including a lot more public investment in his plan — which will be possible if he takes a longer view.
The Romer-Bernstein report acknowledges that “a dollar of infrastructure spending is more effective in creating jobs than a dollar of tax cuts.” It argues, however, that “there is a limit on how much government investment can be carried out efficiently in a short time frame.” But why does the time frame have to be short?
As far as I can tell, Mr. Obama’s planners have focused on investment projects that will deliver their main jobs boost over the next two years. But since unemployment is likely to remain high well beyond that two-year window, the plan should also include longer-term investment projects.
And bear in mind that even a project that delivers its main punch in, say, 2011 can provide significant economic support in earlier years. If Mr. Obama drops the “jump-start” metaphor, if he accepts the reality that we need a multi-year program rather than a short burst of activity, he can create a lot more jobs through government investment, even in the near term.
Still, shouldn’t Mr. Obama wait for proof that a bigger, longer-term plan is needed? No. Right now the investment portion of the Obama plan is limited by a shortage of “shovel ready” projects, projects ready to go on short notice. A lot more investment can be under way by late 2010 or 2011 if Mr. Obama gives the go-ahead now — but if he waits too long before deciding, that window of opportunity will be gone.
One more thing: even with the Obama plan, the Romer-Bernstein report predicts an average unemployment rate of 7.3 percent over the next three years. That’s a scary number, big enough to pose a real risk that the U.S. economy will get stuck in a Japan-type deflationary trap.
So my advice to the Obama team is to scrap the business tax cuts, and, more important, to deal with the threat of doing too little by doing more. And the way to do more is to stop talking about jump-starts and look more broadly at the possibilities for government investment.
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10 Comments so far
Show AllWhen I heard about Obama's plan to give $150 billion in tax cuts to Big Business I was mortified. It's the same old plan that the reactionaries have been trying since Ronald Reagan.
Has Obama not figured out that tax cuts for the rich simply do not stimulate the economy?
Change we can believe in? When pigs fly!
Here's a better idea for Obama. Listen to RALPH NADER and remind the American people of the need to pound Congress with DAILY HEADACHES until they FUCKING LISTEN !!
While public infrastructure improvements are much needed, things like new schools bridges, roads, flood control and the like, there is also a great need for improvements to the private infrastructure. Privatized care for the elderly, which receives a very high percentage of its income from federal subsidies, is a nightmare. Many nursing homes are perpetually understaffed, over crowded and nearly universally ignored even by their local community. Adding additional staff to these facilities would both create more jobs rapidly and improve a sector of our society much in need of improvement. Given the profitability of these facilities and the lavish salaries of top management simply improving the minimum standards should create many more jobs with little additional Federal cost.
With the United States having the highest rate of incarceration of any developed nation the lack of meaningful rehabilitation and job skills training in America’s jails and prisons is a disgrace. For all but the most violent offenders, for those likely to be returned to society, the primary function of incarceration should be rehab and job training instead of punishment.
Two words; public education. Do you want to see public education improve? Ban all schools in the bottom half (or third) (or below a certain score on standardized tests) from hosting sports teams while mandating that the salaries used to hire athletic coaches be used to hire more teachers.
Speaking of projects that are “shovel ready” with state and local governments revenue shrinking like a wool sweater accidentally washed in hot water how about using some of the stimulus money to keep these governments from laying off employees or canceling projects that are already scheduled.
The ethanol industry, already the recipient of bunches of Federal and state subsidies is teetering on the verge of bankruptcy. VeraSun, the largest private distiller of ethanol from corn filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy re-organization at the end of Oct. 2008. The bankruptcy judge has ruled that VeraSun has until 10 business days before a contract for delivery of corn comes due to notify the farmer if VeraSun is going to honor the contract or cancel it. Since corn prices have fallen drastically from their peak last summer VeraSun is canceling all delivery contracts so corn that the farmer expected to get $7.00 a bushel is now selling for $4.00. Should corn go way up VeraSun could start honoring contracts forcing the farmer to sell for less than the market price. Heads VeraSun wins, tails the farmers lose. Many experts expect that even after reorganization VeraSun will not be solvent.
While I do NOT favor a bailout for VeraSun (or the corn from ethanol industry) since the bankruptcy judge screwed the farmers royally I would like to see those screwed by VeraSun’s poor business practices get some sort of a break.
My local farmer's coop made some of those high dollar sales to VeraSun and it appears they are now stuck with the $3 or so loss / bushel. As a farmer I've benefited from the ethanol subsidies, but they're quite stupid. Theoretically we save a tiny bit on fuel prices, but pay a bit more for food. Looking at all costs, including environmental, it's a loser.
Krugman gives a good example of the kind of constructive criticism that can be helpful, and does not descend into merely bashing Obama. The posters on CD could learn a thing or two from him.
"Mainly, though, Mr. Obama needs to make his plan bigger."
From this I can only assume that Krugman is endorsing the second $700 billion stimulus package. Unless he's saying it needs to be bigger, because there was talk of initially making it over a trillion.
It's very easy for Paul Krugman to argue in the elite frame in which the unemployment figure means everything. It's a very familiar frame, which makes it easy for Krugman (1), because this frame has served the elite delightfully well over the past thirty years, at the expense of the people. No trouble getting the people to submit in the past, why any trouble now? Wage stagnation for thirty years, hours per week increased, massive debt, industries for local self-reliance exported to China, all political power sucked from the people's necks like blood. And Paul Krugman wants to sooth the people with the unemployment figure.
Sure, jobs for everyone who wants one! Let them join Blackwater. I heard that mercenaries is a growth industry! Let them join that overbloated health insurance racket! Let them work as "public relations" specialists for the fossil/nuke industries! Let them join the K St. lobby corps! I heard we need more medical "specialists"! Never mind that general practitioners and nurses can't be found anywhere! God Bless the United States of America! We will need someone to wash the new 5 ton SUVs rolling off GM's assembly lines soon enough! Do NOT build the economic self-reliance of your local communities! Leave the economy to the far-flung elites!! This is the elite message of course, force fed to everyone for the past thirty years. Does it still taste good?
(1) Remember that the Nobel prize badge that Krugman flashed at you at the bottom of his article was not created by Mr. Nobel himself in the establishment of the foundation but rather after his death, the foundation "caretakers" added a prize in economics. Did M.r Nobel simply "forget" about economics or did he have a good reason to omit economics?
If we get a good stimulus plan, we will benefit for decades (eg wind turbines, transmission upgrades, education subsidiies). A bad plan with limited future benefits would simply mean more debt, more tax dollars lost in interest payments and an even bigger sink hole to nowhere.
isn't there some evidence that the planet is suffering due to human industrial\economic activity? wouldn't this kind of planning, meaning more similar activity, exacerbate such planetary suffering? is that relevant?
"One more thing: even with the Obama plan, the Romer-Bernstein report predicts an average unemployment rate of 7.3 percent over the next three years."
The real unemployment rate is already 17%. The government only counts people currently receiving unemployment insurance. What a crock. When is it a depression, not a recession?
-- ekaton aka d.k.shaw
There are actually several different government unemployment rates. Quite naturally most like to use one that looks less DEPRESSING.