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Does it get any clearer than the hard numbers regarding who will lead  
the country to stronger economic times for all?  See the article from  
the NYT Business Section Sunday.

If this election was about policies, economics, and science, rather  
than culture and 'someone I can have a beer with,' then it is clear  
as day that Obama is the stronger candidate for America's future.  If  
America doesn't want to vote for the future, then perhaps we don't it  
deserve a future.
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August 31, 2008
ECONOMIC VIEW
Is History Siding With Obama’s Economic Plan?

By ALAN S. BLINDER
CLEARLY, there are major differences between the economic policies of  
Senators Barack Obama and John McCain. Mr. McCain wants more tax cuts  
for the rich; Mr. Obama wants tax cuts for the poor and middle class.  
The two men also disagree on health care, energy and many other topics.

Such differences are hardly surprising. Democrats and Republicans  
have followed different approaches to the economy for as long as  
there have been Democrats and Republicans. Longer, actually. Remember  
Hamilton versus Jefferson?

Many Americans know that there are characteristic policy differences  
between the two parties. But few are aware of two important facts  
about the post-World War II era, both of which are brilliantly  
delineated in a new book, “Unequal Democracy,” by Larry M. Bartels, a  
professor of political science at Princeton. Understanding them might  
help voters see what could be at stake, economically speaking, in  
November.

I call the first fact the Great Partisan Growth Divide. Simply put,  
the United States economy has grown faster, on average, under  
Democratic presidents than under Republicans.

The stark contrast between the whiz-bang Clinton years and the dreary  
Bush years is familiar because it is so recent. But while it is  
extreme, it is not atypical. Data for the whole period from 1948 to  
2007, during which Republicans occupied the White House for 34 years  
and Democrats for 26, show average annual growth of real gross  
national product of 1.64 percent per capita under Republican  
presidents versus 2.78 percent under Democrats.

That 1.14-point difference, if maintained for eight years, would  
yield 9.33 percent more income per person, which is a lot more than  
almost anyone can expect from a tax cut.

Such a large historical gap in economic performance between the two  
parties is rather surprising, because presidents have limited  
leverage over the nation’s economy. Most economists will tell you  
that Federal Reserve policy and oil prices, to name just two  
influences, are far more powerful than fiscal policy. Furthermore, as  
those mutual fund prospectuses constantly warn us, past results are  
no guarantee of future performance. But statistical regularities,  
like facts, are stubborn things. You bet against them at your peril.

The second big historical fact, which might be called the Great  
Partisan Inequality Divide, is the focus of Professor Bartels’s work.

It is well known that income inequality in the United States has been  
on the rise for about 30 years now — an unsettling development that  
has finally touched the public consciousness. But Professor Bartels  
unearths a stunning statistical regularity: Over the entire 60-year  
period, income inequality trended substantially upward under  
Republican presidents but slightly downward under Democrats, thus  
accounting for the widening income gaps over all. And the bad news  
for America’s poor is that Republicans have won five of the seven  
elections going back to 1980.

The Great Partisan Inequality Divide is not limited to the poor. To  
get a more granular look, Professor Bartels studied the postwar  
history of income gains at five different places in the income  
distribution.

The 20th percentile is the income level at which 20 percent of all  
families have less income and 80 percent have more. It is thus a  
plausible dividing line between the poor and the nonpoor. Similarly,  
the 40th percentile is the income level at which 40 percent of the  
families are poorer and 60 percent are richer. And similarly for the  
60th, 80th, and 95th percentiles. The 95th percentile is the best  
dividing line between the rich and the nonrich that the data  
permitted Professor Bartels to study. (That dividing line, by the  
way, is well below the $5 million threshold John McCain has jokingly  
used for defining the rich. It’s closer to $180,000.)

The accompanying table, which is adapted from the book, tells a  
remarkably consistent story. It shows that when Democrats were in the  
White House, lower-income families experienced slightly faster income  
growth than higher-income families — which means that incomes were  
equalizing. In stark contrast, it also shows much faster income  
growth for the better-off when Republicans were in the White House —  
thus widening the gap in income.

The table also shows that families at the 95th percentile fared  
almost as well under Republican presidents as under Democrats (1.90  
percent growth per year, versus 2.12 percent), giving them little  
stake, economically, in election outcomes. But the stakes were  
enormous for the less well-to-do. Families at the 20th percentile  
fared much worse under Republicans than under Democrats (0.43 percent  
versus 2.64 percent). Eight years of growth at an annual rate of 0.43  
percent increases a family’s income by just 3.5 percent, while eight  
years of growth at 2.64 percent raises it by 23.2 percent.

The sources of such large differences make for a slightly complicated  
story. In the early part of the period — say, the pre-Reagan years —  
the Great Partisan Growth Divide accounted for most of the Great  
Partisan Inequality divide, because the poor do relatively better in  
a high-growth economy.

Beginning with the Reagan presidency, however, growth differences are  
smaller and tax and transfer policies have played a larger role. We  
know, for example, that Republicans have typically favored large tax  
cuts for upper-income groups while Democrats have opposed them. In  
addition, Democrats have been more willing to raise the minimum wage,  
and Republicans have been more hostile toward unions.

The two Great Partisan Divides combine to suggest that, if history is  
a guide, an Obama victory in November would lead to faster economic  
growth with less inequality, while a McCain victory would lead to  
slower economic growth with more inequality. Which part of the Obama  
menu don’t you like?

Alan S. Blinder is a professor of economics and public affairs at  
Princeton and former vice chairman of the Federal Reserve. He has  
advised many Democratic politicians.


Copyright 2008 The New York Times Company

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