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A Trap in Obama’s Spending Plan
(A sign of the times. Uchitelle quotes Counterpunch contributor Bob Pollin.)
NY Times, December 21, 2008
A Trap in Obama's Spending Plan
By LOUIS UCHITELLE
As the recession deepens, President-elect Barack Obama is gearing up
to spend hundreds of billions of dollars on public investment
projects, counting on them to lift the economy, as they have in the past.
But this time that may not happen. Public spending, American style,
has worked best in good times, when people have jobs and executives
are eager to invest. A new public highway is soon lined ? in good
times ? with stores and malls filled with consumers. A dollar spent
by government generates three or four from the private sector.
That symbiosis makes a humming economy hum more, as it did in the
1950s and '60s. But it may not work that way when the American
economy is in full retreat, as it was in the 1930s and seems to be today.
As a measure of the current disaster, the Federal Reserve last week
lowered interest rates to an unheard-of near-zero percent and offered
in effect to give away money if a fearful nation would only spend it.
But panicked by investment losses or fearful for their jobs, people
tend to hold back. In such circumstances, a new road could be lined
not by shopping malls, but by empty, overgrown land.
That is the risk facing Mr. Obama's plan. By January, Congress will
probably be asked to approve an outlay of more than $700 billion.
Spent in one year on construction, research or equipment, it might
well offset the contraction at first. But unless it also revived
general confidence, the economy could collapse again, once the money was gone.
"If that spending can't get the private sector going, then it is just
a make-work maintenance operation," said Stanley Moses, an economist
at Hunter College in New York.
History illustrates how tricky it can be to make public spending work
as intended. The many dams Franklin D. Roosevelt's administration
built generated an abundance of electricity, lowering its cost so
that families could afford to operate the appliances then becoming
available. The construction itself put money into workers' pockets.
But the appliances were too costly for most families during the
Depression, and the manufacturers wouldn't extend credit. For all the
money spent by the Roosevelt administration, public investment was
failing to jump-start a key private-sector industry.
His administration was inventive, however, and found a way around the
problem by subsidizing installment purchases. That was when appliance
production finally rose. In time, installment plans evolved into
consumer loans and charge cards, and that helped make the American
consumer economy the envy of the world.
These symbiotic relationships between the public and private sectors
? playing off each other in ways hard to anticipate and hard to
channel ? became an essential ingredient of American prosperity from
World War II until the mid-1970s.
"It is not in the nature of a market system to have adequate private
investment all of the time," said Robert Pollin, co-director of the
Political Economy Research Institute at the University of
Massachusetts at Amherst. "So we used public investment to smooth
things over and improve the climate for private investment."
That changed. In the 1970s, the public reacted against high taxes and
growing budget deficits, and conservatives argued that putting money
in private hands would lift the economy more effectively. Public
investment tapered off, and was used less as a tool of economic
policy as the economy experienced the increasingly sharp ups and
downs of the 1980s, 1990s and the new century.
Now, in the opening months of the worst bust since the Great
Depression, Mr. Obama is expected to seek sustained outlays over at
least two years to repair roads, bridges and waterways; to build and
repair public schools; to expand the broadband network; to digitize
medical information; to advance green technology. An economic adviser
says his goal is "to encourage private investment, particularly in
areas where we have too little investment today, for example, solar
systems and wind power."
But Mr. Obama is bucking a deep private-sector funk, a bit like what
Roosevelt described in his first Inaugural Address as "fear itself ?
nameless, unreasoning, unjustified terror which paralyzes needed
efforts to convert retreat into advance." Borrowers and lenders have
pulled back. Business investment has plummeted. So has consumer
spending. "A psychology of bad times is becoming the mindset of the
public," says Andrew Kohut, director of the Pew Research Center, a
survey operation.
Like Roosevelt's dams, Mr. Obama's expenditures will no doubt
generate jobs and wages in the construction phase. But in 1937,
Roosevelt, thinking that the private sector could sustain itself,
pulled back on public spending. Some historians say this was a big
reason the economy sank again. .
Mr. Obama faces a similar danger. Green-technology spending might
spawn a far more efficient solar panel, but investors still might
shrink at manufacturing it. What if consumers ? having lost equity in
their homes and scrimping on cars, vacations, even college tuition ?
were reluctant to buy and install the panels? "There are so many
problems today and no good news, and that is enough to stop the
impact of what Mr. Obama does," said Mr. Moses of Hunter College.
The president-elect and his advisers recognize this danger. But they
? and many others, including some Republicans ? see no other choice.
"The most important thing the new administration can do at a moment
when the collective psyche has been so shattered is to spend money
now on tangible things," said Mark Zandi, chief economist at Moody's
Economy.com, who advised John McCain's presidential campaign. "People
want to see up front a repaired bridge, a new energy technology, a
better water system. They want to feel these will have huge benefits
down the road, and that might get them spending again."
Whatever the obstacles, Mr. Obama's plan would mean giving up the
view ? widely held since the 1970s by economists, policy makers and
business executives ? that the private sector, by itself, is the key
source of prosperity and full employment, and government spending is
inefficient.
Perhaps with that in mind, Mr. Obama evoked as an illustration of his
plan's breadth not the desperate 1930s, but the prosperous 1950s and
'60s. That was when President Dwight Eisenhower and Congress set out
to build the Interstate System of highways ? a gift to an expanding
auto industry and to trucking that also linked the country,
encouraging all sorts of other investments.
But there is a big difference between Eisenhower's era and Mr.
Obama's. By 1950, the Depression's gloom had been banished by the
common effort of World War II, followed by immense postwar demand for
American production. Road building was just one public investment
that set off huge private outlays. The space program stands out; so
does military spending, which spurred computer development and
created the Internet. And Medicare, born in the 1960s, became
intertwined with private medicine.
Such symbiotic successes prompted a French journalist, Jean-Jacques
Servan-Schreiber, to issue a warning to Europe in 1968. In "The
American Challenge," a best seller, he wrote that "the government
official, the industrial manager, the economics professor, the
engineer and the scientist have joined forces" to support American
economic growth, and that the juggernaut would soon reduce Europe to
an American colony.
He was wrong. Europe outpaced the United States in its embrace of
public-private symbiosis. And now Mr. Obama proposes, in effect, to
restore the formula in this country.
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