Artikel menarik ttg Barack Obama setelah mengeluarkan program ekonomi
barunya...

http://www.accuracy.org/release/can-obama-be-fdr-or-is-he-hoover/

Can Obama Be FDR? — Or is he Hoover?

RANDALL WRAY, WrayR at umkc.edu
Currently in New York, Wray, is professor of economics at the University of
Missouri-Kansas City. He recently wrote the piece “With $300 Billion, The
President Could Reduce Unemployment to Zero,” which was published by
TruthDig and is available on Wray’s blog:
http://neweconomicperspectives.blogspot.com

He said today: “President Obama gave a good, strong speech and the $450
billion plan is 50 percent bigger than rumored. Still, most of the
provisions simply extend programs set to expire (the payroll tax holiday for
workers, unemployment benefits), or continue tried-and-failed schemes to
raise business confidence (tax credits for investment, cutting red tape).
Extension of the payroll tax holiday to employers is a good idea, but it
won’t create many jobs since firms need sales before they will hire. Ditto
business tax cuts or deregulation: firms are laying off workers because
sales are down, not because they are burdened with taxes and regulations.
They need sales before they will hire, and consumers will not buy until they
get jobs. We are in a Catch 22 that business confidence cannot resolve.

“Finally, the President’s insistence that every dollar in the plan will be
‘paid for’ by spending cuts or tax hikes elsewhere means that the net
benefits must be quite small. Private economists have estimated the plan
will create 1.5 million new jobs — I expect that will prove to be
optimistic. But in any case we need 25 million jobs to employ all those
seeking work. And note that for $450 billion we could easily create those 25
million jobs if we followed President Roosevelt’s example and simply created
the jobs directly, through a WPA [Works Progress Administration] new New
Deal type program. That could also be used to create all the infrastructure
President Obama spoke of plus provide all the public services that we need
to bring our nation into the 21st century. And those new WPA workers will
generate the sales that firms need to justify more hiring. Now that would
really be an American Jobs Act.” Wary is also senior scholar at the Levy
Economics Institute and his books include “Understanding Modern Money.”

THOMAS FERGUSON, thomas.ferguson at umb.edu,
http://www.newdeal20.org/author/thomas-ferguson
Ferguson is professor of political science at the University of
Massachusetts, Boston and a senior fellow of the Roosevelt Institute. He
said today: “We have known for a long time that President Obama is no
Franklin Roosevelt. The urgent question now, though, is whether he is
Herbert Hoover.

“We won’t see the real plan until next week, but here is one way of thinking
about his speech. The output gap – the difference between what we could
produce and what we are producing – is at least a trillion dollars. Never
mind conservative claims that Keynes is dead; the multiplier on government
spending right now is probably about 1.5. So a $447 billion plan amounts to
a bit more than a half measure. But the chances that our money-driven,
highly partisan Congress will enact it all are zero. And I’ll believe the
talk of large scale mortgage refinancing schemes when I see bankers fly. And
that’s no detail, it’s key, along with measures to make bankers lend instead
of buying back their stocks and paying bonuses. Most alarming of all, much
of the ‘new’ spending simply extends existing programs, such as unemployment
insurance. It will just hold up aggregate demand at current levels.

“So think of it in Zen terms: we are likely to get half of the famous glass
that is half full. But with banks and consumers still intently
‘deleveraging’ (paying down debts), in the end the new package may, like the
earlier stimulus, strike many people as a lot of nothing.” Ferguson’s books
include “Golden Rule: The Investment Theory of Party Competition and the
Logic of Money-Driven Political Systems.”

Kirim email ke