Veronique de Rugy | February 10, 2009
How bad is the stimulus bill just passed by the Senate? Well, at least as bad as the one passed last week by the House of Representatives, but probably not as bad as the final bill that will land on President Barack Obama's desk, possibly as soon as the end of this week.
Don't take my word for it. In a report to Sen. Judd Gregg (R-N.H.), the nonpartisan Congressional Budget Office (CBO) laid out in plain English—well, economic language—that the Senate bill would eventually cause not a stimulus but a recession in "the longer run." As CBO's director Douglas W. Elmendorf wrote on February 4:
At your request, the Congressional Budget Office (CBO) has conducted an analysis of the macroeconomic impact of the Inouye-Baucus amendment in the nature of a substitute to H.R. 1 [the House stimulus bill]. CBO estimates that this Senate legislation would raise output and lower unemployment for several years, with effects broadly similar to those of H.R. 1 as introduced. In the longer run, the legislation would result in a slight decrease in gross domestic product (GDP) compared with CBO’s baseline economic forecast.
On the CBO's The Director’s Blog, Elmendorf explains why the Senate legislation would eventually reduce economic output: “The principal channel for this effect is that the legislation would result in an increase in government debt. To the extent that people hold their wealth in the form of government bonds rather than in a form that can be used to finance private investment, the increased government debt would tend to 'crowd out' private investment—thus reducing the stock of private capital and the long-term potential output of the economy.”
The CBO's latest projection for fiscal year 2009's deficit is that it will reach $1.2 trillion (that’s eleven zeros after the 2) before factoring in any stimulus spending or war spending. That’s 8.3 percent of GDP and far higher than any deficit under President Ronald Reagan in the 1980s (when deficits reached 6 percent of GDP). In fact, you have to go back to World War II to find deficits higher than the projections for FY 2009.
Truly massive deficits won't surprise anyone who has looked at the Senate version of the stimulus bill. Much has been made over the "compromises" and negotiations behind the Senate finally arriving at something that garnered enough support for passage. Here are three large categories of expenditures where senators managed to sort out their differences and find a compromise that they can all live with. If only things were so simple for us taxpayers.
1. Billions of dollars in spending exclusively devoted to benefit federal employees.
That spending was added to an earlier version of the bill, which also benefited federal employees by splurging on things such as the following:
2. Wasteful spending that is not directly targeted at federal employees:
Arguably the best item in the Senate bill is a $1,500 tax credit to anyone that purchases “neighborhood electric vehicles”—also known as golf carts. The total estimated cost of that giveback is $300 million. Purchasers of motorcycles and three-wheelers shouldn't despair, however, as there are benefits available for them, too.
And then there are these:
3. Tax cuts and tax breaks that don't deliver anything close to real reform.
The Senate bill supposedly wooed a few recalcitrant Republicans by trimming spending (see above) and throwing in simple, clear-cut, and effective tax cuts. The tax portions of the Senate stimulus bill do contain approximately 40 separate tax-related provisions aimed at boosting the economy, amounting to an estimated $385.3 billion in cuts and government give-backs.
The Senate might have done something straightforward, like cutting the corporate income tax or cutting the payroll tax that all workers pay. Instead, most of the provisions are tax credits, many of which are refundable. In other words, individuals and businesses need to pay their taxes up front and then will get money back from the government. These sorts of programs, aimed incentivizing investment, are better understood as spending programs disguised as “tax cuts.”
Among the various tax provisions are programs such as the following:
There are many more bad policies and spending decisions in the Senate stimulus bill, but even a cursory glance at the parts outlined above give a good sense of the overall legislation—and what is likely to be signed into law by President Obama.
And here is one more thing to consider: There is absolutely no evidence that any stimulus package in the past 80 years has goosed economic activity—not FDR’s during the Great Depression, not Japan’s during the 1990s, and not George W. Bush’s in 2001 and 2008. If anything, the economic evidence suggests that such spending packages actually intensified and prolonged misery.
Instead of rushing through legislation that will likely have no short-term effect on the economy, is guaranteed to have negative long term ones, and that serves the traditional interest groups that politicians are always busy catering to, the Senate should have cut spending like Ireland is now doing and cut marginal tax rates across the board. That would not only have stimulated the economy, it would have been fiscally responsible considering the massive entitlement crisis that is coming our way. But such legislation, alas, will have to wait for another day. Or another crisis.
Veronique de Rugy is a Reason columnist and a senior research fellow at the Mercatus Center at George Mason University.
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The Lusty Lady: a Seattle icon. Though their signage has been somehow disappointing the last few times I've walked by. I was getting worried that they fired their double entendre guy.
Great, the Challenged One got exactly what he wanted. We are all
doomed.
It is time that I really seriously look at New Zealand. They have a
very generous immigration program for programers (and other
essential skillsets). No H1B type program, it is a pure Green Card
type system and you don't need a job there to get it.
Also, it seems like you can live a Hawaii lifestyle there on an
Iowa budget. Housing with beautiful ocean views was dirt cheap.
About 300k USD.
Time to get packing...
$750 earmark for the National Computer Center
Finally they'll be able to get that new widescreen monitor!
I was getting worried that they fired their double entendre
guy.
Maybe he double entendre'd too many of the girls.
So, how did the markets react to the Senate passage of the
stimulus bill and the new bailout plan announced by our tax-dodging
Treasury secretary?
So glad you asked: down more than 4.5%, closing below 7,900.
Socialism really bites the big one.
I was getting worried that they fired their double entendre
guy.
Maybe he double entendre'd too many of the girls.
He use his long pole on their marquees?
Why can't I find any pictures of Veronique de Rugy? Her name
sounds hot.
You must be trying about as hard as Tim Geithner:
http://www.cato.org/people/rugy.html
The Lusty Lady: a Seattle icon. Though their signage has
been somehow disappointing the last few times I've walked
by.
Dagney, do you remember the sign when the APEC conference came to
Seattle?
Welcom Apeckers!
Comic gold.
It is time that I really seriously look at New Zealand. They
have a very generous immigration program for programers (and other
essential skillsets). No H1B type program, it is a pure Green Card
type system and you don't need a job there to get it.
Also, it seems like you can live a Hawaii lifestyle there on an
Iowa budget. Housing with beautiful ocean views was dirt
cheap.
Plus they've got hobbits!
I hope the Senate-House "compromise" bill turns out to be
several trillion dollars big.
I want to get this collapse over with ASAP.
Oh yeah: I love how the "Republicans" (they should really change
their name to "Empiricans") are suddenly crying for fiscal
restraint.
Yeah, right.
800 Billion? Try 3 trillion.
Doubt the sanity of the Dear Leader?
Racist. Off to the gulag with you and your family.
Face it. The progressives have won. Every Joe and Jane American
expects the gummint to take care of them in one way or another.
I've actually heard otherwise normal, apolitical people utter
things like "tax cuts destroyed the economy" or they speak of the
government as being the only source of prosperity. The Vatican saw
a rain of burning frogs. There are dark time, my friends.
They be taxing all income over $50,000 at 100% within a few years.
Of course, then no jobs will actually *pay* more than that,
reducing tax revenue to zero, but, well, progressives have never
really been on speaking terms with reality.
Plus they've got hobbits!
Ew. Is that really a plus? Reasonably priced high elf whores,
maybe, but hobbits? Bleah! And I suppose Ents would be good for
yard work.
It's funny when the article indicates that Federal Employees
will benefit from all of the spending. I don't believe that any
Federal Employees will be employed for all of the construction
projects, building of green vehicles, etc... but other American
Citizens. If you want to see who is benefiting, don't look at the
final user/resident of the project, but rather look at those
employed to create the project or item.
As far as the $1000 tax credit...the purpose here may not be to
create jobs, but just provide some relief to folks struggling to
pay bills.
Another way to think about all of this goverment spending is to
think about all of the companies/people that aren't spending right
now. An economy grows and is sustained by spending. Right now
people and businesses aren't spending, both due to lack of money
and lack of credit. This lack of spending slows down the economy,
so ANY spending by the government will help the economy by creating
jobs, etc. The idea is to spend on worthwhile items/programs, and I
don't see any spending that is for something totally wasteful, and
jobs will be created/retained based on the programs listed in the
article.
Now when economic times are good (like in the past decade), then
the government should reduce spending and pay off the debt that's
created in economic downturns, but unfortunately the previous
administration didn't do that.
"I was getting worried that they fired their double entendre
guy.
Maybe he double entendre'd too many of the girls.
He use his long pole on their marquees?"
Maybe he put too much T and A on the marquee.
As far as the $1000 tax credit...the purpose here may not be
to create jobs, but just provide some relief to folks struggling to
pay bills.
Then:
(a) Why not do a genuine tax cut? Reduce the rate?
(b) For those who would not benefit (much) from a rate cut because
they don't pay taxes, why disguise a welfare payment as a tax cut?
Put it out there and let it be debated and approved as what it
is.
"...and jobs will be created/retained based on the programs
listed in the article."
Pipe dream. The only jobs any government has ever created that were
"created/retained" are bureaucratic positions that do not
inherently produce revenue. But rather are essentially recurring
fixed costs, driving up the cost of government long term.
Period.
Government isn't "in" the business marketplace, and can't retain
people who have even adequate business "sense" (or sensibilities,
if you will).
...because governments don't pay enough.
What you've suggested is essentially part and parcel of a utopian
mindset that has never quite grappled with the idea that people are
not inherently altruistic, but are, rather, inherently
self-interested.
The former [philosophic solipsism] is due to misplaced idealism.
The latter [reality] is the result of Darwinian selection.
You can't fight aeons of the genetic dominance of selection with
idealism. The genes will win out, every time.
...this is the core reason why socialism is pure blather, and will
always fail in every instance, over time.
Government philosophers ignore genetic traits (and their Darwinian
predisposition to selecting for "self-interest" - another way to
express breeding dominance - as a proven, indeed the only,
successful long-range breeding strategy) at your peril.
The suggestion betrays an ignorance of human nature in the general,
economics in the particulars, and selection in the theoretical.
Instead, most of the provisions are tax credits, many of
which are refundable. In other words, individuals and businesses
need to pay their taxes up front and then will get money back from
the government.
Actually, the term "refundable tax credit" means that the credit is
treated as a tax payment, thus a business or individual otherwise
eligible for the credit doesn't need to have paid any tax up front
to receive a refund arising from the credit. The credit can be in
excess of your actual tax liability, making it truly redistributive
in nature.
A non-refundable tax credit, on the other hand, cannot reduce your
tax below zero, and so is limited to your actual tax
liability.
The author still makes her point, but the nature of a refundable
tax credit is even more egregious than she originally
indicates.
The Lusty lady is indeed a Seattle! And let me be the first to say, regarding the promotion of that hack Kerlikowske to drug czar, our gain is this nation's loss.
That's depressing! Only a few items that could actually benefit middle class America! I've tried to stay positive about all this, but what with being retired and trying to live on what's left of my savings, plus two adult children out of work and looking to me for help, I'm being squeezed from every side. I worked hard to save for retirement, paid off all of my mortgages, am debt free and now this! Still, I'm better off than most. Guess I can go back to selling real estate when all of these folks decide to utilize their tax credit.
I would rather the nouveau "concerned fiscal conservatives"
explain why it is that they said nothing over the last eight years
while a $6 Trillion SURPLUS(that would more than 6 times the size
of the stimulus bill)was being turned into an unimaginable deficit
by the Bush administration and yet they are ready to attack any
effort by the American People's President to dig us out of 8 years
of Republican blunders.
Making buildings energy efficient is wasteful? I guess in
Republican minds, the statement "not being dependent on foreign
oil" should be used strictly as a campaign slogan and not actually
acted upon.
Energy efficient cars? Flood prevention? Flood damage
rehabilitation? After school jobs? I guess our money would be
better spent on no bid/ no accountability contracts to Blackwater
and Halliburton.
"The Senate stimulus bill should only stimulate taxpayer
anger"
So what, there are like what 50 million or so tax payers. Seriously
if calculated non-govenrment income - government income how many
Americans would actually be paying anything into the system. Face
it most Americans expect to retire with social security or a
government pension, or not at all. Most Americans would work for
the government if they had the chance. This is expecially true with
all the private sector layoffs. For the most part most people get
more from the government than they pay to it.
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