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Saturday, April 16, 2011

President Obama's Real Proposal (and Why It's Risky)

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President Obama's Real Proposal (and Why It's Risky)

by: Robert Reich, Robert Reich's Blog

Paul Ryan says his bud­get plan will cut $4.4 tri­ll­ion over ten years. The Pre­sident says his new plan will cut $4 tri­ll­ion over twel­ve years.

Let’s get real. Ten or twelve-year bud­gets are baloney. It’s hard en­ough to forecast bud­gets a year or two into the fu­ture. Bet­ween now and 2022 or 2024 the economy will pro­bab­ly have gone through a re­cove­ry (I’ll ex­plain later why I fear it will be an­emic at best) and an­oth­er downturn. America will also have been through a bunch of elec­tions – at least five con­gres­sion­al and three pre­siden­ti­al.

The pract­ical ques­tion is how to get out of the on­go­ing gravitation­al pull of this awful re­cess­ion with­out cow-towing to ex­trem­ists on the right who think the U.S. govern­ment is their mort­al enemy. For Pre­sident Obama, it’s also about how to get re­elec­ted.

(Yes, we also have to send a clear sign­al to glob­al lend­ers that America is seri­ous about re­duc­ing its long-term bud­get de­ficit. But in truth, glob­al lend­ers don’t need much rea­ssuran­ce. Bond mar­ket yields in the U.S. are now lower than they were when the govern­ment was runn­ing a bud­get sur­plus ten years ago.)

Seen in this light, Obama’s plan isn’t rea­l­ly a bud­get pro­pos­al. It’s a pro­cess pro­pos­al.

Stage 1, start­ing now and end­ing in June, re­quires that Re­pub­lican and De­moc­ratic lead­ers de­v­ise a bud­get for 2012. Ap­parent­ly they’ve al­ready ag­reed to try.

That bud­get would also in­clude a “framework” for de­ficit re­duc­tion over the long­er haul. But that framework will be main­ly for show. It will give House Re­pub­licans en­ough cover to vote to raise the ceil­ing on the amount the U.S. govern­ment can bor­row. (The vote has to occur be­fore the Treasu­ry runs out of ac­count­ing man­euv­ers, in early July.)

And be­cause the framework’s de­tails will be fil­led in after Elec­tion Day, it will give Obama wiggle room be­fore the elec­tion to cam­paign on his priorit­ies. If he wins big – and if De­moc­rats re­take the House – its de­tails will look com­plete­ly dif­ferent from what they’d look like in the al­ter­native.

Stage 2 oc­curs in 2014 – fully two years after Elec­tion Day. Then, ac­cord­ing to Obama’s pro­pos­al, if the ratio of the nation’s de­ficit to the GDP hasn’t fall­en to 2.5 per­cent (it’s now over 10 per­cent), auto­matic across-the-board cuts will go into ef­fect to get it there.

Im­por­tant­ly, these cuts would­n’t apply to Soci­al Secur­ity and Medicare, or to Medicaid and other pro­grams de­sig­ned for the poor. And they would­n’t be li­mited to spend­ing. They’d also apply to tax ex­pen­di­tures – that is, to tax de­duc­tions and tax credits.

The bet­t­ing in the White House is that by 2014 the re­cove­ry will be in full force, and the economy will have grown so much that the ratio of de­ficit to the GDP will be in the range of 3 to 5 per­cent an­yway. That means any across-the-board cuts would­n’t have to be very deep.

The White House is also bet­t­ing that a strong re­cove­ry will take the sting out of any re­com­menda­tions to slow the growth of Medicare spend­ing em­anat­ing from the Medicare board set up under the new health care law (of­ficial­ly known as the In­depen­dent Pay­ment Ad­viso­ry Board.) Under Obama’s new plan, such pro­pos­als will be neces­sa­ry if Medicare spend­ing grows .5 per­cent fast­er than growth of the economy (under the law, it’s 1 per­cent fast­er).

All told, it’s a clev­er strategy. It might well avoid a dan­ger­ous game of chick­en over rais­ing the debt ceil­ing. It still al­lows the Pre­sident to char­ge Paul Ryan and other Re­pub­licans who join him as end­ing Medicare as we know it – which they are, in fact, pro­pos­ing to do. (This may help De­moc­rats win back sen­iors, whose sup­port for De­moc­ratic house can­didates drop­ped form 49% in 2006 to 38% in 2010.) And it gives the Pre­sident lots of room to man­euv­er bet­ween now and Elec­tion Day, and bet­ween Elec­tion Day and 2014.

But there’s one big weak­ness. The whole thing de­pends on the re­cove­ry pick­ing up steam. If the economy doesn’t, the pro­cess could backfire – lead­ing to in­discriminate bud­get cuts later on, as well as big cuts in Medicare. In­deed, if the re­cove­ry fails to fire up, Obama’s own chan­ce of re­elec­tion is di­mmed con­siderab­ly, as are the odds of a De­moc­ratic House after 2012.

Yet what are the chan­ces of a boom­ing re­cove­ry? The economy is now grow­ing at an an­nualized rate of only 1.5 per­cent. That’s piti­ful. It’s not near­ly en­ough to bring down the rate of un­employ­ment, or re­move the dang­er of a doub­le dip. Real wages con­tinue to drop. Hous­ing prices con­tinue to drop. Food and gas prices are ris­ing. Con­sum­er con­fid­ence is still in the base­ment.

By focus­ing the pub­lic’s at­ten­tion on the bud­get de­ficit, the Pre­sident is still play­ing on the Re­pub­lican’s field. By ad­vanc­ing his own “twel­ve year plan” for re­duc­ing it – with­out talk­ing about the economy’s un­der­ly­ing pro­blem – he ap­pears to validate their big lie that re­duc­ing the de­ficit is the key to fu­ture pro­sper­ity.

The un­der­ly­ing pro­blem isn’t the bud­get de­ficit. It’s that so much in­come and wealth are going to the top that most Americans don’t have the purchas­ing power to sus­tain a strong re­cove­ry.

Until steps are taken to alter this fund­ament­al im­balan­ce – for ex­am­ple, ex­empt­ing the first $20K of in­come from payroll taxes while li­ft­ing the cap on in­come sub­ject to payroll taxes, rais­ing in­come and capit­al gains taxes on mil­lionaires and using the re­venues to ex­pand the Ear­ned In­come Tax Credit up to in­comes of $50,000, strengthen­ing labor uni­ons, and so on – a strong re­cove­ry may not be pos­sible.



Robert Reich

Robert Reich is Chancellor's Professor of Public Policy at the University of California at Berkeley. He has served in three national administrations, most recently as secretary of labor under President Bill Clinton. He has written thirteen books, including The Work of Nations, Locked in the Cabinet, Supercapitalism, and his most recent book, Aftershock.

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