Real Clear Politics
 
November 1, 2010  
Obama's Economists Missed What Voters Plainly  Saw
By _Michael  Barone_ 
(http://www.realclearpolitics.com/authors/?author=Michael+Barone&id=14827) 

Heading into what appears to be a disastrous midterm election, the Obama  
Democrats profess to be puzzled. The president's record, they insist, is  
moderate, accommodating -- if anything, overcautious. So why do most American  
voters seem to be angrily rejecting it? 
That's one way of looking at it. Another way is to say that the Obama  
administration and the Democratic Congress have increased government's share of 
 
gross domestic product from 21 percent, where it's hovered for the last 
several  decades, to about 25 percent and have put the national debt on a 
trajectory to  increase from 40 to 90 percent of GDP.

 
Voters have noticed -- and don't like it.
 
But, say the Obama Democrats, shouldn't ordinary people -- in particular,  
shouldn't the blue-collar working class -- be grateful to a government that  
tries to "spread the wealth" (Obama's words to Joe the Plumber) in 
difficult  economic times? 
They used to be, the argument would go. In post-World War II America, 
voters  regularly moved toward the Democrats in recession years. 
There's a difference, however, that has escaped Obama Democrats but perhaps 
 not ordinary voters. 
In recessions caused by oscillations in the business cycle from the 1940s 
to  1970s, voters were confident that the private-sector economy could 
support the  burden of countercyclical spending on things like unemployment 
insurance and  public works projects. 
That spending would stimulate consumer demand, the thinking went, and once  
inventories were drawn down, manufacturers would call workers back to the  
assembly line. The recession would be over. 
But it's been a long time since we've had a major business cycle recession. 
 The recession from which we've technically emerged, but which seems to 
most  voters to be lingering on, is something different, the result of a 
financial  crisis. 
And financial crisis recessions tend to be a lot deeper and more prolonged  
than business cycle recessions, as economists Carmen Reinhart and Kenneth 
Rogoff  argue in their 2009 book, "This Time is Different: Eight Centuries of 
Financial  Folly." "The aftermath of systemic banking crises," they write, 
"involves a  protracted and pronounced contraction in economic activity and 
puts significant  strains on government resources." 
The very able economists in the incoming Obama administration seem to have  
ignored the difference between these two kinds of recessions. Council of  
Economic Advisers head Christina Romer was surely sincere when she promised 
that  passage of the stimulus package would hold unemployment under 8 
percent. 
Similarly, administration economists evidently thought the private-sector  
economy could bear the burden of a national debt that doubled over a decade. 
It  would bounce back like it usually does in a business cycle recession. 
Tea partiers took a different view -- and before long, so did most voters.  
They seem to believe that permanent increases in government's share of GDP 
will  inflict permanent damage on the private-sector economy -- and won't do 
much, if  anything, to move us out of this prolonged financial crisis 
recession. The  evidence so far seems to support them. 
In addition, they seem to have understood that the threat of higher tax 
rates  and more onerous and intrusive regulation from this administration would 
deter  business executives from expanding, entrepreneurs from creating 
jobs, investors  from taking risks and consumers from buying things. 
Larry Summers could tell business leaders that they had nothing significant 
 to fear from a sophisticated economic adviser like himself. But he was 
working  for a president who told ABC's Charlie Gibson that he would favor 
higher capital  gains tax rates even if they brought in less revenue to the 
government. This is  a president who likes taking rich people's money away from 
them. 
The business leaders know that Summers has gone, while the voters know that 
 Obama remains and will be in office two more years -- but without a 
Democratic  majority in the House of Representatives and, perhaps, a Democratic 
majority in  the Senate, if the polls are right. 
The line from the Obama camp is that voters are confused, ignorant, misled 
or  even racist; they can't be rejecting the president's party on the 
merits. But  voters, in rejecting the Obama Democrats' vast expansion of 
government, may be  more sophisticated than their supposed betters. Leave the 
private 
sector alone,  they seem to be saying, so it can recover from the financial 
crisis recession  and once again create the bounteous and unscripted growth 
that has been the norm  in American history.

-- 
Centroids: The Center of the Radical Centrist Community 
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