This is that wonderful time of year when a roly-poly, white-bearded fellow
descends from the North Pole to lavish us with presents. So when President
Obama follows suit, maybe it's just his way of getting into the spirit of the
season.
He sounded uncannily like Santa Claus the other day in a speech
taking credit for creating and saving 1.6 million jobs and vowing to do even
more. The recent uptick in the economy and dip in unemployment, the president
announced, came about because of the $787 billion economic stimulus package he
signed last February.
But with unemployment still at 10 percent, Obama perceives a need for the
government to generate additional jobs -- which he plans to do with a new
collection of tax cuts, public works expenditures, subsidies to homeowners for
energy-saving investments, and a partridge in a pear tree. Though he stressed
his commitment to fiscal responsibility, the president studiously avoided
putting a price tag on this plan.
Like a certain jolly old elf, he doesn't want us to worry about the cost.
After all, fiscal stimulus is supposed to more than pay for itself by goosing
consumption expenditures to unleash a new surge of jobs, economic activity and
tax revenue. It's a Christmas that will go on for months or even years.
If only it were true. In fact, there is no reason to believe the American
Recovery and Reinvestment Act has done anything to revive the economy.
Economist John Taylor of the Hoover Institution at Stanford University reports
that the economic data show "no noticeable impact of the temporary tax rebates
and one-time payments on consumption." No impact, by the way, is pretty much
what we got when President Bush tried a stimulus in 2008.
The administration's allies crow that in the six months before the package
was approved, the economy shrank, and in the six months after, the economy
grew. But just because football season follows baseball season, that doesn't
prove baseball causes football. Just because the economy grew after the
stimulus passed doesn't mean the stimulus deserves the credit.
Considering the claims of stimulus supporters, John Cochrane, a
macroeconomist at the University of Chicago Booth School of Business, says,
"There is just as much evidence that Valentine's Day saved the economy." What
the advocates disregard, he notes, is that every dollar spent on federal
programs is a dollar that is not invested or spent elsewhere. An extravagant
program can create jobs in one place only by endangering them in another.
Even by the administration's logic, the success story doesn't hold up. The
contraction of the economy slowed sharply in the first month after the passage
of the stimulus -- before any appreciable amounts of federal cash had been
spent. Which suggests that the economy, far from requiring huge injections of
federal cash to avert a depression, was already bouncing back on its own,
something economies did for eons before Keynesian prescriptions came along.
What has happened since then doesn't make the case for buying a second
round. Apparently the recession has already ended and unemployment has begun
to fall -- despite the fact that most of that $787 billion is doing about as
much stimulating as the gold in Fort Knox. Only about one-third of the money
has actually gone out the door.
If one-third of the stimulus spending was potent enough to rekindle growth,
shouldn't the other two-thirds be even more effective? Why do we need to throw
more tens or hundreds of billions on the fire when it's already starting to
blaze? On the other hand, if the first stimulus fizzled, as the evidence
suggests, it makes no sense to do a sequel.
Either way, there's precious little to be said for opening the throttle of
a federal spending machine that is already hurtling out of control. But
there's a lot to be said against it. Every big new appropriation represents
money that has to be paid back with interest, on top of the $12 trillion we
already owe.
Whatever else it may do, piling up more debt brings us closer to the day
when the government will have to choose among such dire options as vastly
increasing taxes, resorting to inflation and defaulting on its obligations. If
that day comes, Santa Claus may be hard to find.
Copyright 2009, Creators Syndicate Inc.