Dromond
Pleasantly abstruse.
http://www.nytimes.com/2012/09/16/opinion/sunday/dont-tell-anyone-but-the-stimulus-worked.html
For posterity, I'm posting the text of the article. Also for those who don't want to darken the NYTimes' virtual door.
God forbid we sow some growth in the economy...
For posterity, I'm posting the text of the article. Also for those who don't want to darken the NYTimes' virtual door.
NYTimes said:By DAVID FIRESTONE
Published: September 15, 2012
Republicans howled on Thursday when the Federal Reserve, at long last, took steps to energize the economy. Some were furious at the thought that even a little economic boost might work to benefit President Obama just before an election. It is going to sow some growth in the economy, said Raul Labrador, a freshman Tea Party congressman from Idaho, and the Obama administration is going to claim credit.
Mr. Labrador neednt worry about that. The president is no more likely to get credit for the Feds action for which he was not responsible than he gets for the transformative law for which he was fully responsible: the 2009 stimulus, which fundamentally turned around the nations economy and its prospects for growth, and yet has disappeared from the political conversation.
The reputation of the stimulus is meticulously restored from shabby to skillful in Michael Grunwalds important new book, The New New Deal. His findings will come as a jolt to those who think the law failed, the typical Republican assessment, or was too small and sloppy to have any effect.
On the most basic level, the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act is responsible for saving and creating 2.5 million jobs. The majority of economists agree that it helped the economy grow by as much as 3.8 percent, and kept the unemployment rate from reaching 12 percent.
The stimulus is the reason, in fact, that most Americans are better off than they were four years ago, when the economy was in serious danger of shutting down.
But the stimulus did far more than stimulate: it protected the most vulnerable from the recessions heavy winds. Of the acts $840 billion final cost, $1.5 billion went to rent subsidies and emergency housing that kept 1.2 million people under roofs. (Thats why the recession didnt produce rampant homelessness.) It increased spending on food stamps, unemployment benefits and Medicaid, keeping at least seven million Americans from falling below the poverty line.
And as Mr. Grunwald shows, it made crucial investments in neglected economic sectors that are likely to pay off for decades. It jump-started the switch to electronic medical records, which will largely end the use of paper records by 2015. It poured more than $1 billion into comparative-effectiveness research on pharmaceuticals. It extended broadband Internet to thousands of rural communities. And it spent $90 billion on a huge variety of wind, solar and other clean energy projects that revived the industry. Republicans, of course, only want to talk about Solyndra, but most of the green investments have been quite successful, and renewable power output has doubled.
Americans dont know most of this, and not just because Mitt Romney and his party denigrate the law as a boondoggle every five minutes. Democrats, so battered by the transformation of stimulus into a synonym for waste and fraud (of which there was little), have stopped using the word. Only four speakers at the Democratic convention even mentioned the recovery act, none using the word stimulus.
Mr. Obama himself didnt bring it up at all. One of the biggest accomplishments of his first term a clear illustration of the beneficial use of government power, in a law 50 percent larger (in constant dollars) than the original New Deal and its author doesnt even mention it in his most widely heard re-election speech. Such is the power of Republican misinformation, and Democratic timidity.
Mr. Grunwald argues that the recovery act was not timid, but the administrations effort to sell it to the voters was muddled and ineffective. Not only did White House economists famously overestimate its impact on the jobless rate, handing Mr. Romney a favorite talking point, but the administration seemed to feel the benefits would simply be obvious. Mr. Obama, too cool to appear in an endless stream of photos with a shovel and hard hat, didnt slap his name on public works projects in the self-promoting way of mayors and governors.
How many New Yorkers know that the stimulus is helping to pay for the Second Avenue subway, or the project to link the Long Island Rail Road to Grand Central? Almost every American worker received a tax cut from the act, but only about 10 percent of them noticed it in their paychecks. White House economists had rejected the idea of distributing the tax cuts as flashy rebate checks, because people were more likely to spend the money (and help the economy) if they didnt notice it. Good economics, perhaps, but terrible politics.
From the beginning, for purely political reasons, Republicans were determined to oppose the bill, using silly but tiny expenditures to discredit the whole thing. Even the moderate Republican senators who helped push the bill past a filibuster had refused to let it grow past $800 billion, and prevented it from paying for school construction.
Republicans learned a lesson from the stimulus that Democrats didnt expect: unwavering opposition, distortion, deceit and ridicule actually work, especially when the opposition doesnt put up a fight. The lesson for Democrats seems equally clear: when government actually works, let the world know about it.
A version of this editorial appeared in print on September 16, 2012, on page SR10 of the New York edition with the headline: Dont Tell Anyone, But the Stimulus Worked.
God forbid we sow some growth in the economy...