1/28/2009

Washington’s Bubble

naked capitalism passes along some opinion from the Financial Times:

The US debate over the fiscal stimulus is remarkable in its neglect of the medium term – that is, the budgetary challenges over a period of five to 10 years. Neither the White House nor Congress has offered the public a scenario of how the proposed mega-deficits will affect the budget and government programmes beyond the next 12 to 24 months. Without a sound medium-term fiscal framework, the stimulus package can easily do more harm than good, since the prospect of trillion-dollar-plus deficits as far as the eye can see will weigh heavily on the confidence of consumers and businesses, and thereby undermine even the short-term benefits of the stimulus package.

We are told that we have to rush without thinking lest the entire economy collapse. This is belied by recent events. The spring 2008 stimulus package of $100bn (€76bn, £71bn) in tax rebates was rushed into effect in a similar way and we now know it had little stimulus effect. The rebates were largely saved or used to pay down credit card debt, rather than spent. The $700bn troubled asset relief programme bail-out was also rushed into effect and its results have been notoriously poor.

The Tarp has not revived the banks or their lending, but it has supported a massive transfer of taxpayer wealth to the management and owners of well-connected financial institutions. Some of those transfers – as in the case of Merrill Lynch using its government-financed sale to Bank of America to enable $4bn in bonuses last month – are beyond egregious. Yet the US is now inured to corruption and in such a rush that even billions of dollars of public funds shovelled into Merrill’s private pockets in broad daylight barely merited a day’s news cycle.

The most obvious problem with the stimulus package is that it has been turned into a fiscal piñata – with a mad scramble for candy on the floor. We seem all too eager to rectify a generation of a nation saving too little by saving even less – this time through expanding government borrowing. First it was former US Federal Reserve chairman Alan Greenspan’s bubble, then Wall Street’s, and now – in the third act – it will be Washington’s.

The White House and Congress have stated an amount – $825bn to be spent mostly over two years – on top of a deficit that is already projected to reach $1,186bn in fiscal year 2009 without the stimulus package. Many of the details of allocating the $825bn are being left to Congress with the aim of reaching a bipartisan consensus. The result is shaping up to be an astounding mish-mash of tax cuts, public investments, transfer payments and special treats for insiders.

What we need is a medium-term fiscal framework, one that lays out an anticipated schedule of taxes and spending consistent with the needs of the economy and government functions. Rather than soundbites about ending pork-barrel projects or scouring the budget for waste, or about the relative multipliers of tax cuts versus spending increases (both of which depend on expectations about the future, a point mostly overlooked in the debate), we should be reflecting on certain basic fiscal facts, the most important of which is that the US government faces huge and potentially debilitating structural deficits as far as the eye can see.

Posted: 7:41 am

2 Comments

  1. Thank you BMB for another excellent post on what we are getting into… Recall the famous words of Milton Friedman, “The power to do good is also the power to do harm”…

    The bankrupt Federal government is drawing us into a web of deception.

    It has been said that there is absolutely nothing to be gained by pretending that a bankrupt person or institution is anything other than bankrupt. In fact, there is a lot to lose by pretending that a bankrupt person or institution is something other than bankrupt. The bankrupt entity will draw into ruin anyone through whom it can sustain itself as it continues to conceal the deceit of its predicament.

    Oh, my, how the pretense is working well these days. Most are quite happy to go along with the marvelous plan that the government proposes. We believe all of the promises and assurances that it will all work to our benefit. The government says we must spend this money even though it has none of it on hand… and neither of course do we.

    The insipid truth that will later be revealed is actually a shocking realization that awaits us just down the road. There we will find a far more immense and looming obstacle standing before us. This new dilemma will make us think of the once “good old days” of our now current crises. We will remember the self-determinism and freedoms that we once had. My, had we only not recoiled so from the work of paring down excesses ourselves. Had we only accepted a life of less for a time as we allowed the poor decisions we made and our failed financial institutions also to work out as the capitalist system was designed to. Some of us would have to take responsibility for our past decisions just as the financial institions should also acept bitter medicine. Had we only faced the prospect of getting by with less which would have quickly pressed us back into meaningful work and increased our productivity again. Had we not turned to the promises of government. Had we only accepted our outcomes and done this by ourselves.

    Nevertheless the sheer size of the looming obstacle will stop us cold. It will completely obscure any way forward. It will be a new entity insisting it must now escort us forward. And we will learn then that our recovery can come only if we submit to being the willing slaves of this new entity (Hmmm… hadnt this outfit once showered us with such wonderful promises?). What we will find looming over us is our very government itself, yet now taking the ugly form of a politically socialist, oppressive and immensely regulated tax state.

    The choice is ours.

    Comment by Christian — 1/28/2009 @ 1:54 pm

  2. Exactly what the ‘end game’ proves to be remains to be seen, but the ’slippery slope’ is turning into an glacier-covered mountainside.

    Comment by BMB — 1/28/2009 @ 2:15 pm

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