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Lincoln Mitchell

Lincoln Mitchell

Posted: February 15, 2011 02:03 PM

President Obama's latest budget proposals have frustrated many progressives who believe that Obama is cutting programs that are important to progressives while not asking for similar sacrifices from conservatives. Others have argued that spending cuts will prolong the recession and dampen any job generation that might be occurring. There is a lot of truth to both these claims. Obama has proven throughout his presidency that he is willing to negotiate away too much, often starting negotiations by meeting his political opponents halfway, or more. Additionally, deficit spending is far more likely to generate jobs and economic activity than cutting spending and trying to balance the budget.

There is an economic logic for the president to de-emphasize the problem of the deficit and continuing to seek to spend our way out of the recession. However, this is increasingly politically impossible. One of the clear successes of the Tea Party movement has been to draw attention to the problem of the deficit. Although rarely grounded in thoughtful analysis, the Tea Party made a lot of noise about the deficit and placed it firmly on the national agenda. There is now a cost associated with ignoring the deficit, one which the Democrats paid last November.

The Tea Party was not alone in this area as the deficit also has become an issue of increasing concern to political elites, across party lines and even across sectors who in most other ways are not comfortable, and do not share priorities with the Tea Partiers. Think tanks, journals and universities are now examining deficit related questions and exploring how the deficit will accelerate America's decline or curtail our foreign policy options.

The Tea Party emphasis on the deficit ultimately devolves into partisan nonsense because they blame this entire problem on Obama. Clearly President George W. Bush contributed to the deficit problem facing the US as well, but Obama is now president and is charged with addressing this problem, or at least appearing to address this problem. Obama cannot ignore the deficit or seek to persuade the American people that until the economy recovers, the deficit will not be a priority. This may have been possible in 2009, but two years of Tea Party activism have changed this.

Obama faces a uniquely difficult conundrum regarding the deficit. First, the Republican Party, despite being wedded to fiscally irresponsible policies such as tax cuts for the wealthy and lacking the political courage to take on any of the major sources of spending such as the military or various entitlement programs, have successfully reinvented themselves as the party of deficit hawks. Thus, it is easy for the Republicans in congress to attack any proposal by the President as insufficiently serious about the deficit and to push him to make more cuts.

The difficulty is made worse because two years into the Obama presidency, Republicans in congress have become aware of Obama's negotiating strategy. They know that he always wants a deal, values compromise over substance of the compromise and will start with a good offer and then keep conceding things until the Republicans finally agree. This, of course, is an almost untenable position for the President, but it is one which he has created for himself. Additionally, the President will be held more accountable than the Republicans in the House, so Obama has a far greater incentive to come to some kind of a deal than the Republicans have.

In general, deficits are a strange political issue. While most politicians, at least reasonably thoughtful ones, understand the importance of sound fiscal policy, deficit reduction is almost always a highly political issue. It is also an issue that is almost always seized upon by the party out of power. The efforts by the Tea Party to do this in 2009-2010 were more dramatic and successful than similar efforts by the Democrats during the presidencies of Ronald Reagan and George W. Bush, but during those years it was the Democrats who were concerned about rising deficits, while incumbent Republican presidents spent money irresponsibly and drove the country to the edge of bankruptcy.

Occasionally presidents take balancing the budget seriously or have strong enough economies to address the deficit. George H.W. Bush and Bill Clinton were more or less examples of that, but these efforts are rare and rarely sustained for more than a few years.

Faced with a budget deficit that is largely not of his making and has been exploited by his political opponents, but is nonetheless serious and an economy that has been agonizingly slow to recover, Obama has no easy way out. Ignoring the reality of the deficit would not be wise, but ignoring the reality that spending cuts will hurt the economy would also be unwise. The President is going to make some unpopular decisions, but looking at the current proposed budget, progressives are right to wonder when he is going to make a decision which is unpopular with his political opponents, rather than just with his base.

 
 
 

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kemstone
Traveler, thinker, writer.
03:56 AM on 03/06/2011
Every decision Obama makes is unpopular with the Tea Partiers, as most of then just don't like HIM. They don't REALLY care about the deficit--they just latch onto that as an intelligent-sounding reason for them to say they hate the president, when really they just don't like him as a person.

The president must know that nothing he can do is going to bring these people around to his side, so there's got to be another reason he keeps reaching out to conservatives. Maybe it's because that's what the big business interests who funded his campaign want him to do.
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Jim bob
Be the change you wish to see.
06:39 PM on 03/05/2011
With respect to what everyone here is trying to say with varying degrees of clarity---the whole issue is so clouded that it doesn't yield to rationality. How can anyone be serious about a budget when we've had two wars, each of which have gone on longer than any other in our history, as yet without any end in sight, and a complete failure of our banking system, again, without any punishment for proven fraud, and without any end in sight? I refuse to take any conversation about "budget" seriously until someone shows me that anybody in any position of authority cares one bit about the laws of science, reason, logic, empiricism or even rhetoric. Until then, it's all absurd.
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cornel
wuf wuf
10:07 AM on 02/16/2011
It does not really matters who caused the deficit, it's here to stay. Those proposed cuts are a joke and only hurts the poor and the middle class.
Want to really reduce the deficit, how about cutting the wars ? $105 billion/per year Afghanistan, $40 billion/per year Iraq, maintenance of 1,350 US bases world wide $146 billion/per year. Stopping those expenditures alone would save us $291 billions/per year, I admit this saving cannot match by any means the kind of money we would save if Obama did not authorized the extended tax cut to the 2% super rich !
07:58 AM on 02/16/2011
For all the talk over the past day about leadership, political courage, etc., neither party has yet addressed the hard reality that you cannot make a significant inroad on the deficit without dealing with revenue. The Bush '01-'03 tax cuts cost $2 trillion in revenue, and the wars have added $1 trillion in expense. A two-year extension of the tax cuts may have been unavoidable, but the impact pales in comparison with what came before. Now, even the deepest cuts in spending will have little long-term impact in the debt, while causing serious near-term hardship, especially to vulnerable groups in society. Leadership and political courage require dealing with both sides of the ledger.
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The Lone Stranger
Yes, I am a lousy typist. OK!
12:55 AM on 02/16/2011
In a nutshell, Obamas problem is that he still has not figured out that he was not elected to be a waffling compromiser, but to enact a solid platform of progressive reforms.

It's like space aliens came in and rewired his brain after he was inauggurated and suddenly he decided thathis job as presdient is about representing all americans instead of having confidence in the agenda of reform that got him elected in the first place. I know that the president represents all americans, but this need not lead to the conclusion that all views are equally valid and that what this nation needs is a sort of mediocre middle solution of the like that Obama now seems to crave in the name of bipartisanship.

nobody wants bipartisan ship. The GOP hates Obama and only made bipartisanship their mantra as a means to gain power against a president they see as their enemy. I do not want bipartisanship either because this means continuing to cooperate with the eveil GOP and their crooked policies that ruined our nation in the first place. But this does not matter to Obama. Rather than doing the hard work that has at least a hope of improving things and pushing for real reform, his presidency has been nothing but a spactacular cop out by a wimpy incompetent guy who has no courage whatsoever.

Please advise him not to seek a second term.
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Jim bob
Be the change you wish to see.
06:48 PM on 03/05/2011
Yeah, in a nutshell that sounds about right. I'm hard corps we need to elect this guy again...but I could be wrong. The other side of me says...let's just let it all fall apart, I'm really getting tired of investing emotional energy in people who say they'll do the right thing...then watch as they crumble and let the crooks run all over them. Hundreds of lies running up to the wars which cost hundreds of thousands of lives, all in--hundreds of lies, and rampant fraud, running up the banking bubble--nobody prosecuted, nobody in jail, no real attention paid to any of it, and at the other end, we get a "bipartisan" commission which tells us we've got to do something about....ready??? "social security"??? Really? Are we really supposed to buy that this is a serious administration? I try, really I do...but I just can't.
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03:54 PM on 02/15/2011
You can make the case that there is a lot of largesse in most every agencie's budget, and those are great places to start cutting. However, the politics involved in making those cuts, make them nearly impossible to execute. That particularly holds true in the defense budget. One thing I don't get, is why we continue paying military housing allowances to those officer and senior enlisted ranks earning over $60,000 per year? The housing allowances are a tax free supplement to military basic pay and the amount paid is adjusted for dependents and duty location. The allowance is supposed to make off-base housing affordable. The allowance paid increases according to rank, therefore, an O-6 (Navy Captain/Army Colonel) with over 20 years of service, makes about $110,000 per year in basic pay, but earns on average, up to another $28,000 in housing pay, based on dependents. Enlisted members earn considerably less. Does it make sense to pay the officer who could easily afford his/her own housing more than the enlisted member, who would need the allowance more? How many billions could this save? Just wondering.
06:20 PM on 02/15/2011
Military personnel are required to move every one to two years. In addition, they currently are spending months on assignment to prosecute the two wars. They are cheap compared to hiring private contractors like Blackwater.

The biggest problem with today's military budget is that the American people are not getting a good ROI on our investment in military hardware. Years ago most private sector companies did around 25% of their business with the military which did two things; first it evened out the business cycle for the private sector and second there was a knowledge transfer from the DOD to the private sector that enabled engineering advances. Because of the concentration of military procurement to just a few companies this no longer the case.
03:28 PM on 02/15/2011
Largely not his making???? Why is it he has spent more than all the presidents before him in total? Why the back pedalling of all the promises that he made for Stimulus? Remember..creating 500,000 jobs per month. Remember under 8% unemployment. How about shovel ready jobs, then he says there is no such thing. How about the change into "saved" jobs when things weren't working out. It's clear Obama doesn't have a handle on the economy and he still wants the checkbook.
04:12 PM on 02/15/2011
Yes, not his making. 30 years of GOP control. What is with people who think things happen instantly? I will agree with you that Obama overstated his stimulus, mainly because he kept it too small and it wasn't implemented efficiently.
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Cool Bam
07:20 PM on 02/15/2011
30 year of GOP control? The Dems held both Houses from 2007 to the Current Congress just to choose a current example. Coincidentally, 2007 was the year we started running deficits again.
06:08 PM on 02/15/2011
Please he hasn't even spent as much as the last one president.

............Original Deficit....................In 2010 dollars as a percentage of GDP

Bush II.....$6,102,365,591,311.74.....$6,102,365,591,311.74

Bush I......$1,554,057,922,952.06.....$3,820,000,000,000.00

Reagan....$1,859,530,960,187.32.....$8,150,000,000,000.00
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Cool Bam
06:47 PM on 02/15/2011
What is "In 2010 dollars as a percentage of GDP" supposed to mean?
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Cool Bam
06:59 PM on 02/15/2011
The President's budget proposal to run a deficit of $1.645 trillion this year. The figure breaks the record set in 2009’s (the previous record) by over $230 billion. The INCREASE alone over the prior record is actual more than the total of GWB's 2007’s deficit at $160 billion. Certainly this problem has been building and is not all Obama's fault, but lets see the state of things clearly.