Posts Tagged ‘economic stimulus’

Track Record

Monday, January 11th, 2010

Most Republicans were opposed to the stimulus package signed by Obama last year and, according to some polls, the public also has its doubts. But the people who measure such things agree that it prevented a deeper recession and has contributed to growth.

The American Enterprise Institute is a conservative outfit but even they grant that the stimulus package was effective. Via Jon Chait:

The real economy … responded to the massive stimulus but remained heavily dependent on it. In the United States, growth during the second half of 2009 probably averaged about 3 percent. Absent temporary fiscal stimulus and inventory rebuilding, which taken together added about 4 percentage points to U.S. growth, the economy would have contracted at about a 1 percent annual rate during the second half of 2009.

As Steve Benen noted last week:

The GOP said the stimulus package would fail to create jobs. We now know the Republicans were wrong.

The GOP said the recovery efforts would fail to generate economic growth. We now know the Republicans were wrong.

The GOP said the stimulus “failed.” We now know the Republicans were wrong.

The GOP said the government should cancel unspent recovery funds. We now know the Republicans were wrong.

The GOP said tax cuts are more effective at stimulating the economy than government spending. We now know the Republicans were wrong.

Had Republicans been in the majority a year ago, the results for the United States and the global economy likely would have been devastating. That GOP officials and their allies continue to pretend otherwise serves as a reminder of just how little role reality can play in our discourse.

Compromising on the Stimulus Package Was a Bad Idea

Sunday, October 4th, 2009

In February, when Obama went to Congress to pass his stimulus package a small group of so called “centrist” Senate Republicans held the legislation hostage until the Democrats agreed to slash over $100 billion from the bill.

One of the casualties was $40 billion dollars intended to aid state governments.

These centrists claimed that aid to states will not stimulate the economy because—well I don’t think they ever gave a reason. They just said it wouldn’t help. So the Democrats had to cave.

Liberal economists railed against this compromise to little effect. It turns out that giving in to Republicans was a very bad idea as the reports of more joblessness poured in last week.

In the past, government hiring had managed to somewhat offset losses in the private sector, but government jobs declined by 53,000, with the biggest number of cuts on the local and state levels. Even the Postal Service, which is included in the public-sector job statistics, dropped 5,300 jobs.

“The major surprise came from the public sector, where every level of government cut back,” Naroff said. “The budget crises at the state and local levels have caused an awful lot of belt-tightening.”

Compromise in our political system is necessary. But there are consequences to compromising with people who don’t have the country’s interests at heart and are blinded by their ideology.