Whether and How to Sell the Jobs Policy

  

by: BruceMcF

Sun Sep 11, 2011 at 04:02:17 AM EST


(10 am. - promoted by ek hornbeck)

Burning the Midnight Oil for Progressive Populism

First off, the thing to do with the BS about gutting the safety net on the excuse that the Take Everything Away Party wants to kill it is to take the idea of gutting the safety programs behind the farmhouse to the mint bed and apply a sharp ax.

How to do that, I don't know.

But if it can be done, then there's still the question of whether and how to sell the "Jobs Policy"

In a Nutshell

Without the specifics, the broad outline (pdf) of the policy is about $240b in tax cuts and $200b in spending. Of the $200b in spending, about $50b is unemployment insurance extension, which is maintaining what we presently have, and $35b is offsetting state and local cuts in teacher and first responder employment, so about $115b in new spending stimulus.

Economically, the alternative is not status quo, the alternative is ongoing cuts, so you could argue that its a useful $200b increase in spending in economic terms ~ but in political terms, "it could have been worse" is a sharp an argument as a plastic knife, so I'll count it as $115b in stimulus.

Can that work? Well, it depends on what you mean by work. To the extent that the $115b in spending can be done over the next year, it is more "Stimulus" than we had last year, and almost as much as we had in the Fiscal Year from October 2009 to September 2010 ~ when unemployment did, in fact, noticably decline.

So in terms of "will unemployment noticeably decline?" as working (as low a bar as that may be), yes, it's likely to work.

Over the long haul, if that worth the promised future spending cuts over the next decade to "pay for" the payroll tax cuts that will have such weak effect? ...

... well, that's the question.

In policy terms, we need employment now. When we set the damage to be done in the future against whatever fights we lose in the future based on the "baseline" including absurd cuts .... against the damage that will be done by a second recession if we allow the economy to continue heading into a second recession ... the recession is more total damage.

And in political terms, I was here in Ohio when Governor Strickland was facing re-election against a heavily corporate backed and heavily attacked for his corporate background rival, and the heavy attacks on his corporate background had a serious impact ... but Kasich still won by 2%. If the economy slips into a recession next year, the Citizen's United money is going to get that to use to continue attacking the half measures taken in 2009, and could quite conceivably lay the foundation for policies that extend the current Depression into something to rival the Great Depression.

Fighting to preserve the safety net is complex enough: I argue for simplifying everything else.

But HOW to support the Jobs Bill

The problem is, based on past performance, we would expect the Obama administration to cave on the useful parts of the Job Bill and accept a "compromise" consisting of only the useless parts. After all, the Republicans would happily accept the useless parts, as advancing their interests while still tilting the playing field to their advantage as they choose between nominating a bad candidate or several worse ones.

So support needs to be both simple, and to be support for the spending plus tax cuts as a package deal.

I reckon the message is:

The real job creators are customers. All the tax cuts in the world are useless unless businesses have orders to fill. Pulling out the spending makes the tax cuts useless, so no spending, no jobs. And no jobs, no deal.

No spending, no jobs. And no jobs, no deal.

BruceMcF :: Whether and How to Sell the Jobs Policy
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Timid steps in the right direction mixed in with ... (4.00 / 3)
... bold steps in the wrong direction. What lovely times we live in.

In an op-ed in the NYT (4.00 / 2)
Joe Nocera said that there needs to be more pressure on the banks to extend credit to small business. He had an e-mail from a friend with a small business who couldn't get credit. The banks just aren't lending and sitting on trillions.

The other elephant in the room that wasn't mentioned is the continued foreclosure/housing crisis that will add another trillion or so to the losses already sustained by the government and Fannie/Freddie who were more or less forced to buy the bad Mortgage Backed Securities from BoA and other Too Big To Fail banks.

The solution to Social Security is easy, raise the cap and stop borrowing from the trust.

Medicare has one quick fix, negotiate with the pharmaceutical companies like the VA does. The other fix would be to end the wars we are involves in. The savings from that would fund the Medicare shortfall for 75 years. That was calculated by several economists including Dean Baker

Sadly this president and congress won't do any of this.

"by the pricking of my thumbs, something wicked this way comes" Wm. Shakespeare, Macbeth


When people say 'raise the cap' ... (4.00 / 1)
... they normally mean a levy ~ raising the cap as such would mean people with high enough SS tax payments having entitlements to $100,000+ Social Security checks, and social security checks of several multiples of median income is bad for the political security of the system.

As far as "borrowing from the trust fund" ~ cashing in the bonds in the trust fund is what the bonds are there for ~ the issue is whether they are exhausted in the middle of the Baby Boomer demographic bulge or when the demographic bulge has passed. Putting FICA taxes so high that we don't cash in the bonds at all is setting them higher than need be.

But this essay is not focusing on the gutting of the safety net programs on the pretext of funding the jobs bill, but on the jobs bill itself.

As far as lending to small business: increase economic activity, and reduce the degree of plundering of small business by big business, and banks will be more willing to lend to small business, since they'll be more attractive borrowers. Obviously a Hedge Fund Democrat is not going to do the latter, so that leaves the former.


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