December 7, 2010
For Obama, Tax Deal Is a Back-Door Stimulus
By DAVID LEONHARDT

WASHINGTON

A year ago, President Obama and the Democrats made the mistake of
assuming that an economic recovery was under way. This week’s deal to
extend the Bush tax cuts shows that the White House’s top priority is
avoiding the same mistake again — even if it has to upset many fellow
Democrats in the process.

Mr. Obama effectively traded tax cuts for the affluent, which
Republicans were demanding, for a second stimulus bill that seemed
improbable a few weeks ago. Mr. Obama yielded to Republicans on
extending the high-end Bush tax cuts and on cutting the estate tax
below its scheduled level. In exchange, Republicans agreed to extend
unemployment benefits, cut payroll taxes and business taxes, and
extend a grab bag of tax credits for college tuition and other items.
...

Tellingly, economists and Democratic policy experts were largely
pleased with the deal. Forecasting firms on Tuesday upgraded their
estimates for growth and job gains over the next two years. Economists
at Goldman Sachs, who have been more negative and more accurate than
most Wall Street forecasters lately, called the deal “significantly
more positive” than they had anticipated.

And left-leaning policy experts said the package did more to create
jobs than they had thought possible after the Republicans’ midterm
election victories. Robert Greenstein, Lawrence Mishel and John
Podesta — who run prominent Washington research groups that range from
liberal to staunchly liberal — all offered praise for the package. Of
its estimated $900 billion-plus cost over two years, roughly $120
billion covers the high-end tax cuts and the estate tax cut, $450
billion covers Mr. Obama’s wish list and $360 billion covers the tax
cut extensions both parties favored.

“People are kind of venting their disappointment and acting as if the
administration did a terrible job in the negotiations,” said Mr.
Greenstein, who runs the Center on Budget and Policy Priorities. “But
it didn’t. The mistake the administration made — and it was a serious
one — was that it should have dealt with this well before the
election.”

Still, the risk for Democrats, and the economy, remains the same as it
was. Financial crises wreak terrible havoc. They typically cause
unemployment to rise for more than five years and leave consumers and
business uncertain about when healthy growth will finally resume.
Aftershocks are common, as is evident in Europe. Virtually no
economist believes the new stimulus package will be big enough to make
the economy feel healthy anytime soon.

The ideal package would have been larger than the current one, and it
would have been better tailored. The $120 billion cut in the payroll
tax, for example, will apply to the portion paid by workers, not
companies. The Congressional Budget Office and other analysts have
said that cutting the workers’ portion provides less bang for the buck
because individuals are likely to save some portion of the money.
Cutting the employers’ portion subsidizes hiring.

But politics prevented the best kind of payroll tax cut. Republicans
did not want one larger than the $120 billion, one-year cut in the
package. Administration officials wanted the political benefit of
having that whole sum apply to individual workers. The resulting
compromise will help the economy, but not as much as it could have.

Initial estimates by economists suggested that the overall legislation
would reduce the unemployment rate by one-half a percentage point to a
full point over the next year, compared with allowing all the tax cuts
to expire and passing no new stimulus. By the end of 2012, the decline
could be up to 1.5 percentage points, economists said.

On the other hand, the unemployment rate will still probably be near 8
percent by the end of 2012, when the current package expires, and the
two parties will get to have this fight all over again.

What’s the early line on that fight? Republican officials hope that
Democrats will again find it hard to let all the tax cuts expire in
the name of letting some expire. White House officials hope the
economy will have improved enough by then to help Mr. Obama win
re-election — and to allow him to threaten, credibly, to veto any bill
that includes a tax cut for the wealthy.

There is also one big unknown looming over the whole debate: the
deficit. This week’s deal, of course, will worsen the deficit. In the
short run, many economists believe a larger deficit is better than the
alternative. As Ben Bernanke, the Federal Reserve chairman, said
during a recent “60 Minutes” interview, “We don’t want to take actions
this year that will affect this year’s spending and this year’s taxes
in a way that will hurt the recovery.”

Yet Mr. Bernanke and other economists usually add another point. Any
additional spending now, they say, should be paired with future
deficit reduction. Otherwise, the long-term deficit will continue to
rise, and nervous investors may eventually demand that the federal
government pay higher interest rates. Interest rates remain low for
now, but they did rise on Tuesday, after the compromise was announced.

The problem is that raising the deficit — be it through high-end tax
cuts or a new stimulus program — is a lot easier than cutting it.
Strange as it may sound, some of the only fiscal conservatives in
Washington this week have been liberals who would be willing to let
everyone’s taxes rise. And they seem unlikely to win on this issue.

http://www.nytimes.com/2010/12/08/business/economy/08leonhardt.html

-- 
Jim Devine / "The conventional view serves to protect us from the
painful job of thinking."   - John Kenneth Galbraith
_______________________________________________
pen-l mailing list
[email protected]
https://lists.csuchico.edu/mailman/listinfo/pen-l

Reply via email to