Capital Commerce

Obama's Trillion-Dollar Spending Plan

By James Pethokoukis

Posted: February 14, 2008

What does "change" cost? About a quarter of a trillion bucks a year, according to Barack Obama. But first, this: "I wish Obama would go further than that, but it's a start," was the reaction of one DailyKos poster to Barack Obama's economic plan unveiled yesterday in a campaign appearance in Janesville, Wis. Some hard-core liberals may be underwhelmed by the scope of Obama's agenda—after all, there's no single-payer healthcare plan or Scandinavian-style "flexicurity" worker benefits program in the mix—but my guess is that the average person would find it all pretty aggressive. Here are the priciest parts:

Put it all together, and we are talking about a $200 billon plan, $800 billion over four years. And that does not even include fixing the alternative minimum tax, a $50 billion-a-year item that will assuredly get passed. A few thoughts:

1) Let's put aside for a moment whether the Obama plan will actually increase our standard of living, enhance productivity, or encourage innovation. As a matter of accounting, I don't get how Obama will pay for his plan. Now he claims he's paid "for every element of this economic agenda—by ending a war that's costing us billions, closing tax loopholes for corporations, putting a price on carbon pollution, and ending George Bush's tax cuts for the wealthiest 2 percent of Americans."

But I don't think that adds up. Take, for instance, eliminating those Bush tax cuts on top earners. That might gain $50 billion a year, assuming no negative economic effect. But Congressional Budget Office estimates already assume that the Bush tax cuts expire at the end of 2010. So Obama gains nothing beyond, perhaps, a one-year bump in 2010 if he repeals the tax cuts a year earlier.

2) Obama clearly advocates jacking up payroll taxes as a way of creating long-term solvency for Social Security. Check out this chunk from his campaign press release:

Obama will be honest with the American people about the long-term solvency of Social Security and the ways we can address the shortfall. Obama will protect Social Security benefits for current and future beneficiaries alike. And he does not believe it is necessary or fair to hardworking seniors to raise the retirement age. Obama is strongly opposed to privatizing Social Security. Currently, the Social Security payroll tax applies to only the first $97,500 a worker makes. Obama has consistently said that we may want to include a "doughnut hole" to ensure that lifting the payroll tax cap does not ensnare any middle-class Americans. Obama supports increasing the maximum amount of earnings covered by Social Security, and he will work with Congress and the American people to choose a payroll tax reform package that will keep Social Security solvent for at least the next half century.

Taken at face value, Obama is proposing no benefit cuts at all. None. He won't cut future benefit increases by linking them to the inflation rate rather than wages, nor will he extend the retirement age even as life expectancy increases. Retirement accounts, a way to make Social Security a better deal for younger workers but not a way to directly deal with the solvency issue, are also out of the question. I will update all this after I chat with Team Obama about its candidate's ideas.

basic ecomics

this is a very basic tool that obama is using to increase ad. increased govt spending means that Aggregate demand curve shifts right. thus increased output and gdp= no more recession!! govt defecit is not a bad thing- its an effective fiscal policy!

nish of NY @ Oct 01, 2009 05:28:29 AM

No More

Need not to say, we all know what debt can do for our future. We are now at that future and it was set for us decades ago. It is here now. Wake up America, we can not spend our way thru problems with money we don't have. Bush did that with the war. Now Obama doing it on everything else. It sucks!!!

joe smoe of OH @ Sep 11, 2009 17:20:20 PM

Socialism?

America is FAR from being a socialist country.

Socialism doesn't allow for the amount of power that large corporations have both financially and politically.

The traditional socialism relies on a labour force for it's economy, which is lacking in many of America's financial sectors as more cheap labour is acquired from overseas.

The most important thing, however, is that the state would need to regulate most financial matters, which hasn't happened and deregulation of the banks and insurance companies' finances are one of the prime reasons we are in a recession.

At the end of the day, if you go into two different shops one day and find two loaves of bread that are exactly the same, but the shops have priced them differently, you are NOT in a socialist country (given a strict definition). One of the loaves is more expensive and a CORPORATION is benefitting from that, not the state.

Fork @ Aug 12, 2009 19:54:04 PM

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Capital Commerce

Capital Commerce

U.S. News business reporter Matthew Bandyk examines the issues, people, and debates that shape the nexus of political and economic life in the nation's capital.

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