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TheMercenary 07-08-2009 09:28 AM

Democrats Split on Stimulus as Job Losses Mount, Deficit Soars

Quote:

July 8 (Bloomberg) -- Democrats who control the levers of power in Washington are divided over whether to push for more deficit spending to end the recession and stem job losses, complicating the possibility of a second stimulus bill.

“We need to be open to whether or not we need further action,” House Majority Leader Steny Hoyer, a Maryland Democrat, told reporters yesterday. Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid of Nevada countered that “there is no showing to me that another stimulus is needed.”

President Barack Obama underscored the dilemma by addressing both sides of the argument. In an interview with ABC News yesterday, he said unemployment approaching 10 percent is something “we wrestle with constantly.” He added that spending more borrowed money is “potentially counterproductive.”

The split reflects two major challenges facing the Democrats: Record budget deficits that make additional spending much tougher to pass and a 26-year-high unemployment rate of 9.5 percent that is expected to rise to double digits.

“They’re between a rock and a hard place,” said Stuart Rothenberg, editor of the Rothenberg Political Report in Washington.

The U.S. economy lost 467,000 jobs in June, exceeding economists’ forecasts, while the federal budget deficit is projected by the Congressional Budget Office to top $1.8 trillion this year and $1.4 trillion in fiscal 2010. That’s provoked criticism of the $787 billion stimulus bill passed in February as either wasteful or not large enough.

Borrowing Surge

The Treasury is increasing debt sales to pay for the spending. After more than doubling note and bond offerings to $963 billion in the first half, another $1.1 trillion may be sold by year-end, according to Barclays Plc. The second-half sales would be more than the total amount of debt sold in all of 2008.

The U.S. should consider drafting a second stimulus package focusing on infrastructure projects because the bill approved in February was “a bit too small,” said Laura Tyson, an adviser to Obama during last year’s presidential campaign who now sits on the White House’s Economic Recovery Advisory Board.

Rhode Island Senator Sheldon Whitehouse, a Democrat whose home state has a 12 percent jobless rate, told ABCNews.com that a second stimulus is “probably needed.” Action by Congress would “probably take place towards the end of the year,” Whitehouse said.

With the White House and congressional Democrats focused on a major health-care overhaul and a climate bill, some lawmakers expressed pessimism about the likelihood of such legislation.

Deferring to Obama

“I’m not sure how you would do it,” said the Senate’s second-ranking Democrat, Dick Durbin of Illinois. He said he would leave any decision on the need for a fiscal stimulus to “the president’s evaluation.”

Republicans seized on the unemployment rate and job losses of about 6.5 million since the recession began in December 2007 as validation of their vote against the measure in February.

Senate Republican leader Mitch McConnell of Kentucky said in a floor speech yesterday that Democratic proponents of the stimulus program “over-promised on results and now their predictions are coming back to them.”

McConnell mocked the idea of another stimulus. He called it “mind-boggling” and a worse idea than the previous one, which he said “has been demonstrably proven to have failed.” He added, “There is no education in the second kick of a mule.”

Bernstein Defense

The White House dismissed calls to augment or alter the initial legislation.

“It’s working, it’s demonstrably working,” said Jared Bernstein, chief economic adviser to Vice President Joseph Biden, whose office is overseeing the rollout of the first stimulus.

Bernstein said about $200 billion of the $787 billion allocated in the bill has been obligated or spent, adding that the effects of the spending and tax cuts will continue to ramp up in the next few months.

“There is no conceivable stimulus package on the face of this earth that would fully offset the deepest recession since the Great Depression,” Bernstein said in a telephone interview yesterday.

The Obama administration may have to stick with that argument, as more spending is unlikely in the face of record deficits, said Stan Collender, a former House and Senate budget analyst.

“Adding additional spending or tax cuts right now would be very difficult,” Collender said. He added, however, that if the economy deteriorates, another bill to juice the economy may become possible.

“Right now it doesn’t seem to be justified,” said Collender, managing director of Qorvis Communications in Washington. “Come September, it might be.”
To contact the reporter on this story: Matthew Benjamin in Washington at Mbenjamin2@bloomberg.net

http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?p...d=aIHpsBT0JHFc

glatt 07-08-2009 10:11 AM

Quote:

Bernstein said about $200 billion of the $787 billion allocated in the bill has been obligated or spent, adding that the effects of the spending and tax cuts will continue to ramp up in the next few months.
According to the front page story in the Washington Post today, we have only spent 14% of the stimulus package that was already passed. Seems like we should spend the remaining 86% of the money before they ask for more.

TheMercenary 07-09-2009 11:49 AM

Yea, I have heard some other numbers as well. It is hard to say but suffice it the majority has not been spent. And yet how many more jobs were lost last month? The pipe dream of this program putting people back to work has been a big fat lie by Obama and the Dems.

sugarpop 07-11-2009 11:31 AM

Everyone knew it would take some time to work, and jobs always lag behind the economy. Give it time Merc. This recession is going to be deep, and long. They have said that from the beginning. I would bet though, that had there been no stimulus, the economy would be much worse, and even deeper.

spudcon 07-11-2009 11:47 AM

I'm going to pay off my credit card by getting another card, and borrowing twice as much as I owe. Then I'm going to give a lot of that money to some guys who came to my door, asking if they could pave my driveway, and somehow my debt will get paid.

sugarpop 07-11-2009 12:11 PM

I don't know. All I know is, during the 30s when the banks failed, we went into a full-on depression that lasted for years. Hoover did nothing, and it got much worse. FDR did big stimulus projects, and it got better. Then when he stopped the stimulus, it got worse again, so he started it back up and got better again. Seems pretty logical to me to do the same thing again. But back then we didn't have 24 hour news cycles, and people didn't have the attention span of a gnat, so they allowed it time to work.

spudcon 07-11-2009 05:47 PM

World War II stopped the depression, all FDR did was prolong it till he could get us into war.

xoxoxoBruce 07-11-2009 10:45 PM

Prolong it? Bullshit. FDR made life better for millions of Americans until the war put everyone to work.

Urbane Guerrilla 07-12-2009 12:18 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Troubleshooter (Post 101617)
I rather like the idea of a xtian state. It gets them all in one place.

Follow that with a little "strategic" bombing and...

...And you'd be at one with Hitler. Now fuck off and go fuck yourself, hard, dry and deep, until you've Amadou Diallo'd this kind of crap your filthy bigoted mind, you miserable, sick son of a bitch and tertiary-syphilis case. It'll still work even five years on.

There was absolutely no sweetness nor light in your soul back in 2004. Why are you alive? Are you still alive?

Urbane Guerrilla 07-12-2009 12:25 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by xoxoxoBruce (Post 580977)
Prolong it? Bullshit. FDR made life better for millions of Americans until the war put everyone to work.

As you may be marginally aware, there's been some thoughtful new looking at that idea. There are those -- students of economics, note well -- who disagree and can say why: the jobs were Joe-jobs and temporary at that. Do you read history? I do. And that's why I argue with you so often.

xoxoxoBruce 07-12-2009 02:13 AM

You read it, my family and I lived it. They're rewriting history with bullshit assumptions and you're buying into it.

spudcon 07-12-2009 08:30 PM

My family lived through it too Bruce. Roosevelt's socialist bullshit was just as unconstitutional and harmful as the 21st century socialist are doing.

xoxoxoBruce 07-12-2009 11:42 PM

Oh yeah, Roosevelt really fucked things up. Guess that's why we lost the war and became a second world, backwater, country. Get real.

TheMercenary 07-13-2009 09:33 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by sugarpop (Post 580867)
Give it time Merc.

Where are the hundreds of thousands of job we were promised? Where are all the "shovel ready" jobs?

sugarpop 07-13-2009 10:08 AM

Merc, everyone knew it was going to take time for all the money to get out there. There have certainly been jobs saved, millions I imagine. I have heard numerous people on TV (governors and company executives) who have said they would have had to fire even more people if it hadn't been for the stimulus money. The 2nd phase is coming, and that is where the jobs will come in. I understand your frustration, I'm frustrated too. But be happy more people didn't lose their jobs, because they could have. We could very well have been in a full blown depression right now if we hadn't taken action.


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