The New York Times / January 12, 2009 / Op-Ed Columnist

Ideas for Obama
By PAUL KRUGMAN

Last week President-elect Barack Obama was asked to respond to critics
who say that his stimulus plan won't do enough to help the economy.
Mr. Obama answered that he wants to hear ideas about "how to spend
money efficiently and effectively to jump-start the economy."

O.K., I'll bite — although as I'll explain shortly, the "jump-start"
metaphor is part of the problem.

First, Mr. Obama should scrap his proposal for $150 billion in
business tax cuts, which would do little to help the economy. Ideally
he'd scrap the proposed $150 billion payroll tax cut as well, though
I'm aware that it was a campaign promise.

Money not squandered on ineffective tax cuts could be used to provide
further relief to Americans in distress — enhanced unemployment
benefits, expanded Medicaid and more. And why not get an early start
on the insurance subsidies — probably running at $100 billion or more
per year — that will be essential if we're going to achieve universal
health care?

Mainly, though, Mr. Obama needs to make his plan bigger. To see why,
consider a new report from his own economic team.

On Saturday, Christina Romer, the future head of the Council of
Economic Advisers, and Jared Bernstein, who will be the vice
president's chief economist, released estimates of what the Obama
economic plan would accomplish. Their report is reasonable and
intellectually honest, which is a welcome change from the fuzzy math
of the last eight years.

But the report also makes it clear that the plan falls well short of
what the economy needs.

According to Ms. Romer and Mr. Bernstein, the Obama plan would have
its maximum impact in the fourth quarter of 2010. Without the plan,
they project, the unemployment rate in that quarter would be a
disastrous 8.8 percent. Yet even with the plan, unemployment would be
7 percent — roughly as high as it is now.

After 2010, the report says, the effects of the economic plan would
rapidly fade away. The job of promoting full recovery would, however,
remain undone: the unemployment rate would still be a painful 6.3
percent in the last quarter of 2011.

Now, economic forecasting is an inexact science, to say the least, and
things could turn out better than the report predicts. But they could
also turn out worse. The report itself acknowledges that "some private
forecasters anticipate unemployment rates as high as 11 percent in the
absence of action." And I'm with Lawrence Summers, another member of
the Obama economic team, who recently declared, "In this crisis, doing
too little poses a greater threat than doing too much." Unfortunately,
that principle isn't reflected in the current plan.

So how can Mr. Obama do more? By including a lot more public
investment in his plan — which will be possible if he takes a longer
view.

The Romer-Bernstein report acknowledges that "a dollar of
infrastructure spending is more effective in creating jobs than a
dollar of tax cuts." It argues, however, that "there is a limit on how
much government investment can be carried out efficiently in a short
time frame." But why does the time frame have to be short?

As far as I can tell, Mr. Obama's planners have focused on investment
projects that will deliver their main jobs boost over the next two
years. But since unemployment is likely to remain high well beyond
that two-year window, the plan should also include longer-term
investment projects.

And bear in mind that even a project that delivers its main punch in,
say, 2011 can provide significant economic support in earlier years.
If Mr. Obama drops the "jump-start" metaphor, if he accepts the
reality that we need a multi-year program rather than a short burst of
activity, he can create a lot more jobs through government investment,
even in the near term.

Still, shouldn't Mr. Obama wait for proof that a bigger, longer-term
plan is needed? No. Right now the investment portion of the Obama plan
is limited by a shortage of "shovel ready" projects, projects ready to
go on short notice. A lot more investment can be under way by late
2010 or 2011 if Mr. Obama gives the go-ahead now — but if he waits too
long before deciding, that window of opportunity will be gone.

One more thing: even with the Obama plan, the Romer-Bernstein report
predicts an average unemployment rate of 7.3 percent over the next
three years. That's a scary number, big enough to pose a real risk
that the U.S. economy will get stuck in a Japan-type deflationary
trap.

So my advice to the Obama team is to scrap the business tax cuts, and,
more important, to deal with the threat of doing too little by doing
more. And the way to do more is to stop talking about jump-starts and
look more broadly at the possibilities for government investment.

Copyright 2009 The New York Times Company
-- 
Jim Devine / "Segui il tuo corso, e lascia dir le genti." (Go your own
way and let people talk.) -- Karl, paraphrasing Dante.
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