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More Fiscal Stimulus Is Needed to Reverse Economic Decline

by: Mark Weisbrot  |  t r u t h o u t | Perspective

A homeless woman lives in a tent along the road in Las Vegas, Nevada.

A homeless woman lives in a tent along the road in Las Vegas, Nevada. (Photo: Getty Images)



    In February the Congress approved $787 billion of federal spending, in order keep the economy from sinking into a deeper recession. However, it is increasingly clear that this is not enough, and a third stimulus (the first was a small stimulus package early last year) will be necessary.

    About $584 billion of the stimulus package will be spent over the next two years, in order to keep the economy from sinking into a deeper recession. This sounds like a lot of money, but it is only about two percent of Gross Domestic Product (GDP) over the next two years. Our economy shrank at an annual rate of 6.3 percent in the fourth quarter of last year; economists surveyed by the Wall Street Journal project negative 1.4 percent for 2009, with recovery beginning in the second half. However these forecasts have been overoptimistic in the past - most economists missed the housing bubble and the disastrous impacts of its inevitable collapse.

    In short, we really don't know where the bottom of the recession is, or whether a prolonged period of high unemployment and weak growth will follow. There has been a lot of emphasis on curing the ills of the financial system, and this is surely necessary for a sustained recovery to take hold. However it is not sufficient. Even if the US Treasury's latest plan were to restore solvency to the entire financial system - and this seems very unlikely - we would still be facing a serious recession in the real economy. Even solvent banks are not going to increase lending if there are no additional credit-worthy borrowers seeking loans.

    The latest data on home prices reinforces this point. The decline in home prices is still accelerating, with the 20-city Case-Shiller index falling at an annual rate of 26.5 percent over the last quarter. Home prices have further to fall to get back to their pre-bubble trend levels, and they could even overshoot on the down side: people who lose equity in their homes when prices fall cannot afford a down payment (now raised to 20 percent) for a new home when they have to move, and rising unemployment and foreclosures add to the oversupply of housing.

    The global economic outlook is also worsening, with the OECD now forecasting a phenomenal 2.75 GDP percent decline worldwide. Although the United States is fortunate in this respect to export only about 11 percent of GDP, shrinking global demand and an overvalued dollar do not offer much hope for trade to boost the US recovery.

    The household savings rate collapsed to zero in 2007, from an average of 8 percent in the post World-War II era. As savings recover to more normal levels, it means that consumption, which is about 70 percent of the economy, must fall. This can also further discourage investment and add to the cycle of declining output and employment, as well as the fear and pessimism that exacerbates it.

    My colleague Dean Baker has put forth a plan for the government to provide a tax credit to employers for health care and also to increase employees' paid time off - in the form of reduced hours, additional vacation, sick leave, or other days off. This has the advantage of injecting money very quickly into the economy with minimal bureaucracy or waste. If these credits cause employers to reduce average hours per worker by just three percent, this would add 4.2 million jobs at the same level of output.

    With the collapse of private spending, it is clearly up to the government to rescue the real economy, and ideological prejudices must be swept aside. It is time for our government to consider some fresh ideas that can be implemented quickly.

  

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Mark Weisbrot is co-director of the Center for Economic and Policy Research, in Washington, DC. He is co-author, with Dean Baker, of "Social Security: The Phony Crisis," and has written numerous research papers on economic policy. He is also president of Just Foreign Policy.

Comments

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This is absurd. A tax credit

This is absurd. A tax credit to employers for health care costs is simply another handout to the insurance industry while the plan to increase employees' paid time off provides a dis-incentive in a falling economy to hire replacements and seems like another handout to businesses in general. Other than providing available time to be consumers, I don't see any benefits. When is any money going to be coming to Main Street?

If we just keep throwing

If we just keep throwing money at the banks who will not lend and already-wealthy CEOs who simply outsource their $$$ to non-taxable accounts, then I can't see where the economy can possibly improve for those who need it. For example, AT&T, in spite of 3 billion in profits, are trying to get their employees to cut back wage and hour demands in a new contract. I'm no economist, but even I can see that somebody is missing the point about where the money should really be going. I think the Geithner/Lawrence/Bernanke crew haven't a clue. Nor do AT&T. So?

Stimulus in the form of

Stimulus in the form of money to prop up failing businesses is not the answer. Our lack of understanding of the true nature of energy (not as in power generation) has brought our world to this lesson. Those seeming (thinking) to be in power are/were not making decisions based on natures law. The masses allowed themselves to be manipulated and gave their power to others. So all are to blame and none are to blame. It is a learning tool. Let's move on: Empower the individual and you will strengthen the nation and in turn the world.

You mean those thieves don't

You mean those thieves don't have enough taxpayer money yet?

Sorry Mr. Weisbrot, but I

Sorry Mr. Weisbrot, but I disagree with the premise that stimulus is going to help. In my opinion, the economy needs to find a new balance. Rather than blindly throwing more fiat money at consumers, it would be better to eliminate the corporate bailouts and use that funding to feed the hungry and house the roofless. The continuance of this profligate spending will quite possibly lead to our creditors cutting us off. At which point, we had better already have programs in place to help the people, or we will then be unable to help them. That would be fertile ground for demagogues of all stripes to cause trouble.

This article assumes this

This article assumes this economic downturn wasn't engineered by the same people we are asking to save it. For one, they don't want the economy saved they want a one world currency so they can control everything and they only way to do that is to sink the dollar. How about instead of asking what our government can do for us we ask what can we do ourselves at the state level to thwart this corrupt federal government? Perhaps state controlled banks?

Beyond absurd -- this is

Beyond absurd -- this is just insane. The idea that a bankrupt government should gin up more fake money and spread it around with the intention of reviving an economy that was based on mindless consumerism in the first place truly shows that our elected "representatives" are nuts. In any event, the depression is here and no amount of funny money and political platitudes will make it go away. Furthermore, the "economy" that these goofballs are attempting to revive is dead and it is not coming back. It appears that it is up to individuals to survive the cataclysm on their own. This will not be easy and there will be many casualties, but some will survive -- and even prosper --in the coming transition to a different type of economic interaction among the people of the world.

If the Fed bought all toxic

If the Fed bought all toxic loans. The stimulus would be a lot less than what it is now. And it would be mostly paid back. We paid the wrong party. And we will continue to pay for a long time coming. This would have avoided a lot of tangent problems such as declining health among the victims and a lot less new homeless people. It would have freed up the peoples money to spend within the economy. It is indeed a 'time for a change'. But not a change of party, a re organization of the federal government. A government that serves the people, not the corporation. To big to fail? That's what Goliath and his Philistines thought.

If the federal education

If the federal education department took lay-offs, the money could perhaps go out to where the kids are. Lets go down the list of the alphabet soup, looking for savings that can go outside the beltway. In the bedroom communities of official D.C., unemployment figures don't resemble those on Main Street. Maybe they drive by some unemployed on their way out of the city? The federal government is where the giant sucking sound is, with central banks of much of the world singing along. It isn't so hard to figure out. The money isn't on Main Street because a hulking lot of it is going offshore. So much for war making a nation rich. May that notion die forever.

Why not just print a few

Why not just print a few more trillion fake dollars, and give it to the people of the USA? At least we might have a chance to have some fun before the whole world goes to hell.

Stimulus of consumerism

Stimulus of consumerism misses the point entirely. Three or four planet earths are required to sustain corporate consumerism at the current consumption level. If the world's poor are allowed to live as the developed economies do, we need ten or twelve planets worth of resources and garbage dumping grounds. Although the current shrinkage of corporatism is made more uncomfortable by corruption, the actual cause of the collapse is a puny planet too small to sustain current consumption. More and more people understand this every day, that is why many who could be helping the economy with patriotic purchases are not buying into the program.

"Why not just print a few

"Why not just print a few more trillion fake dollars, and give it to the people of the USA? At least we might have a chance to have some fun before the whole world goes to hell." Actually, FUNNY you should say that. That is exactly what Geithner and Bernanke are doing, only its no faker than the rest of our money, which it is set to devalue via inflation. Oh, and YOU don't get any, nor do I, we don't have the right kind of friends for that.

Ok, while you're printing

Ok, while you're printing money, howz about printing, say, 100 billion to help out the homeless and vets. I mean, what's 100 billion more when you're printing trillions, right? That 100 billion would got immediately into the economy and would provide infinitely more stimulus that giving it to bankers who'll just pocket the cash in some over-seas investements.

C'mon, suck it up! Just

C'mon, suck it up! Just think like them, all you have to is cheat. steal. and lie...it's the American way, you climb up by stomping on people's faces. Just be ruthless and take what you want. You feel kind of guilty at first, but it becomes addictive once the money starts rolling in. It helps to be seen in church on Sundays too, sort of smoothes things over.