Capital Commerce

7 Reasons to Kill the Obama Stimulus Bill

By James Pethokoukis

Posted: January 5, 2009

The great Arnold Kling takes the other side of the stimulus trade:

1. It is harder to spend larger amounts quickly and cost-effectively.

2. There is a greater risk that we will run into a "sudden stop," in which foreign investors are no longer willing to fund our deficits (this is Buiter's main worry).

3. There is a risk that the intergenerational transfer imposed by the stimulus (from our children to ourselves) is excessive, particularly in the context of other intergenerational transfers of the same sort.

4. There is a risk that fiscal stimulus, large or small, is actually ineffective, so that a large stimulus only means a large failure.

5. There is a risk that much of the spending will kick in after a recovery is underway.

6. The government's capacity to deal with an emergency, such as a major natural disaster or a foreign attack, will be limited, because its credit worthiness will be damaged.

7. There is a risk that government will absorb a permanently higher share of GDP. Policymakers will be reluctant to cut public spending for fear of causing a downturn. Moreover, it will be difficult politically to cut public sending.

I suspect that for some of the proponents of fiscal stimulus, the last point is a feature, not a bug. What they really are proposing is a permanent, Galbraithian shift from the private sector to government, in the guise of a large fiscal stimulus.

Overall, on close examination, the case for the large fiscal stimulus, like the case for the Paulson rescue plan, is really quite weak. However, the same elite groupthink that made passage of the Paulson plan inevitable probably also makes the passage of the stimulus package inevitable. Opponents of the stimulus plan will be mocked and vilified in the media, even though they may very well have logic on their side.

stimulus bill

What I don't get is if it's so all-fired urgent that we pass this to prevent, as Obama says, catastrophe, why does the majority of it not take effect until 2010 or later. Why don't they start small and just pass the part that takes effect now?

M from MI of MI @ Feb 07, 2009 12:17:53 PM

STIMULUS BILL

ARE THEY CRAZY????

THIS IS CHANGE WE DON'T NEED.

gARY of TX @ Feb 06, 2009 10:23:48 AM

stimulus bill

I think the stimulus bill is an incredible idea! Doesn't matter if it might be difficult to start.

k of MA @ Feb 06, 2009 09:26:44 AM

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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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