More on the job numbers
Last week, pressure from deficit hawks forced the House of Representatives to cut the size of their jobs bill in half. As David Leonhardt wrote, "the case against the jobs bill starts with the idea that the economy is recovering." But as today's employment numbers show, our fitful recovery is going much too slowly given our near-10 percent unemployment rate.
Yes, deficits can become a problem. But the problem facing America is long-term, not short-term, deficits. Which is why every wonk answers this question the same way: Expand short-term deficits to boost employment and commit to credible deficit reduction in the long-term. The right move for deficit hawks would be to release a proposal that pairs a generous jobs bill with serious long-term reforms (for instance, a bill providing $300 billion in immediate stimulus and also lowering the cap on the mortgage interest deduction, bringing back the full estate tax and cutting defense spending). This moment, viewed correctly, actually offers a substantial opportunity for long-term deficit reduction because the need for short-term deficit spending gives hawks a bargaining chip that will bring liberals to the table. But no one seems interested in offering that deal.
I can tell you why this isn't happening (even though the country would benefit from it). Tax hikes or to put it pro spin way, broadening the tax base, may hurt your chances for re-election. Even if you aren't the party in power you can't suggest stuff that could be put in a negative campaign ad, even if it is for the good of the country.
Thus we continue this shit about complaining about a problem we have no interest in fixing. Furthermore we make sports teams and caricatures instead of dealing with reality.
We can't have it all. We can't reduce government spending, while wanting more, we can't reduce taxes, while at the same time complain about exploding government debt. Baby's want it all, grownups realize you can't always get what you want, but if you try sometimes you just might find. You get what you need. You get what you need...
Last week, pressure from deficit hawks forced the House of Representatives to cut the size of their jobs bill in half. As David Leonhardt wrote, "the case against the jobs bill starts with the idea that the economy is recovering." But as today's employment numbers show, our fitful recovery is going much too slowly given our near-10 percent unemployment rate.
Yes, deficits can become a problem. But the problem facing America is long-term, not short-term, deficits. Which is why every wonk answers this question the same way: Expand short-term deficits to boost employment and commit to credible deficit reduction in the long-term. The right move for deficit hawks would be to release a proposal that pairs a generous jobs bill with serious long-term reforms (for instance, a bill providing $300 billion in immediate stimulus and also lowering the cap on the mortgage interest deduction, bringing back the full estate tax and cutting defense spending). This moment, viewed correctly, actually offers a substantial opportunity for long-term deficit reduction because the need for short-term deficit spending gives hawks a bargaining chip that will bring liberals to the table. But no one seems interested in offering that deal.
I can tell you why this isn't happening (even though the country would benefit from it). Tax hikes or to put it pro spin way, broadening the tax base, may hurt your chances for re-election. Even if you aren't the party in power you can't suggest stuff that could be put in a negative campaign ad, even if it is for the good of the country.
Thus we continue this shit about complaining about a problem we have no interest in fixing. Furthermore we make sports teams and caricatures instead of dealing with reality.
We can't have it all. We can't reduce government spending, while wanting more, we can't reduce taxes, while at the same time complain about exploding government debt. Baby's want it all, grownups realize you can't always get what you want, but if you try sometimes you just might find. You get what you need. You get what you need...
Deficit Hawks where are you?
08/06/2010 11:32:33 PM
- 689 Views
I agree that short-term deficits help reduce long-term ones if the money is wisely spent.
09/06/2010 03:13:28 AM
- 1756 Views
Re: I agree that short-term deficits help reduce long-term ones if the money is wisely spent.
09/06/2010 01:58:46 PM
- 442 Views
I guess someone should tell Klein deficiet hawks are not the ones writing bills these days
09/06/2010 04:58:37 AM
- 441 Views
We have a political structure, that if one side proposes any solution to these problems...
09/06/2010 09:33:47 AM
- 488 Views