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A Trillion Dollar Recovery

by: Katrina vanden Heuvel  |  The Nation

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Dan Bolden installing solar cells on a roof in California. President-elect Obama has proposed that increasing the number of jobs related to green technologies be a major part of any proposed stimulus plan. (Photo: Max Whittaker / The New York Times)

    Poverty is on the rise, record numbers of people are relying on food stamps and we've seen no relief for the foreclosure crisis. There are increasing rates of child abuse and domestic violence linked to this recession. State governments don't have financial resources to cope at the exact moment when those resources are most needed. Nineteen states and the District of Columbia have lowered Medicaid payments or eliminated people from eligibility. The senior economist of the International Monetary Fund recently warned of another Great Depression.

    We don't need a stimulus, we need a recovery. And that means investing $1 trillion over the next two years.

    The Congressional Progressive Caucus (CPC) has proposed a plan to do just that--a detailed $1 trillion recovery plan to kick start the economy, invest in sustainable, long term growth and target individuals and communities that are most desperate for resources.

    Obama political adviser David Axelrod said this weekend that the new Administration is looking at a stimulus bill in the range of $675 to $775 billion over two years. But is that enough at this moment of metastasizing economic pain and deepening recession? Not according to CPC Co-Chair, Representative Lynn Woolsey of California, who said, "...anything much less than $1 trillion would be like trying to put out a forest fire with a squirt gun."

    In addition to much needed investments which have already been laid out--like the extension of unemployment insurance while joblessness soars, increasing food stamps, and assisting cash-strapped states with Medicaid--the CPC plan goes a step further. It takes a holistic approach to economic recovery and the needs of ordinary Americans by addressing infrastructure, human capital, keeping people in their homes, job creation, fiscal relief for state, local and tribal governments, education and job training and tax relief for lower-income families.

    There are smart commitments in the CPC plan that deserve real attention, such as:

  • A percentage of the infrastructure work would be performed by veterans, low-income and homeless individuals, out-of-school youth, and others facing multiple barriers to employment.
  • Green technologies to weatherize the nation's homes and small businesses.
  • Grants to neediest schools for modernization, renovation, energy efficiency, and investing in educational technology.
  • Construction of libraries in rural communities in order to expand broadband access
  • Capital improvements and short-term operating funds for federally-qualified health centers.
  • Boost funding for National Health Service Corps to produce more doctors, dentists and nurses to provide health care in underserved area.
  • Expand sustainable food systems at local community level.
  • A moratorium on home foreclosures.
  • At least $100 billion allocated to "green jobs creation", including at community level and in Indian Country.
  • Creation of a new energy block grant to transition to green energy sources
  • Re-establish Youth Conservation Corps to eliminate backlog of work projects in national, state, and local parks.
  • Federal Arts and Writers Project to create jobs for American artists, writers, editors, researchers, photographers, and others.
  • Triple funding for Community Development Block Grant Program
  • Make the child tax credit fully refundable, lifting 2.7 million people--including 1.7 million children--above the poverty line.
  • Expand the earned income tax credit for families with three or more children.
  •     "The Progressive Caucus is determined to bring justice and prosperity to the American economy, and this proposal does both," CPC Co-Chair, Representative Raul Grijalva of Arizona, said in a released statement.

        "The American people's urgent needs in health care, employment, education and infrastructure have been neglected for so very long that the basic structure of our economic system has been undermined. Now that the American people have the attention of Wall Street and Washington, we intend to lift their voice and demand the profound change the people voted for."

        There is a groundswell of support for massive action along these lines. More than twenty progressive groups and unions are spearheading the Jobs and Economic Recovery Now campaign, building grassroots support for a bold recovery program of $850 billion or more. At events across the nation, supporters urged quick passage of the legislation so that it is waiting on President Obama's desk the day he takes office.

        The campaign is also targeting moderate Republicans in the Senate in order to avoid a filibuster. It was just three months ago, after all, that Republicans successfully filibustered a stimulus that targeted unemployment insurance, food stamps and "shovel-ready" infrastructure projects--and that was only $56 billion.

        At this moment, a massive recovery along the lines of what the country needs is far from a done deal. The Congressional Progressive Caucus has done a great service with its plan, showing us what a comprehensive approach to economic recovery looks like--addressing the needs of ordinary Americans who have been left behind by the Wall Street Bailout Bonanza and eight years of greed and deregulation. Contact your elected officials--make sure they read the plan and support a $1 trillion recovery. We can't afford anything less.

      

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    Comments

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    No, Katrina. It's $1

    No, Katrina. It's $1 trillion a year over the next 5 years. Nothing less. That's an investment in infrastructure and human capital that will bring the US into the 21st century. This amount includes an investment in mass transit, localized agriculture, renewable energy, social security, environmental preservation, water conservation, reconstruction of major US cities on the model of a Portland, Oregon, education, mental and physical health care, as well as the arts and sciences.

    Actually we do not need a

    Actually we do not need a stimulus or a recovery, we need a transformation. We need to move away from consumerism, shrink the economy, and reduce the throughput in our economy. As we already use 120% of the global yearly productivity, if we increase the amount of stuff in our economy, we only bring about ecological collapse faster.

    Let's all hope the

    Let's all hope the Republicans don't screw up this one with a fillibuster. Americans deserve better. Better yet, the Republicans can all go on vacation while the package is in congress and just let the democrates vote on it so the package gets passed.

    STOP PRICE TAGGING DAMMIT!

    STOP PRICE TAGGING DAMMIT! You weren`t bitching and whining in 2004 when Dumbya was all grins bragging "Save that pen,it`s a part of history" when the little SOB televised signing the repugnantcons energy and transPORKtation bills into law that included paving Walmarts Corporate HQ parking lot while he couldn`t find it in the budget to pave the parking lot at the state of the art then fully equipped for handling war wounded Fitzsimmons Hospital completed,(except the parking lot) even before his illegal invasion... remember Don Imus and others trying to collect donations for completion of the rehab facility in Houston for wounded soldiers? YEAH..DON`T LET NO ONE FORGET THIS! As for price tagging the things that must be done JUST DO IT and shut the hell up about cost...it is the price you pay for looking the other way when you should have been diligent! (moderator feel free to edit but convey the essence)Peace

    Greg Gerritt has it right

    Greg Gerritt has it right --- it is totally insane to expect that the injection of trillions of fake paper into an economic system that is choking on debt will kick-start the Frankenstein one more time. The pols and the "government" haven't got a clue, and there is scant hope that the American people will see the light in time to reject the shambling zombie that our debt-based economic model has become. A collapse, despite the best efforts of the funny money infusion, is quite probable. At that point, it may become apparent to folks that we need to adopt a different way of life based on local production, conservation, personal savings and community awareness. What part of YOU CANNOT PRINT YOUR WAY OUT OF DEBT do these people not understand?

    Amen to Greg Gerritt, but

    Amen to Greg Gerritt, but also we have a massive challenge in cleaning pollution. When our engineers went to China to build coal-generation plants there, we shared with them a future need for clean-up. Figuring out how to remediate some of our most polluted places is a challenge we should get going on. Doing this will rile some of the biggest donors to congresspersons, but maybe this is the year of the tipping point on that. Just because a congressperson took a lot of money from big polluters does not mean they need to turn away from children who face enormous health problems because of pollution. Building bridges that encourage more driving should stand behind this need. A new movie documents some of the damages, The World According to Monsanto.

    Spend, Borrow, Spend, Fail.

    Spend, Borrow, Spend, Fail. It's true, Karina's editorial shows the amazing similarity between Liberals and Conservatives when it comes to capitalism. They both want to print money, all of it borrowed, to prop up larger families, more construction, more bulldozing, more consumption, more capitalism, more more more. More waste. More overpopulation, More destroying of earth. More noise. More pollution. More roads. More cell phones. More death of the earth. As the other commenter Greg said, until we recognize that money is part of the probem, spending is part of the problem. It's time to embrace "ecomarxism." It's time to stop pretending. Our way of life has to change, and no amount of debt-financed government spending is going to be anything other than a band-aid.