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Bruce Bartlett, Ex-Reagan Economist: Idea That Deregulation Leads To Jobs 'Just Made Up'

Ronald Reagan

By CHARLES BABINGTON   10/30/11 01:07 PM ET   AP

WASHINGTON -- Key proposals from the Republican presidential candidates might make for good campaign fodder. But independent analyses raise serious questions about those plans and their ability to cure the nation's ills in two vital areas, the economy and housing.

Consider proposed cuts in taxes and regulation, which nearly every GOP candidate is pushing in the name of creating jobs. The initiatives seem to ignore surveys in which employers cite far bigger impediments to increased hiring, chiefly slack consumer demand.

"Republicans favor tax cuts for the wealthy and corporations, but these had no stimulative effect during the George W. Bush administration, and there is no reason to believe that more of them will have any today," writes Bruce Bartlett. He's an economist who worked for Republican congressmen and in the administrations of Presidents Ronald Reagan and George H.W. Bush.

As for the idea that cutting regulations will lead to significant job growth, Bartlett said in an interview, "It's just nonsense. It's just made up."

Government and industry studies support his view.

The Bureau of Labor Statistics, which tracks companies' reasons for large layoffs, found that 1,119 layoffs were attributed to government regulations in the first half of this year, while 144,746 were attributed to poor "business demand."

Mainstream economic theory says governments can spur demand, at least somewhat, through stimulus spending. The Republican candidates, however, have labeled President Barack Obama's 2009 stimulus efforts a failure. Instead, most are calling for tax cuts that would primarily benefit high-income people, who are seen as the likeliest job creators.

"I don't care about that," Texas Gov. Rick Perry told The New York Times and CNBC, referring to tax breaks for the rich. "What I care about is them having the dollars to invest in their companies."

Many existing businesses, however, have plenty of unspent cash. The 500 companies that comprise the S&P index have about $800 billion in cash and cash equivalents, the most ever, according to the research firm Birinyi Associates.

The rating firm Moody's says the roughly 1,600 companies it monitors had $1.2 trillion in cash at the end of 2010. That's 11 percent more than a year earlier.

Small businesses rate "poor sales" as their biggest problem, with government regulations ranking second, according to a survey by the National Federation of Independent Businesses. Of the small businesses saying this is not a good time to expand, half cited the poor economy as the chief reason. Thirteen percent named the "political climate."

More small businesses complained about regulation during the administrations of Bill Clinton and George H.W. Bush, according to an analysis of the federation's data by the liberal Economic Policy Institute.

Such findings notwithstanding, further cuts in taxes and regulations remain popular with GOP voters. A recent Associated Press-GfK poll found that most Democrats and about half of independents think "reducing environmental and other regulations on business" would do little or nothing to create jobs. But only one-third of Republicans felt that way.

The GOP's presidential hopefuls are shaping their economic agendas along those lines.

Former Massachusetts Gov. Mitt Romney says his 59-point plan "seeks to reduce taxes, spending, regulation and government programs."

Businessman Herman Cain would significantly cut taxes for the wealthy with his 9 percent flat tax plan. Rep. Michele Bachmann of Minnesota said in a recent debate, "It's the regulatory burden that costs us $1.8 trillion every year. ... It's jobs that are lost."

The candidates have said little about another national problem: depressed home prices, as well as the high numbers of foreclosures and borrowers who owe more than their houses are worth.

After the Oct. 18 GOP debate in Las Vegas, a center of foreclosure activity, editors of the AOL Real Estate site wrote, "We didn't hear any meaningful solutions to the housing crisis. That's no surprise, considering that housing has so far been a ghost issue in the campaign."

To the degree the candidates addressed housing, they mainly took a hands-off approach. "We need to get government out of the way," Cain said. "It starts with making sure that we can boost this economy and then reform Dodd-Frank," which is a law that regulates Wall Street transactions.

Bachmann, in an answer that mentioned "moms" six times, said foreclosures fall most heavily on women who are "losing their nest for their children and for their family." She said Obama "has failed you on this issue of housing and foreclosures. I will not fail you on this issue." Bachmann offered no specific remedies.

Romney told editors of the Las Vegas Review-Journal: "Don't try and stop the foreclosure process. Let it run its course and hit the bottom. Allow investors to buy homes, put renters in them, fix the homes up and let it turn around and come back up."

Perry spokesman Mark Miner said the Texas governor's "immediate remedy for housing is to get America working again. ... Creating jobs will address the housing concerns that are impacting communities throughout America."

Bartlett, whose books on tax policy include "The Benefit and the Burden," recently wrote in the New York Times: "People are increasingly concerned about unemployment, but Republicans have nothing to offer them."

The candidates and their supporters dispute this, of course. A series of scheduled debates may give them chances to explain why their proposals would hit the right targets.

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WASHINGTON -- Key proposals from the Republican presidential candidates might make for good campaign fodder. But independent analyses raise serious questions about those plans and their ability to cur...
WASHINGTON -- Key proposals from the Republican presidential candidates might make for good campaign fodder. But independent analyses raise serious questions about those plans and their ability to cur...
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
CaptainRenault
Here to keep an eye on the rascals.
06:03 PM on 11/17/2011
Here comes the GOP braintrust -- excerpt: "I will not fail you on this issue [people losing their homes]." Bachmann offered no specific remedies.

Does she ever offer any?

^ ^
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
CaptainRenault
Here to keep an eye on the rascals.
05:46 PM on 11/17/2011
Heretic.

Watch out for TPer death squads.

^ ^
01:22 AM on 11/08/2011
"Bruce Bartlett, Ex-Reagan Economist: Idea That Deregulation Leads To Jobs 'Just Made Up' "

****Finally, one of them admits it.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
CaptainRenault
Here to keep an eye on the rascals.
05:47 PM on 11/17/2011
F/F, #600.

^ ^
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
JPatrickRader
FL Progressive (smiling)
12:55 PM on 11/03/2011
Wow, major republican talking point for the last 30 years was "just made up" by the GOP demi-god. I'd be willing to bet ALL GOP economics are similarly "made up." Who in their right mind really thought "trickle down" was a serious economic plan? You can tell when the GOP are making things up...It's when they're speaking in public. Real GOP economics discussion are all held behind closed doors--at Goldman Sachs.
11:57 AM on 11/03/2011
Why can't we ship them off to Somalia. They won't have to worry about big government there.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Reiner-von-Sinn
Fol de rol de rolly O
10:33 AM on 11/03/2011
Well, congratulations Bartlett on finally waking up from your coma.

That's two of Reagan's advisors to do a 180 on their positions.

David Stockman renounced his old beliefs and blamed the "ideological tax-cutters" for increasing our national debt.

Unfortunately for America the damage is done - millions of manufacturing jobs exported, trillions not reinvested in the US, thirty years of stagnant wage growth for the middle class, widening income and wage disparity gaps.

Anyone who doubts that Friedman's ideas are wrong or that thirty years of voodoo and neo-con policy have wrecked our national economy need look no farther than the Bush misadministration's response to the financial crises of '08.

Bush, Cheney, Paulson and the rest of the Milton-Friedmanistas utterly foresook their own laissez-faire, no-market-intervention, no-regulation principles and back flipped when they recognized how badly their wrong-headed and misguided policies had lead to the then impending sh*t blizzard of credit freezes, market meltdowns, bankruptcies, exponentially increasing foreclosures and unemployment.

They totally reverted to and relied on tried-and-true Keynesian capital infusions to fix the problems.

On September 19, 2008, Paulson called for the U.S. government to use trillions of Treasury dollars to help financial firms clean up nonperforming mortgages threatening the liquidity of those firms.

October 3, 2008 Bush enacted Public Law 110-343, so-called TARP, a law designed to mitigate the growing financial crisis of 2007–2010 by giving trillions to relieve corporations of so-called "troubled assets".
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
CaptainRenault
Here to keep an eye on the rascals.
05:48 PM on 11/17/2011
Better late than never, I suppose.

I can't wait to hear the pushback from the righty-sphere.

^ ^
06:16 PM on 11/17/2011
The right will never hear these comments, I fear. Or they will spin Bartlett as a traitor to THEIR God. The same one who raised taxes 11 times and exploded the deficit. Among other things.
10:02 AM on 11/03/2011
Republicans the party of the 1%, tax the middle class and the poor to support the 1%'s ability to profit. Republicans the party of economic servitude for all but their contributors. Why do we Christans allow our selves to be so easily misdirected from what should be one of the major tenants of our faith as expressed by the words of Christ, as written in Matthew 6:24. "No one can serve two masters. Either you will hate the one and love the other, or you will be devoted to the one and despise the other. You cannot serve both God and money".
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
jesocr
03:17 AM on 11/03/2011
Just because it's made up doesn't mean that you won't keep hearing it form their minions on Faux News. Never let anything get in the way of the agenda.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
CaptainRenault
Here to keep an eye on the rascals.
05:49 PM on 11/17/2011
And you can bet there will be a whole lot of caterwauling from the right about this..

^ ^
04:13 PM on 11/02/2011
They do not have many regulations in Zimbabwe....and they have a lot of guns to. Deregulation regulates US to 3rd world status.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Gailsunday
I think what I think...therefore, I am
03:13 PM on 11/02/2011
Well, according to this article, a "republikan" FINALLY told the truth....the "deregulations produce jobs", was "just made up".......Well, never believed it would or could work any way, no reason it should, made no sense... deregulations, nothing to do with anything but more "money in their pockets"....they're main aim.
OMG FINALLY A TRUTH is SPOKEN from the All UNAmerican Party of NO!

AND..doesn't this tells us a lot, about the Rethuglikan sheeple mentality!!! They are willing to BElieve anything their "leaders" tell them, truth or otherwise, HM "JUST made up,... just nonsense".." deregulation leads to job creation", IS admittedly and out and out FALSEhood!!!

...THE ONE DAMN THING THE COUNTRY NEEDS is Jobs...THE ONE DAMN THING WHICH WILL create employment, creating income, creating purchasing power, companies are sitting on millions unspent they could be using to create jobs, so they don't need any tax cuts.
The rate of taxation on Big Businesses needs to be increased back to Eisenhower rates, loopholes closed, far fewer deductions, NAFTA, CAFTA etc., repealed. Steigel/Glass (forgot spelling), needs to be reenacted to help control Wall Street, repair the damage it's repeal created...the MESS the US is in NOW.

PLEEEEEASE! Spare US/us from rethuglikan/republikan/republikan nonsense and fabrications.
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Eris23Skidoo
Dischordian Keynesian
03:05 PM on 11/02/2011
Gotta love how Romney's plan to fix housing results in a few rich people owning all the houses and everybody else being a renter. He's just completely given up on the idea that America is a place where lots of people own homes. He wants it to be a place where only a few rich people own their own homes and they also own everybody else's. Apparently, for Mitt Romney, broad home ownership is not a part of the American dream. I think his American dream is where he gets to live in the White House and fantasize about being "king".
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
12:33 PM on 11/02/2011
"Romney told editors of the Las Vegas Review-Journal: "Don't try and stop the foreclosure process. Let it run its course and hit the bottom. Allow investors to buy homes, put renters in them, fix the homes up and let it turn around and come back up."

THIS IS EXACTLY WHAT I SUSPECTED. Even the foreclosure process is designed to impoverish the 99% SEVERAL times over, by first designing loans that rip them off and inevitably lead to foreclosure, then by squeezing credit so hard that even strong credit risks can't get mortgages so only cash will work, then keeping that system in place long enough for the investor class to gobble up all the affordable housing so THEY can see the appreciation, while the 99% are reduced to renters again.

It's been so transparent all along, why aren't people talking about this more?
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Eris23Skidoo
Dischordian Keynesian
03:10 PM on 11/02/2011
I certainly am. Glad to see you talking about it too. F and F.

My parents used to be people that considered themselves "the investor class". They used to own businesses and invest in stocks and bonds. My step-dad tried to get me involved in futures (it was too risky unless you've got at least 100,000 in your account). They're retired now and living comfortably but my Mom told me recently that they'd applied for a loan and got rejected because they were considered a credit risk. What a bizarro world. My folks are the consummate salespeople and they always had money. They always had nice things and lived in nice houses. Sometimes they had a time-share in the Caribbean. Now they can't even get credit extended to them. Thanks George Dubya and the Banksters!
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
oldcliche
12:23 PM on 11/03/2011
To me it seems like an endless cycle of new buyers falling into the old mortgage traps.
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04:03 PM on 11/04/2011
the point Romney was making is that the foreclosures are actually working out great for the wealthiest people because they can pay cash to buy up "investment" properties while all the dopey middle-class folks have to miss out on all the bargains because the loan process is so disastrous. He said it like it's a good thing.
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american-dolt
Divide and Conquer
09:57 AM on 11/02/2011
Why People continue to think this Prick was a good President shows how lost we are as a Nation.
07:29 AM on 11/02/2011
Deregulation creates an absence of accountability for personal deeds, not jobs. There may be regualations that over reach, but the actions that lead to this over extension are always more severe than the regulation itself. Republicans want to remove regulation in response to political contributions, and job creation is just the smoke screen that is utilized to cloud the risk that it subjects on the public. Have we already forgotten the Gulf oil spill or are we just being asked to accept it as a consequence for job creation?
07:19 AM on 11/02/2011
The GOP lives in a small, nasty world where everything and everyone is a threat to them. They forget how miserable life was before regulations: pollution, burning rivers, lakes where no fishing were fit for eating, air so thick you couldn't breathe, soil polluted with lead. They forget that their grandparents or great-grandparents came here to find the freedom they want to deny others. They forget that generally their security and infrastructure are due to liberals who envisioned a better life for everyone. They forget that there was a time when segregation corroded our ideas of freedom and rights. They forget there was a time when women were seen and not heard. They forget life before unions which actually gave most folks the first step to the middle class. They fantasy that they will become millionaires through the Tea Party Candidates is destroying the fabric of democracy. The world they see isn't one I want to live in.