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THE BIG LIE: How Ideologues Smeared Fannie Mae

by Melissa Jeltsen on December 25, 2011

Huffington Post…

So this is how the Big Lie works. You begin with a hypothesis that has a certain surface plausibility. You find an ally whose background suggests that he’s an “expert”; out of thin air, he devises “data.” You write articles in sympathetic publications, repeating the data endlessly; in time, some of these publications make your cause their own. Like-minded congressmen pick up your mantra and invite you to testify at hearings.

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THE BIG LIE: How Ideologues Smeared Fannie Mae

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Huffington Post…

The government’s bailout of banks may cost U.S. taxpayers nearly two times more than originally estimated, according to the Congressional Budget Office. The Troubled Asset Released Program, better known as TARP, will cost the federal government $34 billion , the CBO reported on its director’s blog. That’s $15 billion higher than the agency’s previous estimate in March. The increase in the estimate is mostly due to a drop in the market value of the government’s investments in American International Group and General Motors. In addition to the TARP loan, the Federal Reserve provided financial institutions with loans totaling more than $1 trillion in December 2008, at the height of the credit crisis, according to Bloomberg. Federal officials engineered TARP in October 2008, arguing that giving banks billions of dollars would help them withstand the credit crunch and stymie financial disaster. Critics allege that the money, which was supposed to spur lending to American businesses, never made it to Main Street. More recently, the contrast between the government bailouts bankers received and ordinary Americans’ lingering jobs and housing woes has become a rallying cry for Occupy Wall Street . In fact, many of the banks went back to making the same high-risk bets that got them into trouble in the first place, according to a September study from the University of Michigan . Banks treated the money and the limited guidelines that came with it as an implicit reassurance that the government would help the them in the event of future disaster. Though Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner told a watchdog panel in June 2010 that the banks had repaid 75 percent of the bailout money they received , there’s still billions outstanding. Financial institutions owe the government $18 billion , while AIG still needs to repay $50 billion, according to a CBO infografic. While the CBO boosted its estimate, it’s guess is still lower than that of other agencies. The Office Of Management and Budget estimates that the bailout will cost the federal government $53 billion , according to the CBO blog.

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TARP To Cost The U.S. Nearly Double The Initial Estimates: CBO

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National Home Sales Figures To Be Lowered Dating Back To 2007: NAR

December 12, 2011

WASHINGTON — National home sales figures will be lowered dating back to 2007 after the private trade group that collects them said the numbers were too high. The National Association of Realtors said Monday it will release the downward revisions for previously occupied homes on Dec. 21. Among the reasons for the inflated figures, the Realtors group says: changes in the way the Census Bureau collects data, population shifts and some sales being counted twice. Last year’s total sales figure of 4.91 million was the worst in 13 years. The Realtors consulted with several government and private housing market experts, including the Federal Reserve, the Department of Housing and Urban Development, the Mortgage Bankers Association, the National Association of Home Builders, mortgage giants Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac and CoreLogic, the California-based data firm that first raised doubts about the annual numbers earlier this year. CoreLogic estimated that the Realtors group overstated sales in 2010 by at least 15 percent. The changing numbers could impact how economists view data from the trade group. It could also affect companies who use the figures for hiring and expansion plans.

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Democrats Reportedly Want Tax Hikes To Be First Item Negotiated By Super Congress

October 1, 2011

By Richard Cowan and Tim Reid WASHINGTON (Reuters) – Democrats want tax hikes to be the first item negotiated in “super committee” deficit-reduction talks, trying to force Republicans to confront an issue at the heart of this year’s budget fights, sources told Reuters. The tough stance by Democratic members of the powerful 12-member congressional panel reflects the party’s wariness that Republicans might try to sideline the issue of revenue increases in the negotiations. “They’ve raised the idea of doing taxes first,” a Republican aide involved in the discussions said Friday on condition of anonymity. The panel has the task of finding ways of cutting the U.S. deficit by at least $1.2 trillion over 10 years. If it fails to agree on a plan by Nov. 23, automatic spending cuts will be triggered, beginning in 2013. If Democrats hold firm to their demand for taxes to be discussed first, that could make it hard for the committee to make the tight November deadline. Congress is due to vote on the panel’s recommendations by Dec. 23. Another congressional aide, who also did not want to be identified, confirmed that among Democrats, “there is an effort to try to discuss revenues” now. During the super committee’s initial closed-door meetings, “Republicans wanted to just talk about spending cuts and Democrats said, ‘No,’” the aide said. Republicans strongly oppose tax hikes, arguing they will hurt an anemic economic recovery. But they have not ruled out closing some tax loopholes as part of tax reform. Democrats, including President Barack Obama, insist revenue increases must be part of any deficit reduction deal. Democrats’ calls for increasing taxes on the rich may have been bolstered by a new Congressional Research Service analysis. The Sept. 23 report obtained by Reuters concluded that letting decade-old tax cuts for the wealthy expire at the end of next year as scheduled “could help reduce budget deficits in the short term without stifling the economic recovery.” Discussing taxes first would also be a switch from the negotiating tactics employed in earlier talks. In the summer debt talks between the White House and congressional leaders, the strategy was to try first to agree on what were perceived to be less controversial issues, such as domestic spending cuts. Those talks ultimately broke down amid disagreements over taxes. NO AGREEMENT YET ON WHERE TO START A third congressional aide with knowledge of the super committee’s discussions told Reuters the six Democratic panel members were “not completely unified on their approach.” The aide said that while some of the Democrats were willing to work on less controversial items now, others thought tax increases should take priority. If Democrats insist on tackling tax increases first, that is “problematic” given the Nov. 23 deadline, the aide said. The Republican aide involved in the discussions said the deficit talks were still at an early stage. “They’re going through the minutiae of everything that is possible (for government savings). It’s an inventory phase.” There is “no agreement on what will be negotiated first,” the aide added. Budget and tax specialists in the private sector are predicting arduous negotiations that could end with a partial deal at best in which the committee agrees on some savings, with the balance achieved by the automatic spending cuts. Failure by the committee to agree on a comprehensive deficit reduction deal could lead to a further downgrade of the stellar U.S. government credit rating, a move that in turn could damage a global economy struggling to right itself after a deep recession. (Editing by Ross Colvin and Peter Cooney) Copyright 2011 Thomson Reuters. Click for Restrictions .

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Do Millionaires Actually Pay Lower Taxes Than Their Secretaries?

September 20, 2011

WASHINGTON — President Barack Obama makes it sound as if there are millionaires all over America paying taxes at lower rates than their secretaries. “Middle-class families shouldn’t pay higher taxes than millionaires and billionaires,” Obama said Monday. “That’s pretty straightforward. It’s hard to argue against that.” The data tell a different story. On average, the wealthiest people in America pay a lot more taxes than the middle class or the poor, according to private and government data. They pay at a higher rate, and as a group, they contribute a much larger share of the overall taxes collected by the federal government. There may be individual millionaires who pay taxes at rates lower than middle-income workers. In 2009, 1,470 households filed tax returns with incomes above $1 million yet paid no federal income tax, according to the Internal Revenue Service. That, however, was less than 1 percent of the nearly 237,000 returns with incomes above $1 million. In his White House address Monday, Obama called on Congress to increase taxes by $1.5 trillion as part of a 10-year deficit reduction package totaling more than $3 trillion. He proposed that Congress overhaul the tax code and impose what he called the “Buffett rule,” named for billionaire investor Warren Buffett. The rule says, “People making more than $1 million a year should not pay a smaller share of their income in taxes than middle-class families pay.” “Warren Buffett’s secretary shouldn’t pay a higher tax rate than Warren Buffett. There is no justification for it,” Obama said. “It is wrong that in the United States of America, a teacher or a nurse or a construction worker who earns $50,000 should pay higher tax rates than somebody pulling in $50 million.” Buffett wrote in a recent piece for The New York Times that the tax rate he paid last year was lower than that paid by any of the other 20 people in his office. This year, households making more than $1 million will pay an average of 29.1 percent of their income in federal taxes, including income taxes and payroll taxes, according to the Tax Policy Center, a Washington think tank. Households making between $50,000 and $75,000 will pay 15 percent of their income in federal taxes. Lower-income households will pay less. For example, households making between $40,000 and $50,000 will pay an average of 12.5 percent of their income in federal taxes. Households making between $20,000 and $30,000 will pay 5.7 percent. The latest IRS figures are a few years older – and limited to federal income taxes – but show much the same thing. In 2009, taxpayers who made $1 million or more paid on average 24.4 percent of their income in federal income taxes, according to the IRS. Those making $100,000 to $125,000 paid on average 9.9 percent in federal income taxes. Those making $50,000 to $60,000 paid an average of 6.3 percent. Obama’s claim hinges on the fact that, for high-income families and individuals, investment income is often taxed at a lower rate than wages. The top tax rate for dividends and capital gains is 15 percent. The top marginal tax rate for wages is 35 percent, though that is reserved for taxable income above $379,150. With tax rates that high, why do so many people pay at lower rates? Because the tax code is riddled with more than $1 trillion in deductions, exemptions and credits, and they benefit people at every income level, according to data from the nonpartisan Joint Committee on Taxation, Congress’ official scorekeeper on revenue issues. The Tax Policy Center estimates that 46 percent of households, mostly low- and medium-income households, will pay no federal income taxes this year. Most, however, will pay other taxes, including Social Security payroll taxes. “People who are doing quite well and worry about low-income people not paying any taxes bemoan the fact that they get so many tax breaks that they are zeroed out,” said Roberton Williams, a senior fellow at the Tax Policy Center. “People at the bottom of the distribution say, but all of those rich guys are getting bigger tax breaks than we’re getting, which is also the case.” Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner was pressed at a White House briefing on the number of millionaires who pay taxes at a lower rate than middle-income families. He demurred, saying that people who make most of their money in wages pay taxes at a higher rate, while those who get most of their income from investments pay at lower rates. “So it really depends on what is your profession, where’s the source of your income, what’s the specific circumstances you face, and the averages won’t really capture that,” Geithner said.

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Debt Ceiling Deal Could Mean Problems For States

July 31, 2011

HARTFORD, Conn. — The cost of the compromise needed to raise the federal debt ceiling will likely inflict more fiscal pain on states still struggling to recover from the recession and the end of federal stimulus spending. While the details of the spending cuts to states remain unclear, lawmakers from both parties have discussed the need to cut or impose caps on so-called discretionary spending over the next decade. That could mean wide-ranging cuts in federal aid to states, affecting everything from the Head Start school readiness program, Meals on Wheels and worker-training initiatives to funding for transit agencies and education grants that serve disabled children. There also is concern among governors, state lawmakers and state agency heads that Congress will make deep reductions or changes in federal aid for health services for the needy, most notably through Medicaid. That could shift more of the costs onto states that already are having trouble balancing their budgets. “We have the potential for disaster should there be a major realignment in federal funding that results in a cost shift to states,” said Nevada state Sen. Sheila Leslie, a Democrat from Reno who recently discussed the issue with Obama administration officials in Washington. “In short, we are teetering on the edge right now, and a cost shift could send us over the cliff.” States already have closed nearly $480 billion in budget gaps since the beginning of the recession, according to the National Conference of State Legislatures. In Connecticut, for example, officials have struggled to cover a $3.3 billion deficit, accounting for more than 16 percent of the state’s main budget account. About 19 percent of the state’s non-transportation revenue comes from the federal government. “The timing is lousy in every respect,” said Benjamin Barnes, secretary of the Connecticut Office of Policy and Management. “It will certainly have a recessionary impact on the overall national economy, and that’s the last thing we want right now.” Among the programs that could be affected is a service that delivers meals to the home-bound elderly. Connecticut received about $4.5 million from the federal government for the program this year and $1.8 million from the state. Marie Allen, executive director of the Southwestern Connecticut Agency on Aging, said the program is a staple for many senior citizens on tight budgets. The federal aid ultimately saves taxpayers money because it helps keep people out of costly nursing homes, she said. “If we don’t have the support for them in the community, people end up in nursing facilities because they don’t have proper nutrition,” Allen said. “These are the real reasons why we spend more money on skilled nursing care.” State officials across the country are worried about the austerity steps demanded by fiscal conservatives in exchange for raising the nation’s debt ceiling, said Brian Sigritz, director of state fiscal studies at the National Association of State Budget Officers. He said the association expects states to be affected by cuts, if not immediately, then in the next year or two. While the legislation being considered did not cut entitlement programs such as Medicare and Medicaid, it did call for creating a special congressional committee to find additional savings. That next step likely would lead to specific recommendations to trim spending on entitlement programs. Darrell Steinberg, president pro-tem of the California state Senate, said he is concerned about such cuts, especially if they reduce payments to the states for Medicaid, which provide health care for the poor and disabled. The state’s version is known as Medi-Cal and covers 7.5 million people. Significant cuts could force California to look for ways to make up for the funding at a time when the state is slowly emerging from a recession that has left it with one of the highest unemployment rates in the nation. Lawmakers closed a $26.6 billion shortfall this year, partly with the help of rising tax revenue. “Certainly in California, we’re on the verge of turning a corner …” said Steinberg, a Democrat. “We want to go forward, not backwards.” A concern in many states is a possible change in the federal-state formula known as FMAP, which is used to fund Medicaid programs. In Nevada, for example, the federal government pays 55 percent of the cost. Every 1 percent of cost that is shifted to the state equals roughly $15 million. “The change in FMAP is probably one of the more fearful ones that we could experience,” said Mike Willden, director of the Nevada Department of Health and Human Services. Not all state officials are dismayed by the possibility of broad-based cuts in federal aid. Alaska Gov. Sean Parnell said he believes substantial funding cuts would have less of an impact on his state than allowing the federal government to stay on its current course of mounting debt. He is among a small group of GOP governors who signed a pledge urging Congress to oppose increasing the debt limit unless certain conditions are met, including substantial spending cuts. “We need a serious directional change to recover, and merely raising the debt limit will lead only to disaster,” he wrote in a recent email. The long-term effects of a compromise to raise the debt ceiling could come as a surprise to many state officials, said Rep. George Miller of California. The top Democratic lawmaker on the House Education and Workforce Committee said he has received almost no input so far from state education departments and local school districts about the looming spending cuts. He said reductions contained in the debt-ceiling legislation are “going to make life much more difficult for” for public schools. Robert Moran, who represents the American Association of State Colleges and Universities, said plans offered by the leaders of the House and Senate each kept a major aid program largely intact. Pell grants, which provide up to $5,550 to low-income students, would sustain cuts, but they would be relatively small, he said. “I think the higher-education community was probably pleasantly surprised about that,” he said. But he said colleges still face a double-whammy – federal cuts coming on the heels of deep state cuts. In many university systems around the country, departments have lost funding and class offerings have been reduced. Barry Toiv, the vice president of public affairs for the Association of American Universities, said continuing to take money out of education would slowly and steadily degrade the quality of the nation’s universities and affect America’s ability to produce the next generation of leaders. “It’s like termites in the wall, gradually eating away at the underpinnings of our innovation,” he said. “If you do that over a long period of time, at some point you’re no longer leading the world. And eventually, like with termites in the wall, you’re not really going to have a house anymore.” ___ Ramde reported from Milwaukee. Associated Press writers Kevin Freking in Washington, D.C.; Sandra Chereb in Carson City, Nev.; Judy Lin in Sacramento, Calif.; and Becky Bohrer in Juneau, Alaska, contributed to this report.

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Debt Ceiling Deal In The Works, Default At Stake

July 31, 2011

WASHINGTON — The U.S. Senate plunged on Sunday into what many lawmakers and the White House – and millions of Americans coast to coast – hoped would be an all-but-decisive last-minute effort to raise the nation’s debt ceiling and defuse a crisis that still could lead to an unprecedented government default. As senators began debate in a rare Sunday session – just hours after Saturday night’s concluded – Democratic leader Harry Reid said he was “cautiously optimistic” agreement could be reached. But first, in a partisan vote, the Senate rejected an effort to advance a Democratic approach to resolving the debt issue. The vote was 50-49, or 10 short of the 60 votes needed to move forward on legislation proposed by Reid that would have carried out $2.2 trillion in deficit reduction over 10 years while raising the debt ceiling by $2.4 trillion. The outcome of that vote did not directly affect the behind-the-scenes negotiations on a compromise. Immediately afterward, Reid told fellow senators that while they were “not there yet,” a vote on a possible compromise could still happen Sunday. “We are hopeful and confident it can be done.” Senate Republican leader Mitch McConnell, a key player in the negotiations, said as he headed back to his office that the sides were “really, really close.” Tuesday is the deadline for averting default, the day the Treasury says it will reach the limits of its borrowing authority to pay all the nation’s bills. McConnell, R-Ky., said earlier on the Sunday talk shows that negotiators were looking at a deal that would cut spending by some $3 trillion over the next decade while raising the debt ceiling through 2012 in a two-stage process. A Democratic official, speaking on condition of anonymity to discuss the private talks, said Vice President Joe Biden had been on the phone with McConnell multiple times over the preceding 24 hours. Biden has remained a key negotiator for the White House following the more public role he had earlier in leading several weeks of debt talks with lawmakers. Appearing on CNN and CBS, McConnell said he hoped to soon be able to present to his fellow Republicans an agreement “that they’ll consider supporting.” That agreement would include raising the debt ceiling, cutting spending by some $1 trillion initially and creating a joint committee of members of Congress that would look at a larger plate of cuts including tax and entitlement changes. Sen. Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., a member of the Democratic leadership, told CNN that while “there is no final agreement,” there was a sense of relief that the two sides were finally working on a compromise plan. Schumer later told CBS that one of the last sticking points is the creation of a “trigger” mechanism that would hit priorities of both parties if the committee does not come up with a plan for further deficit reduction. Among the trigger ideas being discussed are automatically reducing spending on entitlement programs such as Medicare along with closing tax loopholes or reducing defense and non-defense programs by an equal amount. “It should be equally tough on Democrats and Republicans,” Schumer said. McConnell said the bipartisan committee, which would be asked to come up with a plan by Thanksgiving, would have a “broad mandate” to look at all aspects of government finance, including tax reform. McConnell said he had talked to both President Barack Obama and Biden on Saturday. “I particularly appreciate that we are back talking to the only person in American who can sign something into law, and that’s the president of the United States,” he said. McConnell said the deal being worked on, while raising the debt ceiling in two stages, would satisfy Obama’s demand that there not be another divisive debate before next year’s election. The scenario being discussed would raise the debt ceiling unless there is a two-thirds majority in both houses of Congress to reject it. McConnell said that there would be no tax increases in the deal, and White House National Economic Council Chairman Gene Sperling, on CNN and Fox, said there would be no revenue increases over the next year and a half. But while keeping higher taxes out of the deal was the top priority of many Republicans, it’s still going to be a task for McConnell to sell any agreement to his caucus. Sen. Lindsey Graham, R-S.C., said on ABC that this would be the first time that he could remember that the nation is paying for future debt increases dollar-for-dollar and that “from the Republican Party’s point of view, I think we can declare victory in a limited fashion.” But he said that even with the agreement the national debt will continue to rise and “I don’t know where I’m going to land” on a vote. “From a big picture,” Graham said, “I’m not ready to vote for this.” On the House side, where GOP conservatives have pushed their party toward greater cuts and linking future debt ceiling raises to passage of a balanced budget amendment, a leadership aide said that while the negotiators appeared to be heading in the right direction, no agreement will be final until members have a chance to weigh in. Sperling said Obama has presented three principles that the final package must meet: a significant down payment on deficit reduction, major entitlement and tax reform at a later date, and an end to the uncertainty created by the threat of the nation’s defaulting on the debt. He said the nation doesn’t want to “go through this mess again around the holidays.” Under the proposed agreement, Congress would also have to vote on a constitutional amendment requiring a balanced federal budget, a top-flight GOP goal. Unlike a bill approved Friday by the Republican-run House, none of the debt limit increase would be tied to congressional approval of that amendment. Details of a possible accord began emerging Saturday night after Reid, D-Nev., said on the Senate floor that the two sides were trying to nail down loose ends and complete an agreement. “I’m glad to see this move toward cooperation and compromise, and hope it bears fruit,” he said. A Democratic official said that while bargainers were not on the cusp of a deal, one could gel quickly. A Republican said there was consensus on general concepts but cautioned there were no guarantees of a final handshake. Both spoke on condition of anonymity to reveal details of confidential talks. Any pact would have to quickly pass both chambers of Congress after a rancorous period that has seen the two parties repeatedly belittle each other’s efforts to end the standoff. Even so, the deal under discussion offers wins for both sides. Republicans and their tea party supporters would get spending cuts at least as large as the amount the debt ceiling would grow and avoid any tax increases. For Obama and Democrats, there would be no renewed battle over extending the borrowing limit until after next year’s elections. Under the possible compromise, the debt limit would rise by an initial $1 trillion. A second, $1.4 trillion increase would be tied to a specially created congressional committee that would have to suggest deficit cuts of a slightly larger amount. If that panel did not act – or if Congress rejected their recommendations – automatic spending cuts would be triggered that could affect Medicare and defense spending, two of the most politically sacrosanct programs. The government has exhausted its $14.3 trillion borrowing limit and has paid its bills since May with money freed up by accounting maneuvers. McConnell and Schumer appeared on CNN’s “State of the Union” and CBS’ “Face the Nation” while Graham spoke on ABC’s “This Week.” Sperling appeared on “State of the Union” and “Fox News Sunday.” ___ Associated Press writer David Espo contributed to this report.

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Can Obama Extend The Debt Ceiling On His Own?

July 29, 2011

As the debt ceiling fiasco continues unresolved and increasingly dangerous, with no agreement among the House, the Senate and the White House yet in sight, an obscure and forgotten constitutional clause has suddenly come under scrutiny.

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10 States With The Highest Unemployment Rates: BLS

July 23, 2011

Job creation in the United States has been weak, at best, in recent months. And for those states most devastated by the financial crisis, that truth truth has been particularly devastating. Indeed, the degree by which the unemployment crisis has affected communities varies across the country, with states like South Carolina and Florida particularly feeling the heat. Of them all, though, no state has a higher rate than Nevada, currently at 12.4 percent, according to a report released by the Bureau of Labor Statistics on Friday. Nevada’s fall from grace has been hard and fast. Devastated by the thunderous bust of the housing crisis, Nevada’s tourism has also suffered mightily, tumbling 11.9 percent at the onset of the recession, the Las Vegas Sun then reported. Other particularly hard-hit states include mega-states, like California with its 11.8 percent unemployment rate, and tiny Rhode Island, which currently has an unemployment rate of 10.8 percent. For both those states, hard times didn’t arrive alongside the financial crisis. According to the Seattle Times , Rhode Island has been losing jobs since as early as 2006. In California, on the other hand, many have yet to recover from the bursting of the 1990s tech bubble. The following are the ten states with the highest unemployment rates:

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Will Marshall: Welcome Back, Gang of Six

July 21, 2011

Not a moment too soon, the Gang of Six has resurfaced in the U.S. Senate, breathing new life into hopes for a bipartisan “grand bargain” on deficit reduction. Even if Eric Cantor were abducted by aliens, there’s no way that Congress could pass the Gang’s elaborate plan to solve the debt crisis before Aug. 2. But the Gang’s resurgence, with growing support from GOP senators, adds to mounting public pressure on House Republicans to end their self-isolating intransigence on taxes. Several weeks ago, the Gang looked moribund after a key member, Senator Tom Coburn (R-Okla.), went on walkabout. To their immense credit, however, Gang leaders Mark Warner (D-Va.) and Saxby Chambliss (R-Ga.) persevered, got Coburn back in the fold, and unveiled their new plan before 46 Republican and Democratic senators this week. President Obama, who has stood strangely aloof from the Gang’s efforts to find common ground, pronounced the new package “consistent” with his views. The new blueprint, like the original, is based on the Bowles-Simpson fiscal commission plan. It envisions two steps: First, an immediate, $500 billion “down payment” on deficit reduction; followed by more comprehensive reform. Altogether, the Gang calls for $3.7 trillion in debt reduction over the next decade. That’s about what budget experts say is necessary to first stabilize, then start shrinking, the national debt. Another Gang leader, Sen. Kent Conrad (D-Mont.), said today there is talk on Capitol Hill of using the $500 billion cut to win a short-term extension of the debt limit. That could give lawmakers more time to hammer out a permanent solution to the fiscal crisis that includes both increased tax revenues and entitlement reform. The Gang’s revised plan proposes deep cuts in Medicare and other health spending, while — sorry Rep. Ryan — apparently maintaining the structure of Medicare and Medicaid. It would achieve about $1 trillion in savings by capping domestic spending, including defense, over the next decade. These cuts are way beyond cosmetic. The new plan also embraces the fiscal commission’s key proposal on tax reform. It would raise around $1 trillion over the next decade by closing tax loopholes, using the savings both to dramatically lower income and corporate tax rates, and reduce the deficit. Spared are tax credits for low-wage workers and families with children. More affluent taxpayers will welcome the Gang’s call to abolish the Alternative Minimum Tax. The fiscal commission achieved a political breakthrough when Republicans senators embraced tax reform, and some Democrats agreed to cut Social Security benefits for affluent retirees and raise the retirement age. Here the new blueprint disappoints. Basically it punts to the Senate Finance Committee, which is charged with drafting a plan to assure Social Security’s solvency over the next 75 years. The Gang also says efforts to reform Social Security should only take place “on a separate track… any savings from the programs must go toward solvency.” This may placate liberals, but could alienate conservatives who suspect Democrats aren’t really serious about entitlement reform. The big question, of course, is whether the Gang’s plan could ever get through the House. For starters, it violates the Tea Party’s prime imperative — that revenues can be raised for no other purpose than cutting tax rates. Moreover, Ezra Klein reports that it also appears to assume the expiration of the Bush tax cuts for the wealthy. If House Republicans won’t yield on taxes, don’t expect House liberals to deal on entitlement reform. Still, a lot depends on how the debt limit battle plays out. New polls show voters are more likely to see Republicans as standing in the way of compromise than Obama and the Democrats. If things get really ugly — if the federal government can’t pay salaries or mail benefit checks on Aug. 3 — such suspicions could quickly turn into a furious backlash. In any case, the Gang’s initiative illuminates a growing rift between House and Senate Republicans, both on taxes and negotiating tactics. By saying, in effect, “Hell no” to balanced proposals to cut deficits, House Republicans are forfeiting a rare opportunity to get Democrats to swallow huge, multi-trillion-dollar cuts in federal spending. Apparently, real conservatives prefer big government to tax hikes. On the other side, progressives aren’t likely to get a better offer than the one Warner and company are offering. No one knows this better than President Obama, who’s been beating his head against the wall of GOP recalcitrance for weeks. And that’s why, once the debt limit is raised, he ought to throw in with the Gang of Six. This item is cross-posted at Progressive Fix .

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Governors Reflect Partisan Divide In Contentious Debate

July 16, 2011

SALT LAKE CITY — Governors nationwide are nervously watching the debt-ceiling debate in Washington, fearing that a partisan impasse could rattle financial markets and slow the economic recoveries they desperately want for their states. Yet many of them are sticking to the same partisan loyalties and talking points that are making it so difficult for President Barack Obama and Republican lawmakers to find a way to avoid a borrowing cutoff, which could force the government to default on some of its bills. In fact, some of the harshest rhetoric was heard this weekend in Salt Lake City, where the National Governors Association is holding its annual meeting. At stake is “the full faith and credit of the United States of America, and we have Republican members of Congress that say `Faith and credit, baloney. We don’t care about that,’” said Montana Gov. Brian Schweitzer, a Democrat. He called those lawmakers “the same yahoos who didn’t pay for two wars,” a reference to the Afghanistan and Iraq invasions, which President George W. Bush launched while cutting taxes. Maryland Gov. Martin O’Malley, chairman of the Democratic Governors Association, said Republicans should be a moderating voice in the debt talks. He criticized House Majority Leader Eric Cantor and “the dinosaur wing of the Republican Party” for adamantly opposing tax increases on the wealthy, which Obama and demands as part of a deficit-reduction package. Republican governors defend their party’s lawmakers. Iowa Gov. Terry Branstad laughed at the notion that “dinosaurs” are heading the GOP effort in Washington. “The dinosaurs are the ones that spent all the money,” he said “This is the new energy.” “I don’t think Eric Cantor and Paul Ryan are out of touch,” Branstad said. “I think they might be a little more bold than most politicians have historically been. But maybe the times call for that.” Ryan, a Wisconsin Republican, chairs the House Budget Committee and authored a major spending plan passed this year by the House. Despite the rhetoric, governors in both parties agreed that failing to problem could gravely injure state economies. Noting that dozens of Chinese political and business officials are attending the governors’ meeting here, Schweitzer said potential investors from Asia and Europe might steer away from Montana and other states if they feel the U.S. government is in fiscal disarray. “The amount of havoc that would be created in the financial markets would make Greece and Portugal and Ireland and Italy look miniscule,” said Connecticut Gov. Dan Malloy, also a Democrat. Republican Gov. Scott Walker of Wisconsin said the impasse in Washington created uncertainty, which employers hate when deciding whether to expand their businesses. But he said he was not surprised because Washington decisions are usually made based on what will win the next election. “What states are better at doing is courage,” Walker said. “It’s having the courage to make decisions that some might view as more about the next generation than about the next election.” But neither Walker nor other governors here found any fault with specific stands taken by their party in the debt showdown. Branstad strongly defended Cantor’s opposition to new taxes, even if they were to hit only wealthy people. “This anti-wealth rhetoric actually hurts the economy,” Branstad said, “because it makes these people afraid to invest for fear that whatever they make is going to get confiscated.” “Those are the people you want to invest in great jobs,” he said. Branstad, who notes that he has never lost an election in his long career, said Republicans credit much of their 2010 campaign success to a fiercely anti-tax stand. He said voters sent a message last fall: “The last time the Republicans had control of the Congress, they lost their way on spending. And you’d better not do that again.” Mississippi Gov. Haley Barbour, who strongly considered a presidential bid this year, echoed those remarks, even as he left the door slightly ajar for a possible compromise. “I think a tax increase would be terrible,” said Barbour, who once chaired the national Republican Party. But Republicans might have to grimace and accept a compromise, he said, if they can win deep spending cuts and cost-saving changes to Medicare and Social Security. “At the end of the day,” Barbour said, “you have to look at the whole package.” The governors here differ widely on how that package should be shaped. But to a person, they say they desperately want an end to the debt brinkmanship in Washington. ___ Associated Press writer Josh Loftin contributed to this report.

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U.S. Put On Review For Possible Rating Downgrade

July 13, 2011

Because of the “rising possibility” that Congress will not soon approve a deal to raise the debt limit, Moody’s Investors Service has reportedly put the U.S. on review for a possible credit rating downgrade, according to Bloomberg . From the Moody’s statement : Moody’s Investors Service has placed the Aaa bond rating of the government of the United States on review for possible downgrade given the rising possibility that the statutory debt limit will not be raised on a timely basis, leading to a default on US Treasury debt obligations. On June 2, Moody’s had announced that a rating review would be likely in mid July unless there was meaningful progress in negotiations to raise the debt limit. In conjunction with this action, Moody’s has placed on review for possible downgrade the Aaa ratings of financial institutions directly linked to the US government: Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac, the Federal Home Loan Banks, and the Federal Farm Credit Banks. We have also placed on review for possible downgrade securities either guaranteed by, backed by collateral securities issued by, or otherwise directly linked to the US government or the affected financial institutions. From Reuters : NEW YORK (Walter Brandimarte and Daniel Bases) – The United States may lose its top-notch credit rating in the next few weeks if lawmakers fail to increase the country’s debt ceiling, forcing the government to miss debt payments, Moody’s Investors Service warned on Wednesday. Moody’s was the first among the big-three rating agencies to place the United States’ Aaa rating on review for a possible downgrade, which means a negative rating action is impending. In a statement, Moody’s said it sees a “rising possibility that the statutory debt limit will not be raised on a timely basis, leading to a default on U.S. Treasury debt obligations.” Check here for additional debt ceiling updates.

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White House: Obama Wants $4 Trillion Debt-Reduction Plan

July 10, 2011

WASHINGTON — White House chief of staff William Daley says President Barack Obama isn’t walking away from a $4 trillion debt-reduction plan that Republicans and even some Democrats don’t like. Daley says Obama will press congressional leaders at a crucial meeting Sunday evening to accept that deal, even with the tax and entitlement program changes it includes, rather than shorter-term proposals that cause less political heartburn. Daley tells ABC’s “This Week” that Obama wants lawmakers to “step up and be leaders.” House Speaker John Boehner said late Saturday that House Republicans wouldn’t accept tax increases in Obama’s plan. Officials have been negotiating for weeks to allow the nation’s borrowing capacity to rise before an Aug. 2 deadline.

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Obama Faces Tough Task In Making Case On High-Stakes Economic Issues

July 9, 2011

WASHINGTON — Immersed in an intense struggle to cut the national debt, President Barack Obama faces a dilemma that will stay with him even if he succeeds in striking a grand deal with Congress: convincing Americans that the entire effort will do anything to create desperately needed jobs. Obama ties deficit reduction to jobs, on the basis that trying to balance the nation’s books will promote economic stability and give businesses more confidence to hire. But that’s a tough sell to the millions of Americans out of work right now. And the communications problem just got harder. The latest snapshot of the economy, out Friday, was a body blow that showed employers added a meager 18,000 jobs in June. The leaders of the country, meanwhile, are consumed with negotiating a major debt-reduction deal built upon cutting spending and raising taxes. It is not directly aimed at boosting jobs. Obama’s challenge is to link all this in meaningful terms and to get faster results. At stake are the country’s economic recovery and his re-election chances. The debt is the urgent problem for Obama and a divided Congress because they have no choice. Reaching a deal has become the key to winning Republican support for raising the nation’s debt limit, a politically noxious vote that Congress must take by Aug. 2 to keep the nation from risking default for the first time ever. “There’s no question that this is a complex, almost impenetrable issue,” said David Axelrod, a longtime Obama adviser and now a senior strategist to the president’s re-election campaign. “It’s not just the issue of the potential default, but it’s the larger issue of what he’s trying to get at, the opportunity of trying to do something big about the deficits and the debt. Big things are at stake, but they’re hard to penetrate, so the process of dealing with them is painstaking.” Republicans, too, face the challenge of explaining and defending how cutting debt will create jobs in the short term. They won control of the House last year in large part because of voter anxiety about government spending and jobs. But it is Obama who bears the largest burden, as any president does. In addressing the dismal jobs report, Obama made plain he knows what the country is thinking. “The debate here in Washington’s been dominated by issues of debt limit,” Obama said. “But what matters most to Americans, and what matters to me most as president in the wake of the worst downturn in our lifetimes, is getting our economy on a sounder footing so the American people can have the security they deserve.” As an imperative unto itself, deficit reduction is embraced by all parties as vital for stabilizing the nation and shrinking the debt passed on to the next generations. And a failure to extend the nation’s borrowing limit could cause a kind of enormous economic breakdown that would only worsen the employment picture. Now under deadline pressure, Obama and congressional leaders of both parties were to hold a rare weekend negotiation session on Sunday on a debt-cutting package that remains far from certain. It could cut the deficit by roughly $4 trillion over 10 years or so, which even by Washington spending standards would be considered a big deal. Yet it is joblessness itself that cuts to the heart of the American struggle. Obama said people “pour their guts out” when they write him letters about it. So he is pushing jobs ideas distinct from the debt talks. The president is prodding Congress to pass three pending trade deals, create construction jobs by repairing the nation’s infrastructure, extend a payroll tax cut that could keep money in people’s pockets, and make it easier for entrepreneurs to get patents. But the debt discussion is taking up Washington’s bandwidth. And not everyone is so sure it will help speed job creation. “Washington seems tone deaf,” said Scott Paul, executive director of the Alliance for American Manufacturing, a sector of the economy Obama has been actively promoting. “The metric for President Obama and congressional leaders must now be the number of jobs we create, rather than the amount of deficit reduction we see.” The White House says the priority is both the deficit and jobs and that people understand that. A Pew Research Center poll in June found that more people favored cutting the deficit than spending to help the recovery. That mood varied widely, though, by political constituency. Independents, who will be key to Obama’s bid for a second term, favored deficit cutting over economic spending by 54 percent to 39 percent. “The key is making sure that you’re communicating the importance to the future of the country of dealing with our deficit, without slipping into inside-the-Beltway lingo,” said Dan Pfeiffer, Obama’s communications director. “If communicated incorrectly, it can feel removed from day-to-day life. On the other hand, there’s an element of common sense to why this is important that I think people in the country get that sometimes eludes folks in this town.” The debt limit remains an obscurity to people. An Associated Press-GfK poll in June found Americans divided on raising it or not. Obama has tried to make the case that calamity awaits without action by Congress. “I want everybody to understand that this is a jobs issue,” he pleaded in a news conference last week. “This is not an abstraction.” The struggle has drawn Obama again into a reality of his job: time-eating negotiations with Congress on matters that resonate little with voters. After a bruising midterm election season last year, he conceded that meeting his White House responsibilities cost him some connection with the people. The president has since made a point to get out of town more regularly. Not this month, though. He is expected to keep meeting with congressional leaders at the White House until a deal can be reached, just as he did, day after day and night after night, earlier this year on a budget deal that prevented a government shutdown. Irrespective of the jobs element, Obama stands to gain if he emerges with a package that genuinely shrinks the debt in a way most Americans think is fair. “What’s fundamentally at stake here are economic issues. And barring any surprises, that’s what the election will be about,” said Robert Shapiro, a Columbia University professor who studies public opinion. “Getting out in front is something that would play well publicly, if things fare well. Taking the lead on the economy is probably a very good use of his time.”

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Buffett: GOP Threatening To ‘Blow Your Brains Out’ Over Debt Ceiling

July 7, 2011

Republicans are playing a dangerous game by refusing to raise the debt ceiling, according to Berkshire Hathaway CEO Warren Buffett. “We raised the debt ceiling seven times during the Bush Administration,” Buffett told CNBC on Thursday. Now, the Republican-controlled Congress is “trying to use the incentive now that we’re going to blow your brains out, America, in terms of your debt worthiness over time.” If Congress fails to raise the borrowing limit of the federal government by August 2, the date when the U.S. will reach the limit of its borrowing abilities, it will likely begin defaulting on its loans. Buffett, who according to the Washington Post has helped raise money for Democratic candidates like Hilary Clinton in the past, has been highly critical of the actions of the Republican-controlled Congress. In May, Buffett stated at a Berkshire Hathaway shareholder’s meeting that if the Congress failed to raise the debt ceiling, it would constitute “the most asinine act” in the nation’s history, reports Reuters . According to the U.S. Debt Clock , America’s total public debt equals close to $14.3 trillion which, according to the CIA World Factbook , is roughly 60 percent of the annual gross domestic product. But even with this information, Buffett is unfazed. “We had debt at 120 percent of the GDP, far higher than this, after World War II and no one went around threatening that we’re going to ruin the credit of the United States or something in order to get a better balance of debt to GDP.” Some experts, like former Federal Reserve Chairman Alan Greenspan , have floated the idea of the Treasury paying some obligations while not paying others. This, Buffett says, is ludicrous. “If you don’t send out social security checks, I would hate to think about the credit meeting at S&P and Moody’s the next morning,” Buffett told CNBC. “If you’re not paying millions and millions and millions of people that range in age from 65 on up, money you promised them, you’re not a AAA.” A triple-A credit rating is the highest possible rating that can be received. Watch the full CNBC interview here:

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GOP To Block Key Cabinet Official Over Free Trade Deals

June 22, 2011

WASHINGTON — President Barack Obama’s nominee for Commerce Secretary came to Capitol Hill Tuesday for his first Senate nominations hearing—and before he even introduced himself Republicans were warning that his confirmation will likely be blocked through no fault of his own. Sen. John Thune (R-S.D.), a member of the Senate Commerce, Science and Transportation Committee, told the panel that despite aspects of nominee John Bryson’s record being “very impressive,” Thune and other Republicans are prepared to delay Bryson’s confirmation until the administration moves forward on stalled free trade agreements. Thune’s threat traces back to mid-March, when 44 GOP Senators sent a letter to Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid (D-Nev.) vowing to withhold support for any trade-related nominee—including the Commerce Secretary—until Obama submits pending trade deals for Colombia and Panama to Congress. “I believe I speak for a good number of those in our Caucus when I say that it’s going to be difficult for Republicans to support Mr. Bryson’s nomination until the administration submits those free trade agreements,” Thune told Senate Commerce Chairman Jay Rockefeller (D-W.Va.) during Tuesday’s hearing. Thune lamented that it has been more than three months since the Reid letter and the administration “has still not committed to a specific timetable for implementing those agreements.” Obama supports passing all of the trade deals leftover from the Bush administration—that is, for Colombia, Panama and South Korea— but he announced last month that he will only submit them to Congress after Republicans renew a federal program that provides job training to U.S. workers who lose their jobs because of foreign trade. Republicans have been loathe to tie that program to passage of the trade deals, arguing that the weakened economy demands a boost from trade agreements now more than ever. A White House spokesperson reiterated Tuesday the trade deals will come over as soon as Republicans pass the aid package, and warned against holding up a nominee as crucial as the Commerce Secretary. “The President is committed to passing all three trade agreements as well as extending Trade Adjustment Assistance for unemployed workers,” the spokesperson told The Huffington Post. “We continue to work steadily with our partners in the House and Senate and see no reason that we cannot reach an agreement on TAA in the near future.” The spokesperson added, “In the meantime, it would be a major mistake to hold up a nomination as important as the Commerce Secretary for any reason, and we look forward to his confirmation in the Senate.”

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Robert Kuttner: The Gang of Six and Other Rogues

June 13, 2011

If we can just get Congressman Anthony Weiner off the front pages, the Democrats should be enjoying a nice political windfall thanks to the Republicans’ blunder on Medicare. Republican Rep. Paul Ryan’s proposal to end Medicare as a public program is monumentally unpopular. Budget Committee Chairman Ryan’s plan also has the added benefit of dividing Republicans, and usefully contributed to Newt Gingrich’s self-immolation . But watch for the bipartisan Gang of Six, and their conservative allies at Tim Geithner’s Treasury Department, to snatch defeat out of the jaws of victory. In the most likely budget compromise that saves the country from defaulting on the national debt, the differences between the parties will collapse in a largely conservative direction. If the current script is followed, Republicans will be the big winners. They will win on gutting social spending, aborting a fragile recovery, humbling the president, and undercutting his re-election chances. Heckuva job, Gang of Six. Zachary Goldfarb’s recent Washington Post profile confirmed Geithner’s role in persuading President Obama to give deficit reduction priority over job creation. With the resignations of senior economist Jared Bernstein and more recently chief economist Austan Goolsbee, no senior economic adviser to the president is pushing jobs over budget cutting. Even with the withdrawal of Senator Tom Coburn, leaving just five bipartisan stalwarts, the Gang of Six (minus one) claims it is on the verge of agreeing to a deficit reduction plan that proposes $4.7 trillion in spending cuts over a decade. If the test is how much to cut, this plan goes both Obama and Ryan one better. But is that really the right test? For most Americans, the federal deficit is an abstraction. The problem is too few jobs, flat wages, declining home equity, unaffordable health care, rising college costs, diminished opportunity for the young. The entire political class has convinced itself that the way to economic recovery is via deficit reduction. The only problem with that is that no known theory of economics can plausibly demonstrate the connection. Debt financing is not crowding out private investment — interest costs are at record lows. The problem is that business doesn’t see enough customers to increase investment, because of the recession itself. No amount of deficit reduction between now and November 2012 will improve the jobs picture. On the contrary, by denying the government money to invest in projects that could create jobs, the deficit obsession will worsen the economic picture — and the Obama Administration’s re-election prospects. Alan Simpson and Erskine Bowles, former chairs of Obama’s commission on fiscal reform, could not win the necessary super-majority support for their draconian plan, which included Social Security cuts, but they just won’t shut up. They recently published a fatuous op-ed piece in the Washington Post assuring readers that the Gang of Six would soldier on and find a budget compromise. The oped concluded with the immortal words, “Pray for the Gang of Six.” Well, if you believe in the power of prayer, it would be better to pray for the Gang to splinter over partisan differences — because those differences actually play to the strength of progressives. Most Americans don’t support cuts in Medicare or Social Security. Most are opposed to the kinds of savage cuts in programs for the poor and the working middle class that are at the core of the Ryan budget and that will be part of a Gang of Six package if the Gang ever agrees. Most would like to see investments in infrastructure to put Americans back to work — the very investments that would be ruled out as part of a Gang of Six austerity budget. If those differences are submerged in a frenzy of bipartisanship, mainly along fiscally conservative lines, we lose and the right wins. The Republicans on the Gang of Six — senators Saxby Chambliss of Georgia and Mike Crapo of Idaho, as well as their absent colleague Tom Coburn, are against tax increases on the well off. They are also opposed to more than token cuts in the military. So any Gang-of-Six deal accepted by the group’s fiscally conservative Democrats will be mostly domestic spending cuts. That, in turn, will up the pressure on President Obama to accept what is basically a Republican budget and an unpopular one at that. But what about the debt and the risk of a default? The debt is a modest problem, over the long term, but the urgent crisis right now is a flat economy. The better way to reduce the burden of past debt is to get a serious recovery going. That will take more public investment, not less. As for the debt ceiling, why is it that only Republicans and fiscally conservative Democrats get to play chicken with the risk of a default? It would be better for President Obama to make clear that he is not about to sacrifice valued social outlays for far-right ideology, and hold Republicans accountable for spooking the money markets. Most of the debt increase was caused by the recession itself, by the Bush tax cuts, and the military buildup. The simplest way to tame the debt would be to revert to the tax code of the 1990s (a decade of prosperity), to shift military spending to domestic uses, and to increase federal revenues via a strong economic recovery. The final budget agreement will necessary be a compromise. But if Democrats give away their principles before the final negotiations even begin, they should not be surprised when the compromise looks mostly Republican. Robert Kuttner is co-editor of The American Prospect and a senior fellow at Demos. His latest book is A Presidency in Peril .

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Obama Announces Pick For FDIC Chairman

June 11, 2011

WASHINGTON — President Barack Obama said Friday that he will nominate Martin J. Gruenberg to become chairman of the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. Gruenberg would succeed Sheila Bair, who plans to end her five-year term as one of the nation’s top banking regulators on July 8. Bair was a holdover from the Bush administration and one of several regulators who helped shape the federal response to the 2008 financial crisis. Gruenberg’s nomination will require Senate confirmation. A longtime Democratic Senate staff member, he has been No. 2 at the FDIC since August 2005. The independent regulatory agency is charged with maintaining public confidence in the banking system. It guarantees bank deposits up to $250,000. Senate Banking Committee Chairman Tim Johnson, D-S.D., pledged quick action on the nomination. “It is vital that we have strong leaders in place at our financial regulators as we continue the economic recovery,” Johnson said. Gruenberg’s nomination is the first of several vacancies at financial regulatory agencies that Obama must fill. The Office of the Comptroller of the Currency, which oversees most of the nation’s large banks, has been without a permanent leader since John C. Dugan completed a five-year term last August. The Federal Reserve’s Board of Governors has two openings and there’s a vacancy atop the Federal Housing Finance Agency, which regulates Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, the government-run housing agencies. Positions created by a new financial regulatory law also remain unfilled, including a Fed vice chairman for supervision, someone to run a new Office of Financial Research and an insurance oversight position. The new Consumer Financial Protection Bureau, created by the financial overhaul law, also needs someone to run it. Obama named consumer advocate Elizabeth Warren to create the bureau, which is supposed to open in July, but it will not become a full-fledged, empowered agency until a director is in place. Warren’s supporters want her to become the director, but she has many critics in the Senate and is unlikely to be confirmed. Senate Republicans have also promised to block a vote on any nominee to run the bureau until Democrats agree to reduce its powers. Bair, appointed by President George W. Bush in 2006, was among the first officials to warn about the explosion of high-risk lending to borrowers with bad credit and the agency closed the most banks under her tenure since the savings and loan crisis of the 1980s and 1990s. She also spoke up for consumers and small banks during the 2008 financial crisis, when most other regulators focused mostly on helping big Wall Street firms. After the housing bubble burst, she argued unsuccessfully for the government to force banks to reduce monthly payments for troubled homeowners facing foreclosure. Most notably, she clashed with Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner over a range of issues related to the Wall Street bailouts.

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Pressure Builds As Biden-Led Debt Limit Talks Resume On Capitol Hill

June 9, 2011

WASHINGTON — Vice President Joe Biden and GOP negotiators sparred over taxes Thursday in a private meeting that exposed their wide differences as the clock ticks on negotiations to let the government resume borrowing more than $100 billion a month to pay its bills. Both sides hope to pass the measure well before an early August deadline to avoid a first-ever, market-rattling default on U.S. obligations. It was the sixth meeting between Biden and top lawmakers. With the talks moving slowly, they agreed to pick up the pace with three meetings next week. In the 2 1/2-hour meeting, Biden and Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner made a pitch for more revenue. Republicans resolutely oppose anything that could be called a tax increase. “Any balanced packaged has to end big loopholes like subsidies for the oil and gas industry,” said Rep. Chris Van Hollen, D-Md., one of two House Democrats participating in the talks. Last month, Biden told reporters: “I’ve made it clear … revenues have to be in the deal.” Republicans involved in the talks, however, say they believe Biden is mostly going through the motions. Still, the White House push for revenues is noteworthy because Democrats will have to provide votes to get the final measure passed because many tea party-backed House Republicans are likely to oppose any measure to increase the debt limit. The vote is already so unpalatable for Republicans that it’s difficult to imagine GOP negotiators going along with new taxes and risk the wrath of the tea party and anti-tax activists even if it means Democrats will offer up larger spending cuts. Rep. Eric Cantor of Virginia, who’s representing House Republicans in the talks, told the administration that tax increases can’t pass the GOP-controlled House. Republicans have complicated the talks with a demand that any increase in the borrowing limit be matched with spending cuts of equal or greater size, though the cuts could be over the next decade or more. Under current estimates it’ll take at least $2.4 trillion in new borrowing simply to could keep the government afloat until 2013 and guarantee that lawmakers wouldn’t have to make another politically difficult vote before next year’s elections. There’s no sign the group is discussing cuts of that magnitude. Biden has said he thinks the group can come up with more than $1 trillion in deficit savings. Senate GOP Leader Mitch McConnell of Kentucky has pledged that any deal that wins his vote will have to wring savings from Medicare. Defending the politically sacrosanct program, however, is emerging as a hot issue in Democratic efforts to retake the House and keep control of the Senate. Negotiators say the meetings have been constructive, but no agreements are in place despite calls by both President Barack Obama and House Speaker John Boehner, R-Ohio, for one by early July. Cantor said the meetings next week would demonstrate “if we can get a result.” Spokesman Brad Dayspring said Cantor remains hopeful. Cantor and Sen. Jon Kyl, R-Ariz., are trying to keep the focus on spending cuts. “We believe that many of the problems surrounding the lack of job creation and growth in this country have to do with the fact that there isn’t a credible plan to manage down the debt and deficit in this country,” Cantor said. Biden left without making any comment. Failure to raise the nation’s debt ceiling could lead to a first-ever U.S. default on its obligations, sure to roil stock markets and, economists warn, possibly push the teetering economy back into recession.

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To Keep His Job, Obama Needs More Jobs

June 4, 2011

WASHINGTON — President Barack Obama cannot escape one giant vulnerability as he bids to keep his job: Millions of voters still don’t have one. Suddenly, the snapshot of the American economy is depressing again. Job creation is down. So is consumer confidence. And homes sales, auto sales, construction spending, manufacturing expansion. The brutal month of May was a reminder of the economy’s fragility and the risks for an incumbent president. Nothing that Obama oversees, not even a success as dramatic as finding and killing Osama bin Laden, will matter as much as his handling of the economy. It is the dominant driver of voter behavior. People hold their president accountable if they can’t find work in the richest country in the world. The weakening recovery is testing the entire foundation of Obama’s optimistic economic message, that the nation is getting stronger all the time. As much as the White House says it never dwells on any single jobs report, and Obama never even mentioned the troubling one released Friday, the stakes get higher by the month. A finally forming field of Republican presidential competitors is maneuvering into the space for the public’s attention with this message: Obama has failed. Election Day 2012 is 17 months away, and Obama’s campaign knows incremental job growth won’t do. The unemployment rate is 9.1 percent. If it stays anywhere near there, Obama will face re-election with a higher jobless rate than any other post-war president. In his favor, Obama still has the loudest voice to sell his message that the longer term trends, including job growth every month, are good. Nearly halfway through a year dominated by foreign events mostly outside his control, he plans to build his next few months around economic events. So what comes next will be a summer when both sides select the economic facts that best suit their case. It will play against a backdrop of trying to cut a massive deficit while letting the nation borrow more so it doesn’t default. As Obama pushes his economic agenda, his re-election chances bank on more than job growth. They also depend on how well he can remind people that he inherited a recession and that compared with the early days of 2009, the country is in a better place. “This economy took a big hit,” Obama said Friday in Ohio, a pivotal 2012 state. “You know, it’s just like if you had a bad illness, if you got hit by a truck, it’s going to take a while for you to mend. And that’s what’s happened to our economy. It’s taking a while to mend.” Is progress enough to convince people that he deserves a second term? If so, he can’t afford many setbacks like the new jobs report. Employers in May added just 54,000 jobs, the fewest in eight months. Almost 14 million people are jobless. Analysts suggested the economy could improve this year, but the recovery could be weak for months. “There are always going to be bumps on the road to recovery,” Obama said. The Republicans hoping to unseat him pounced. _Former Massachusetts Gov. Mitt Romney: “President Obama has failed to pull us out of this economic downturn. _Former Minnesota Gov. Tim Pawlenty: “Obama’s failure to address the tough challenges” is clear. _Former House Speaker Newt Gingrich: “The administration’s policies are failing.” Obama’s political tendency is to take the longer view. An Associated Press-GfK poll less than a month ago, for example, showed rising public optimism about the economy and his stewardship. The election won’t be just a referendum on Obama and the unemployment rate. It also will offer a choice between his economic ideas and his opponent’s. Still, just as change worked for him last time, it can be used against him in 2012. Even 8 percent unemployment, a goal once promoted by the administration, is hard to see now. Presidents Jimmy Carter, Reagan and George H.W. Bush all faced unemployment rates higher than 7.5 percent in the final months of their re-election campaigns. Reagan won, and an important factor for him was that the jobless rate was declining at the time. Carter and Bush lost. Obama, for now, has no reason to engage the politicians trying to win his job. He instead presents himself as the workers’ champion who risked his own capital and their money in a successful bid to help Chrysler and General Motors survive and return to profitability. “I’ll tell you what. I’m going to keep betting on you,” Obama told workers at a Chrysler plant in Toledo, Ohio. And hope they’ll do the same for him. __ EDITOR’S NOTE – White House Correspondent Ben Feller has covered the Bush and Obama presidencies for The Associated Press.

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Mitt Romney’s Economic Claims vs. The Facts

June 3, 2011

WASHINGTON — In rhetorical excesses marking his entry in the presidential campaign, Mitt Romney said the economy worsened under President Barack Obama, when it actually improved, and criticized the president for issuing apologies to the world that were never made. A look at some of the statements by Romney on Thursday in announcing his bid for the Republican nomination and how they compare with the facts: ROMNEY: “When he took office, the economy was in recession. He made it worse. And he made it last longer.” THE FACTS: The gross domestic product, the prime measure of economic strength, shrank by a severe 6.8 percent annual rate before Obama became president. The declines eased after he took office and economic growth, however modest, resumed. The recession officially ended six months into his presidency. Unemployment, however, has worsened under Obama, going from 7.8 percent in January 2009 to 9.1 percent last month. It hit 10.1 percent in October 2009. A case can be made for and against the idea that Obama’s policies made the economy worse than it needed to be and that the recession lasted longer than it might have under another president. Such arguments are at the core of political debate. But Obama did not, as Romney alleged, make the economy worse than it was when he took office. ___ ROMNEY: “A few months into office, he traveled around the globe to apologize for America.” THE FACTS: Obama has not apologized for America. What he has done, in travels early in his presidency and since, is to make clear his belief that the U.S. is not beyond reproach. He has told foreigners that the U.S. at times acted “contrary to our traditions and ideals” in its treatment of terrorist suspects, that “America has too often been selective in its promotion of democracy,” that the U.S. “certainly shares blame” for international economic turmoil and has sometimes shown arrogance toward allies. Obama, whose criticisms of America’s past were typically balanced by praise, was in most cases taking issue with policies or the record of the previous administration, not an unusual approach for a new president – or a presidential candidate. Romney’s actual point seems to be that Obama has been too critical of his country. But there has been no formal – or informal – apology. No saying “sorry” on behalf of America. ___ ROMNEY: “Three years later, foreclosures are still at record levels. Three years later the prices of homes continue to fall.” THE FACTS: Although foreclosures remain high, the number of U.S. homes that were repossessed by lenders fell in April, compared with March and a year ago, according to the foreclosure listing service RealtyTrac Inc. Romney’s claim about home prices, though, is supported by the Standard & Poor’s/Case-Shiller 20-city monthly index. It found home prices in big metro areas have sunk to their lowest since 2002. Since the bubble burst in 2006, prices have fallen more than they did during the Great Depression. ___ ROMNEY: “Instead of encouraging entrepreneurs and employers, he raises their taxes, piles on record-breaking mounds of regulation and bureaucracy and gives more power to union bosses.” THE FACTS: Romney ignores ambitious tax-cutting pushed by Obama. The stimulus plan early in his presidency cut taxes broadly for the middle class and business. He more recently won a one-year tax cut for 2011 that reduced most workers’ Social Security payroll taxes by nearly a third. He also campaigned in support of extending the Bush-era tax cuts for all except the wealthy, whose taxes he wanted to raise. In office, he accepted a deal from Republicans extending the tax cuts for all. As for tax increases, Obama won congressional approval to raise them on tobacco and tanning salons. The penalty for those who don’t buy health insurance, once coverage is mandatory, is a form of taxation. Several large tax increases in the health care law have not yet taken effect. ___ ROMNEY: “The expectation was that we’d have to raise taxes but I refused. I ordered a review of all state spending, made tough choices and balanced the budget without raising taxes.” THE FACTS: Romney largely held the line on tax increases when he was Massachusetts governor but that’s only part of the revenue story. The state raised business taxes by $140 million in one year with measures branded “loophole closings,” the vast majority recommended by Romney. Moreover, the Republican governor and Democratic lawmakers raised hundreds of millions of dollars from higher fees and fines, taxation by another name. Romney himself proposed creating 33 new fees and increasing 57 others – enough to raise $59 million. Anti-tax groups were split on his performance. The Club for Growth called the fee increases and business taxes troubling. Citizens for Limited Taxation praised him for being steadfast in supporting an income tax rollback. ___ Associated Press writers Steve LeBlanc in Boston and Jim Drinkard in Washington contributed to this report.

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Bill Lichtenstein: Obama’s Wall Street Turnaround Good for Nonprofits

June 2, 2011

After getting off to a rocky start at the beginning of President Obama’s term, the stock market has grown steadily. Consider the Dow Jones, which went up 128 points on Wednesday alone. Even if you don’t have a stock portfolio overflowing with GOOG and AAPL, and especially if you’re involved with a nonprofit or charity, here’s another reason to be thankful for the Obama administration’s success in turning the stock markets around: Commonfund, the 40-year-old Connecticut-based financial advisor to educational and nonprofit endowments, has just released two companion studies of 175 foundations, including 135 private/public foundations and 40 community foundations and operating charities, with a combined total of $108.2 billion in assets. The Commonfund studies found that investment returns of the foundations were in the range of 12 percent in FY2010. This is critical, as it’s the interest or returns on investments that is disbursed by most foundations and charities. Commonfund notes that while the 12 percent returns in FY 2010 were well below the 21 percent range posted in the Obama recovery year of FY2009, these two consecutive years of double-digit returns served as a welcome offset to the 26 percent portfolio decline experienced by these organizations in FY2008, during the final year of the Bush administration. In fact, the average investment returns in 2010 were the fourth highest in the nine years that the foundation study has been conducted and the third highest in the seven years of the operating charities study. According to Commonfund’s executive director John Griswold, foundation funds are still tight, but the situation appears to be less than the crisis that has been feared in the non-profit sector: “Two consecutive years of good performance is a great relief for foundations and operating charities participating in the two Studies after the serious erosion in asset values experienced in FY2008. While three-year returns are just about flat, five- and 10-year returns are edging back into the range of 5 percent, which is an encouraging sign although it still falls short of covering these nonprofit organizations’ spending, inflation and costs.” The same is true with regard to the levels of giving: Among operating charities, giving was stronger in FY2010, but far from robust. Among responding institutions, 17 percent reported decreased giving in FY2010, a marked improvement over the 38 percent that reported decreased giving in FY2009. Finally, the study found that levels of giving by foundations are inching up, with the largest foundations, not surprisingly, leading the way, with community foundations, perhaps hedging their bets about the recovery, giving away the least to nonprofits and charities. Given the “pipeline” effect, resulting from the time delay for foundations and charities to pass along the available funds resulting from their investment returns, nonprofits over the past year or two may have been feeling the lingering results of the poor stock market under the final year of the Bush administration, whereas the revenue from the past year or two may just, in many cases, be starting to flow. If so, that is certainly welcome news to nonprofits. At the same time, this all represents another example of the inextricable ties between “too big to fail” Wall Street and the rest of the nation.

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Dave Johnson: Dems Should Vote for Clean Debt Limit Bill

May 31, 2011

The House is voting on a “clean” debt ceiling bill today — a bill to raise the debt ceiling without any “hostage-taking” conditions. This is the right thing to do for the country and every Democrat should vote for this. Voting for a clean bill will draw the contrast for the public between those who are doing the right thing, and those willing to hold the world’s economy hostage to a make-the-rich-richer plutocracy agenda. Democrats who do not vote for a clean bill should lose committee assignments, parking places, even bathroom keys. The Debt Ceiling The country’s “debt ceiling” has been reached. This means that the government’s authority to borrow money has reached its limit. The Treasury Department is engaging in gimmicks and schemes to keep the country going but time is running out. The Congress must extend this limit, or the government will default on its bonds. If our government defaults on its bonds, it would initiate a worldwide financial crisis that dwarfs the Wall Street meltdown of a few years ago. WHY We Have This Debt In 1981, the Reagan administration dramatically changed the course of the country. They defunded government by passing huge tax cuts for the rich and massively increasing military spending, and began cutting back on the things We, the People (government) do for each other. The country cut back on maintaining — never mind modernizing — our infrastructure, our schools, colleges and universities, scientific research and other things that make us competitive in world markets. We began cashing in our factories and moving the jobs out of the country. As a result of Reagan-era changes, our trade deficits soared, wages stagnated, pensions disappeared, and a few extremely wealthy started getting much, much richer. One major result of these changes, of course, was the huge budget deficits that accumulated into today’s massive debt. This was the plan from the start , to “starve the beast” by defunding government and forcing the debt to reach a level where there was no choice but to cut back on democratic government’s protections for the people, unleashing plutocracy. Hostage-Taking Enabled: The Tax Cut Extension This debate over the debt ceiling and hostage-taking follows the recent extension of the Bush tax cuts — another product of hostage-taking. At the end of the last Congress, unemployment benefits for the millions of unemployed were running out. Republicans — having filibustered much of the legislation of the prior two years — held the extension of benefits “hostage” saying they would not let it pass unless the deficit-creating Bush tax cuts were extended. Enough Democrats caved and passed an extension of the Bush tax cuts. This validated hostage-taking as a successful tactic while making the deficit much worse, setting the stage for today’s debt-ceiling fight. The Vote Is A Trick Today’s vote has been scheduled by the Republican leadership as a trap, trying to get some Democrats to vote with Republicans to support their hostage-taking agenda and create the appearance of bipartisan support for plutocracy. If the Republican position gets the support of enough Democratic members, Republicans can then demand deep cuts in Medicare and other programs that help people and hold corporate power in check, in exchange for their votes to allow the world’s economy to continue to operate. From TPM: First Debt Limit Vote Today As GOP Looks To Divide Dems , The vote is intended to expose fault lines within the Democratic caucus, with Republicans counting on sizable number of Democrats to side with them and bolster their case that Democrats need to agree to deep spending cuts as a condition to raising the debt limit. Vote For A Clean Debt-Ceiling Bill Voting for a clean bill stops government-by-hostage-in its tracks. Voting for a clean bill saves the world’s economy. Voting for a clean bill fights the plutocracy agenda. Voting for a clean bill saves Medicare, Social Security and the things We, the People do for each other. Voting for a clean bill is the right thing to do and doing the right thing is the right thing politically. Call your member of Congress NOW and demand a vote for a clean debt-ceiling bill. (Update: Jed Lewison at DailyKos explains reasons every Democrat should vote against today’s Republican sham-bill .) This post originally appeared at Campaign for America’s Future (CAF) at their Blog for OurFuture . I am a Fellow with CAF. Sign up here for the CAF daily summary .

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Fred Rotondaro: On Taxes

May 13, 2011

House Speaker John Boehner said again this week, tax increases are off the table. He and Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell have used the same language hundreds, perhaps thousands of times. You can’t tax the job creators in a recession, they say. They pound it home time and again. It’s the wealthy who create jobs in America, leaving the clear implication they’re defending tax cuts for the wealthy and for corporations because it’s good for America. McConnell and Boehner either have very incompetent staffs or they are deliberately misleading American voters. There is in fact no clear evidence that tax cuts for the wealthy create jobs. The non-partisan Congressional Budget Office last year analyzed fourteen approaches to creating jobs in America. Tax cuts for the wealthy came in 14th — dead last . Some Republican spokesmen say that history proves them right, arguing that Ronald Reagan cut taxes and had job gains in his administration. They don’t mention that after Reagan cut taxes, he raised them again. The most obvious comparison is of course the eight-year administrations of Bill Clinton and George Bush. Clinton had a tax rate of 39 percent and created some 22 million jobs during his administration. He left George Bush with a surplus and a roaring economy. Bush’s first move was to use the surplus as an excuse to drop tax cuts to 35 percent for the richest Americans. There is no doubt this was good for the rich who from 2001 to 2007 increased their assets by 10 percent every year. During that same period middle Americas actually lost eight percent of their net assets. And importantly, in 2008 and 2009, the last years when Bush policies were in full effect, America lost a total of 8 million jobs. Higher taxes under Clinton and a net gain of 22 million jobs. Reduced taxes under Bush and a two-year loss of 8 million jobs . How does this equate into lower taxes being good for America? In addition, recent studies using CBO figures estimate that six trillion of our current debt stems from the Bush tax cuts in 2001, 2003 and 2004. McConnell and Boehner know the above figures quite well. They have good staffs as befits their important roles. But telling the truth about taxes would not suit their political agendas. Republicans leaders for the last 30 years have promoted lower taxes for three main reasons, each interlinked. First, Republicans do believe in lower taxes. This goes with their theories about smaller government and with their distaste of such programs as Medicare and social security. Second, it is the very rich and corporations who contribute the most to Republican politicians. It is circular giving for the rich and corporations get substantial largess from the government in many forms — contracts, advantageous government policies, etc. Third, the beneficiaries of Republican tax benefits are well organized and well funded. The Club for Growth and Americans for Tax Reform are two corporate funded groups based in Washington that in effect monitor Republicans on tax policy. The ATR boasts openly that it extracts pledges from members of Congress that they will never vote for any sort of tax increase. ATR says it has over 40 pledges from senators and more than 200 from representatives. Failure to follow the pledge has often meant well-funded primary opponents. Politicians like Boehner and McConnell know full well the implications of their no new tax policy. But sadly, like so many politicians like them, they put power and money above the inter of the average American. And they don’t stop for a moment in deceiving Americans in their pursuit of their political goals.

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Robert Teitelman: Krugman on the Policy Elites

May 9, 2011

Paul Krugman launches an attack Monday in the New York Times on what the headline of his column calls “The Unwisdom of Elites.” Well, I can agree with that. This is a Krugman column, however, that has almost very little to do with economics, technical or otherwise, and everything to do with political polemics. It involves the classic straw man lead, followed by a series of simplistic statements and a quivering finger pointed at the bad guys. We could be on cable television. First the straw man. Krugman tackles the big question: “How did it all go wrong” in both the U.S. and Europe? He, of course, answers himself. “Well, what I’ve been hearing with growing frequency from members of the policy elite — self appointed wise men, officials and pundits in good standing — is the claim that it’s mostly the public’s fault. The idea is that we got into this mess because voters wanted something for nothing and weak-minded politicians catered to the electorate’s foolishness.” But au contraire, he goes on to argue, “The fact is that what we’re experiencing right now is a top-down disaster. The policies that got us into this mess weren’t responses to public demand. They were, with a few exceptions, policies championed by small groups of influential people — in many cases, the same people now lecturing the rest of us on the need to get serious.” Who has Krugman been listening to? Well, undoubtedly Republicans of the Paul Ryan deficit-reduction rump, which means he’s been watching far too much Fox. (Krugman makes a parallel argument about Europe, which I’ll set aside because it’s a) confusing and b) involves matters I don’t know as intimately.) After all, he’s pretending that that argument, which is hardly as monolithic and noisy as he would suggest but does exist, stems from some “policy elite,” to which he, of course, with his Nobel, his teaching job at Princeton and his New York Times column, does not belong. This notion of public blame is also not a new argument, but rather a continuation of one that suggested that consumers contributed to the mortgage meltdown by overleveraging and speculating on real estate. But Krugman takes a fairly nuanced position that posits a number of different causes of the crisis (and of today’s deficit problems) — regulators, policymakers, politicians, globalization, innovation, trade imbalances, and, yes, overleveraging and speculation on Wall Street and Main Street — and radically simplifies it down to “you’re blaming blameless victims so just shut up.” Krugman reasonably locates three policies at the heart of the current mess: the Bush tax cuts, the Iraq War and fallout from the financial crisis. All three, he argues, were foisted secretly upon America by elites — or through “a highly deceptive sales campaign.” You can believe, as I do (and did), that all three were problematic policies and still not accept his Manichean view of all this, which depends on making the great mass of ordinary Americans chumps prone to endless manipulation. It’s not that Republican or Democratic pols are sainted. It’s just that there are no saints here at all anywhere. After all, Americans voted for Bush, which would presumably mean his tax cuts and his war, in 2004. True, large parts of the country opposed these policies; but even larger parts embraced them. Krugman may default to the “deceptive sales process” for any policy he dislikes that gains support, but to do so suggests that this democracy is broken beyond repair. Indeed, it’s to see the great mass of voters out there not just as irrational, but as pawns. Why, if that’s what he really believes, does he even bother to write his anti-elite, elite jeremiad? More disturbingly, it also takes him to a place he shares with large parts of the right: into the mental landscape of conspiracies and plots, of small groups of influential men, where you can only retain your fondest hopes of a just and rational nation by imagining that the great gentle herds of Americans have been (and have to be in the future) manipulated. I would argue differently. Americans that I know seemed to understand what the Bush tax cuts meant and the post-Sept. 11 context of the Iraq War. Many of them opposed both; some favored one or the other or both. That latter group was not blind. They may have been wrong, or they may have been consumed by their perceived self-interest, and indeed they may have believed the White House on supply-side wonders and Saddam Hussein’s threat to humanity, but they were no more manipulated than other folks who accepted Barack Obama as the Second Coming. They all made judgments, drew conclusions and, for better or worse, acted in their own rational self-interest — just like the folks I know who used their homes as piggy banks or engaged in flipping. None of them — not Krugman, not Bush, not Carleton Sheets — could predict the future, could see how tax cuts would hollow out the revenue-generation capacity of the state, could foresee how Iraq would go so wrong or, indeed, how deregulation and a dozen other factors produced the Great Recession. They took their chances; they imagined different outcomes. American history is one long cleanup, like a parade that just keeps circling the block. Krugman shares something else with some of his ideological foes, this time on the economics side. He is defining the public in strict utility-maximizing, rational terms, just like the disciples of the school of rational expectations. Politics is not game theory. Because he cannot accept a public with a variety of contrary ideas, dreams and preoccupations — some rational, some irrational, some, like a Shakespearean play, millennial, prosaic, greedy, fantastic, stupid, tragic, comic — he has to posit “deceptive sales practices” as the explanation for not only the wayward course of American politics and history, but for the public’s failure to listen to, well, the likes of him. This democracy thing is a very messy process, far more than whatever goes on in a lecture hall at Princeton. Originally posted at The Deal .

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Scott Bittle: Fiscal Follies: No New Taxes? So Now What?

May 8, 2011

As of this weekend, it looks like Congress will hammer out some sort of deal to extend the federal debt ceiling and avoid pushing the country to the brink of default. The response from the Washington Post ‘s Ezra Klein is the best we’ve read so far. “Whew,” Klein wrote last week. As Klein tells it, both sides are softening their hard line positions out of a “healthy aversion to unimaginable consequences.” Whew indeed. But regardless of what kind of package Congress agrees on, this is just the beginning. We need to cut spending and raise revenue for years to get the country out of its fiscal mess. Unfortunately, a sizable contingent of Americans still believes we can solve our problems without tax increases — or at least not any that would affect “me.” More than half of Americans (53 percent) reject the idea of small tax increases and small cuts in Social Security and Medicare to “significantly” reduce the federal debt. Majorities oppose eliminating deductions for home mortgages, state and local taxes, and contributions to charities as “part of a plan to reduce the federal budget deficit.” By a margin of two-to-one, the public wants to balance the federal budget by cutting spending rather than raising taxes. And why wouldn’t they? Politicians have been telling the public for years that all we need to do is cut — even if they stop short of describing the details. So let’s take a look at what “no new taxes” really means if that’s the way we decide to go. Our trillion-dollar budget problems will be $3 trillion dollars worse. Since the Bush taxes cuts are set to expire in 2014, “no new taxes” means that Congress will need to extend them. According to the Congressional Budget Office, extending all of the existing cuts (both the Bush cuts and the expanded tax credits put in under President Obama) means government will have about $3.2 trillion dollars less to spend over the next decade . If we were at even-steven now, or even close, that would be one thing, but the United States is some $14 trillion in debt , and on track to have our national debt exceed the size of our entire economy in only 10 years or so. Plus, just about every budget out there, from the left, right, and the center (and including the Ryan plan ) has us adding to the red ink for decades. The cuts would have to be savage. Okay, for the sake of argument, let’s see what it would take to eliminate 2011′s $1.4 trillion deficit just by cutting spending. The total budget is about $3.8 trillion, so you have to cut about a third of what government now spends . That might not sound impossible, but once you take a look at the numbers, the task is daunting. To cut the deficit by one-third, you would need to eliminate everything government does except for defense, Social Security, Medicare, Medicaid, and paying interest on the debt. Losing that “non-security discretionary spending” would save $533 billion , but of course, you’ve also just wiped out the entire departments of agriculture, commerce, education, energy, and labor. We no longer have federal meat inspectors, the Centers of Disease Control, FEMA or Pell grants. Want to sink your teeth into defense spending? That’s fine, but to eliminate that $1.4 trillion deficit, entirely, you’d need to cut the entire national security budget: all $900 billion of it in 2011. People may end up paying more one way or the other, even if it’s not called a “tax.” The Republicans seem to be backing away from Rep. Paul Ryan’s controversial budget plan, which included turning Medicare into a voucher plan. It’s a “no new tax” plan, and whatever you think about it overall, it makes one tradeoff perfectly clear: the price for no new taxes is higher medical premiums for seniors . Under his plan, the CBO reported, by 2030 seniors would be paying double what they’re currently projected to pay for Medicare . In a philosophical sense, you may have strong feelings about paying higher premiums versus more taxes — but the cost to your bank account is the same either way. Taxing fat cats doesn’t help as much as you think. It is true that most Americans (although certainly not the purists) do back the idea of raising taxes on people who earn more than $250,000 a year . Unhappily, it doesn’t raise that much money. The CBO calculated that raising taxes by 1 percent on the top two income brackets (individuals earning about $175,000 and couples earning about $212,000) would only bring in about $84 billion dollars over the next decade. Unfortunately, our projected deficit for next year is about 10 times that. There certainly are other options — larger tax increases for wealthier Americans, higher corporate taxes, higher payroll taxes, modest tax increases on all of us, taxing fossil fuels, and so on. But the “no new taxes” mantra shuts down any reasonable conversation on how to cut spending and increase revenues in the fairest, least destructive way. The fact is that most government spending is on Social Security, Medicare, and Medicaid, programs the vast majority of Americans value, and there’s no way to protect them (even with tweaking) without raising taxes to cover what they cost. Perhaps the worst result for the country is when an immovable fixation against higher taxes on one side hits up against an immovable fixation on the other side that Social Security and Medicare are untouchable. At that point, the math is simply impossible. In the near-term, Congress may agree on some immediate spending cuts and make some promises about what they’ll do in the future. We’ll all feel better temporarily. But unless more Americans begin to grasp the facts of the budget, we’ll never get out of this. It’s easy to say “no new taxes,” but in real life, the results are almost unimaginable.

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Tavis Smiley: My Conversation with George Soros

April 27, 2011

During an extended, rare conversation with philanthropist and author, George Soros, I asked him to assess President Obama’s foreign policy as it relates to wars in Afghanistan and Iraq, given that he had been so critical of the policy during the Bush administration. The full conversation airs tonight on PBS.

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Anti-Tax Billionaire Steve Schwarzman: Even Rich Americans Need To ‘Give Something Up’ To Help Narrow Deficit

April 26, 2011

The billionaire who last year compared Obama’s attempts to raise taxes on private equity firms with Hitler’s invasion of Poland, on Monday said even rich Americans will have to “give something up” to help narrow the deficit. In response to a question about raising taxes on the richest 2 percent of Americans, Stephen Schwarzman, the billionaire founder of private equity giant, the Blackstone Group, said the deficit was serious enough that almost everybody in society would have to “give something up.” (Scroll down for video.) “And no one’s going to like it,” Schwarzman told Bloomberg. “It’s like medicine in the old days that tasted really bad, but if you didn’t take your medicine, you weren’t going to get healthy,” he said of the attempts to effectively end the Bush-era tax cuts. “I think this is a widespread issue where everyone is going to be giving something up, and if you don’t, you’re not going to be able to solve the problems we have.” If Americans didn’t make sacrifices, he said, people’s livelihoods would be under threat — and everybody but the poorest Americans, who need protection, he said — would have to chip in, he reiterated. The comments appear to mark a reversal for the billionaire, who last year, compared an Obama administration push to increase taxes on private equity firms — so they would pay the same tax rate as the rest of America — to a “war… like when Hitler invaded Poland in 1939.” In Monday’s Bloomberg interview, Schwarzman noted that the rhetoric from politicians has been more sympathetic towards business since the mid-term elections in November. Earlier in 2010 Schwarzman also controvertially said that Wall Street-bashing would make banks “insecure” and tighten up lending. The remarks come as a battle rages over how to make up the budget shortfall. The Obama administration and Congress must come up with an aggressive long-term plan to reduce the currently $1.5 trillion budget deficit , roughly equivalent to 9.8 percent of U.S. economic output. Earlier this month, the Obama administration proposed a plan that would cut $4 trillion from the budget deficit over the next 12 years, mostly through spending cuts and tax hikes on the rich. Just before, the Republican-controlled House of Representatives approved a different deal to reduce deficits by $4 trillion over the next 10 years while also extending President George W. Bush’s tax cuts at all income levels and repealing Obama’s health care law. The two factions must strike a deal before the country reaches its $14.3 trillion debt ceiling — the maximum amount it can borrow under law. Treasury Secretary Tim Geithner has warned Congress that the debt limit will be hit by May 16, but that he can take “extraordinary measures” to make sure the nation’s debts are paid until roughly July 8, at which point the government would default on some of its debts.

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Jay Mandle: The Politics of the Budget Deficit

April 25, 2011

The federal budget showed a surplus of $185.2 billion in 2000. By 2010 it was in deficit by $1.3 trillion. What happened? Only after that question is answered is it reasonable to discuss what we should do. The numbers are clear: between 2000 and 2010 tax revenues declined from 21.5 percent of the economy’s Gross Domestic Product (GDP) to 16.3 percent. During these same years, federal government expenditures increased from 19.6 percent to 25.4 percent. The budget surplus disappeared because revenues declined by 5.2 percent of GDP and expenditures increased by 5.8 percent. 1 It does not take much investigation to explain the contrasting trends in revenues and expenditures. The two tax cuts passed during the Bush Administration, combined with the two recessions that occurred during that administration, starved the government for funds. At the same time, defense expenditures increased dramatically — from 3.7 percent of GDP to 5.6 — while health care rose from 5.0 to 7.3 percent in 2009 (the most recent available data). This means that increased health care and military spending together were responsible for about three-quarters of the growth in government expenditures as a percentage of GDP that occurred during the last decade. Economic downturns and tax cuts, combined with increased military expenditures and escalating health care costs, were clearly the villains. Logic therefore would suggest that these are the areas that need to be corrected. The economy’s vulnerability to crises should be reduced, the Bush tax cuts rescinded, defense expenditures curbed, and the health care sector made more efficient. But as obvious as these corrective steps might seem, the dominance of wealthy special interests in our political system makes it unlikely that any of them will be implemented. Despite the financial debacle of 2007, Wall Street continues to ride high and the economy remains vulnerable to a financial meltdown. Reducing health care costs will require taking on powerful special interests in a way that the Obama Administration has shown no stomach to do. Increasing taxes on the wealthy at a time of mounting income inequality is so obviously a matter of justice that it would seem not to require much of an argument. Yet spokespersons for the elite like Arthur C. Brooks of the American Enterprise Institute recently argued in The Washington Post that increasing taxation on the rich will damage not only the economy but the meritocratic ideals upon which the country rests. 2 Then there is the question of defense spending. The fact is that the importance of the military in the American economy far exceeds that anywhere else in the world. Most Americans are unaware of that imbalance or its implications. But the fact is that defense spending in the United States as a share of GDP is at least twice as high as in any comparably developed country. In contrast to the roughly 5 percent in the United States, France stands out as the big spender in the European Community at 2.4 percent. The United Kingdom’s level is 1.7 percent. 3 This commitment to the military is particularly anomalous because the United States is a relatively low tax country. Defense spending here therefore claims a significantly larger share of the overall budget. One estimate has it that United States spends 19.3 percent of budget appropriations on the military, in contrast to 6.3 percent in the United Kingdom and 5.4 percent in France. 4 The consequence is that desirable social and labor market policies are crowded out for lack of funds much more so in this country than in Europe. The people who most need social support are the same people who pay the cost of our military expenditures. Given the configuration of power in our political system and in particular the dominant role of wealth, it is all too likely that in addressing the budget deficit, legislators will inflict a grave injustice on large numbers of people. Middle and low income households were not responsible for the budget deficit. But the programs from which they benefit that are most likely to be on the chopping block. The deficit emerged because rich people succeeded in achieving major tax reductions, Wall Street decimated the economy, the costs of health care remained exorbitant, and the growth of defense spending remained unchecked. Yet as things stand, none of these will be the object of political redress. It is at times like these — when real and important choices have to be made – that the fundamental dysfunction of a political system based on wealth is most obvious. 1. Statistics from this and the next paragraph are from the Bureau of Economic Analysis, U.S. Economic Accounts, http://www.bea.gov , Table 3.2, 1.1.10, and 3.12 2. Arthur C. Brooks, the Washington Post , April 24, 2010, p. B-1 3. The World Bank, “Military Expenditures as % GDP,” http://data.worldbank.org/indicator/MS.MIL.XPND.GD.ZS 4. “How Countries Spend Their Money,” % of Total Budget Allocated to Military, http://www.visualeconomics.com

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Nobel Prize-Winning Economist Paul Krugman: ‘I’m A ‘Loner’

April 25, 2011

Paul Krugman is a Nobel-Prize winning economist and world-famous blogger. According to a new article, you can add self-described loner to that list as well. In a New York magazine profile, “What’s Left of the Left,” Krugman, author of the New York Times ‘ highly-influential blog, “The Conscience of a Liberal”, is described as a “lonely man” that had trouble naming a single friend that could be interviewed to provide the author with a better understanding of one of America’s most famous liberals. Asked to describe himself, Krugman, who allegedly avoids eye contact with colleagues in the elevator, quickly points to his own solitary characteristics: “Loner. Ordinarily shy. Shy with individuals.” The portrayal differs somewhat from the March 2010 profile by the New Yorker in which a relatively-content Krugman allows the public into his life and mariage with fellow economist Robin Wells. “I think he’s happy,” his friend Craig Murphy said at the time. “A much happier person now than when we first met him.” The New York profile’s author, Benjamin Wallace-Wells, instead, contrasts Krugman with his bombastic former classmate at Harvard graduate school: Larry Summers, ex-director of Obama’s National Economic Council. “Let’s put it this way,” Krugman says when describing the difference between the two. “When things go crazy, my instinct is to go radical on policy, and Larry’s is to be a little more cautious.” Summers, in return, took aim at Krugman as “the guy in the bleachers who always demands the fake kick, the triple-reverse, the long bomb, or the big trade,” without ever getting in the game. Krugman has previously said his wife pushed him to remain true to his gut, denouncing filibusters and holding strong to his belief that that Obama’s health-care bill needed a public option. In an interview with New York , Krugman describes his first years blogging for the NYT as “a radicalizing experience,” primarily because of wading through the Bush administration’s economic policy closer than ever before. Krugman says he discovered a world in which the president of the United States could say something “demonstrably false” and no one would say anything. “That was pretty awesome,” he said.

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Eric Schoenberg: How I Paid Only 1% of My Income in Federal Income Tax

April 25, 2011

In 2009, the median U.S. family had an income of just under $50,000, on which they would have paid roughly $2,761 (or about 5.5%) in federal income tax. I, by contrast, enjoyed an income of $207,415 in 2009, but paid only $2,173 (or 1.0%) in income tax. In a recent newspaper interview, I mentioned my absurdly low tax rate to illustrate the extent to which the tax system is biased in favor of the wealthy (my income varies widely from year to year, but is typically north of half a million dollars). My point was that with our country facing frightening budget deficits amid an ever-widening income gap between the rich and everybody else, I consider it both unwise and unfair that a former investment banker like myself pays less in taxes than working Americans with far lower incomes. Among the dozens of emails I received in response were many from people who assumed that rich people avoid taxes through complicated strategies devised by an army of expensive advisors (many correspondents asked for the name of my accountant). But under our current tax system, the rich don’t need high-priced lawyers who exploit obscure loopholes; I wasn’t even trying to minimize my taxes (and, in fact, could have paid zero tax if I was). Warren Buffett has observed that if there’s class warfare in this country, the rich are winning. I offer my 2009 tax return, then, as a flare to illuminate the battlefield. Americans are understandably angry over the government’s multi-billion-dollar bailouts of reckless bankers. But low tax rates on investment income have put far more money into Wall Street’s pockets than the TARP bill did. Even President Obama’s proposal to let the Bush tax cuts lapse for the richest Americans would leave a top marginal rate on capital gains and qualified dividends of just 20% — half the proposed rate on labor income. This difference creates a loophole you can drive a Rolls Royce through. Having left Wall Street in 2002, I now earn far more money from my financial portfolio than from my job as an Adjunct Professor, and as a result I consistently pay under 15% of my income to the IRS. Still, I was astonished when my accountant told me that my tax rate for 2009 was a mere 1%. I knew my deductions were an unusually large percentage of my income that year due to three items: $46,000 in charitable gifts, $56,000 in state and local taxes (mostly related to 2008, when my income was much higher) and $45,000 in investment expenses (basically fees paid to various money managers). Personally, I think there are reasonable arguments to be made for keeping each of these types of deduction, but the numerous “tax expenditures” that litter the tax code mean that citizens with similar incomes can end up paying wildly different amounts in tax. Even after deductions and exemptions, however, I still had taxable income of $37,349, putting me in the 15% bracket (higher than the average rate I’ve paid in years past with income twenty times as large). If I’d been an ordinary worker, my tax bill would have been $4,764. But wait! Under the Bush tax cuts, if one’s income from other sources is low enough (which mine was after deductions), certain types of investment income are subject to zero — yes, zero — tax. In my case, the qualified dividends I received in 2009 would have escaped taxation altogether if not for the Alternative Minimum Tax. Even under the AMT, however, I paid less than half the income tax paid by a wage-earner with the same taxable income (and less than a third of the tax burden when including social security taxes, which are not due on investment income). Does that seem fair to you? Advocates of lower taxes on investment income argue that they increase the incentives for folks like me to create jobs. As a long time investor, I’m skeptical. After all, job growth was much higher in the years following the Clinton tax hike in 1993 than it has been over the last decade as investment tax rates were repeatedly slashed. And lower rates on investment income also reward financial speculators, whose actions in recent years haven’t exactly promoted increased employment. Middle class anger in the Tea Party era, meanwhile, has been directed primarily at government spending. Arguing that government will simply waste whatever money it receives, Tea Party supporters oppose higher taxes on anybody (which explains why this is one populist movement which many billionaires are happy to support). But by focusing attention solely on whether government costs too much, the Tea Party ignores the completely separate question of who pays those costs. Last year, the answer was: not me. And I’m not happy about it. Some Tea Party types have observed that I am welcome to pay more voluntarily to the federal government if I want, but this entirely misses the point. Given the choice, of course I prefer to give money to my own causes rather than the federal government. But the whole point of democracy is for the community to decide what activities are in our collective self-interest. “Taxes are the price we pay for civilization,” and since we all share in that benefit, we should all pay our fair share of the cost. While the Republicans talk about the “shared sacrifices” necessary to close our government’s budget deficit, their plan imposes pain mostly on the sick, the elderly, and the poor. Asking the rich to sacrifice by paying higher tax rates surely pales in comparison. I believe that having wealthy investors pay taxes at the same rate as middle-class workers would be an important step towards making sure that we all contribute to putting our fiscal house in order.

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Robert Kuttner: A Double Dip Recession for 2012?

April 25, 2011

Economists are painting a pretty bleak picture of the economic outlook between now and the November 2012 election. Will this hurt President Obama’s re-election chances? Or will voters blame the Party of No? That, of course, partly depends on what kind of campaign Obama runs and partly on the Republicans. But first, let’s take stock (actually, maybe let’s sell stock). The Federal Reserve has been buying up lots of bonds to keep interest rates very low. The Fed disguises what it’s doing with the antiseptic and mystifying term, “quantitative easing,” or QE for short. This is the second time the central bank has tried this trick, hence the coy nickname, QE 2. The problem is that very low interest rates only take you so far in a depressed economy. For the most part the Fed’s policy has been good for large banks and good for the stock market. Ordinary borrowers, businesses and homebuyers have trouble getting credit. But other factors are starting to limit the effectiveness of very low interest rates. For one, the very low rates in the US are depressing confidence in the dollar. That means we start importing inflation. For another, rising commodity prices worldwide — partly the result of the Fed’s policy, partly due to rising demand in India and China — means increasing prices of consumer goods at home. Five-dollar-a-gallon gas is not good for President Obama. Nor is the practice of food processing companies shrinking the size of standard packages to disguise price increases. And in the one part of the economy that might benefit from a little inflation, low interest rates have not worked to levitate depressed housing values. The time-tested remedy, when cheap money ceases working, is expansive fiscal policy — government deficits and public investment. Now there’s an idea. Oops. Forget it. There is, of course, huge pressure from the nation’s opinion elites to cut the deficit, long before the economy is out of the woods. It comes from four potent sources. Wall Street deficit hawks have been banging these drums for three decades, even during the late 1990s when the budget was in surplus. The elite media buys this story, hook, line, and sinker. Big deficits are seen as proof of partisan gridlock and government irresponsibility. The six bipartisan horsemen of budget apocalypse, Senators Warner, Chambliss et. al. are widely depicted as fiscal heroes. The pundits seem to forget where these deficits came from. Republicans since Ronald Reagan have pursued a strategy of cutting taxes and then expressing shock at the ensuing deficit and demanding program cuts accordingly. We were already having historically high deficits when the recession began, because of the Bush tax cuts of 2001 and 2003. Today’s even more extreme Republicans would cut taxes further, slash outlays to their lowest level since before FDR, invoking the gods of deficit reduction. President Obama, for his part, has fanned these flames with his appointment of the Bowles-Simpson commission, and his premature shift, as early as the 2010 State of the Union Address, from the theme of economic recovery and job creation to that of deficit reduction. His recent address at George Washington University was terrific at holding the line on Medicare, Medicaid and Social Security, but bought into the premise that we need deficit reduction more than we need job creation. Why is Obama pursuing this strategy? Partly because his conservative economic advisers buy it, and partly because his political advisers look at polls that tell them voters care about deficits, especially political independents. But that current of public opinion exists only because opinion leaders — including Obama himself — have made such a fetish of deficits. There is a whole politics that just isn’t on the table: massive public investment to create jobs and growth — which then increase revenues and bring down the deficit. The political scientist Walter Dean Burnham refers to this sort of dynamic as “a politics of excluded of alternatives.” But wait, isn’t the deficit a real problem? Yes, and no. Eventually, deficits at the 2011 level are not sustainable. However, the current accumulated debt held by the public of about 60 percent of GDP is not dire. We could have two or three years of bigger deficits, very major public investment, let the debt ratio peak at 100% of GDP; and then stronger recovery, lower unemployment, and higher taxes on the wealthy would bring the debt ratio slowly down, as occurred after WW II. Japan’s debt ratio, for comparative purposes, is over 200 % of GDP — and Japan is increasing government outlay to repair the damage of the earthquake and tsunami. Britain’s, after World War II, was over 250 percent, and Britain went on to enjoy a postwar recovery. Why can’t we have massive public reparation with war or natural disaster? Because politicians lack the vision and nerve. Austerity will only slow down the recovery. The idea that a steeper path to deficit reduction will somehow restore business confidence and thus more than offset the hit to purchasing power is just blarney. And with both parties committed to some version of austerity, we could easily have the worst of both worlds — increasing inflation coupled with persistent stagnation. However much the Republicans are at fault–for creating the financial collapse, blocking a stronger stimulus in 2009, and looting the Treasury with tax cuts for the rich, causing much of the deficit problem in the first place — an incumbent president tends to take the blame for hard economic times. Obama’s talk of having a kinder, gentler brand of deficit reduction is no match for rising fuel and food prices and persistent worries about basic economic security. Can the president shift to a rhetoric and policy that emphasizes the need for more jobs and a stronger recovery, and soon? Let’s hope so. There is nothing like an election hanging to concentrate a politician’s mind. Robert Kuttner is co-editor of The American Prospect and a senior fellow at Demos. His latest book is A Presidency in Peril .

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Default On Debt Could Be Doomsday Scenario For Economy

April 23, 2011

WASHINGTON — The United States has never defaulted on its debt and Democrats and Republicans say they don’t want it to happen now. But with partisan acrimony running at fever pitch, and Democrats and Republicans so far apart on how to tame the deficit, the unthinkable is suddenly being pondered. The government now borrows about 42 cents of every dollar it spends. Imagine that one day soon, the borrowing slams up against the current debt limit ceiling of $14.3 trillion and Congress fails to raise it. The damage would ripple across the entire economy, eventually affecting nearly every American, and rocking global markets in the process. A default would come if the government actually failed to fulfill a financial obligation, including repaying a loan or interest on that loan. The government borrows mostly by selling bonds to individuals and governments, with a promise to pay back the amount of the bond in a certain time period and agreeing to pay regular interest on that bond in the meantime. Among the first directly affected would likely be money-market funds holding government securities, banks that buy bonds directly from the Federal Reserve and resell them to consumers, including pension and mutual funds; and the foreign investor community, which holds nearly half of all Treasury securities. If the U.S. starts missing interest or principal payments, borrowers would demand higher and higher rates on new bonds, as they did with Greece, Portugal and other heavily indebted nations. Who wants to keep loaning money to a deadbeat nation that can’t pay its bills? At some point, the government would have to slash spending in other areas to make room for any further sales of Treasury bills and bonds. That could squeeze payments to federal contractors, and eventually even affect Social Security and other government benefit payments, as well as federal workers’ paychecks. A default would likely trigger another financial panic like the one in 2008 and plunge an economy still reeling from high joblessness and a battered housing market back into recession. Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke calls failure to raise the debt limit “a recovery-ending event.” U.S. stock markets would likely tank – devastating roughly half of U.S. households that own stocks, either individually or through 401(k) type retirement programs. Eventually, the cost of most credit would rise – from business and consumer loans to home mortgages, auto financing and credit cards. Continued stalemate could also further depress the value of the dollar and challenge the greenback’s status as the world’s prime “reserve currency.” China and other countries that now hold about 50 percent of all U.S. Treasury securities could start dumping them, further pushing up interest rates and swelling the national debt. It would be a vicious cycle of higher and higher interest rates and more and more debt. The U.S. has long been the global standard for financial stability and creditworthiness, with Treasury securities seen as a fail-safe investment. But after the near-shutdown of the U.S. government and a new credit-rating report this week questioning the country’s fiscal health, Treasury bills and bonds are losing luster. If there is a debt limit deadlock, the government by this summer could find itself legally unable to borrow more money to pay its bills, beginning with interest on its debt and gradually extending to day-to-day federal operations. At some point, the government would have to decide which bills to pay and which to put aside. The debt ceiling will be hit on or around May 16, the Treasury Department says. Unlike the threatened government shutdown, the impact would start slowly, but then build mightily until the damage would be so dire that few political leaders or economists even want to contemplate it. The day of reckoning could likely be delayed at least until early July with creative bookkeeping. When the House first rejected the Bush administration’s $600-billion bank bailout in September 2008, the Dow Jones industrials went into a dizzying 778-point tailspin. A whiff of a possible similar stock market collapse came on Monday with a sharp selloff on Wall Street when the Standard & Poors lowered its outlook on U.S. debt to “negative” from “stable,” possibly a first step toward a possible downgrade of America’s coveted AAA credit rating. “We haven’t downgraded it. We just said, if nothing happens, we may have to,” said S&P chief economist David Wyss. He said a government default remains uncharted territory, “which is one reason why it’s not a good idea to hit the debt ceiling.” “There’s reason to worry,” said Wyss. “But my best guess is that we sort of muddle through this. Cuts will be made, they’ll be too little too late, but at least they will be enough to maintain a triple-A rating.” “It’s another game of chicken. And this time there are Mack trucks going at each other, not bumper cars. This is a biggie,” said American University political scientist James Thurber. But he predicted that, as in the past, “there will be an accommodation. They will avoid a crash.” Investment bank J.P. Morgan Chase recently concluded that any delay in making an interest or principal payments by the Treasury “even for a very short period of time” would have large “long-term adverse consequences for Treasury finances and the U.S. economy.” The analysis is being circulated on Capitol Hill by supporters of raising the debt limit. “If anyone wants to push that button, which I think would be catastrophic and unpredictable, I think they’re crazy,” JP Morgan CEO Jaime Dimon said recently of those seeking to block raising the debt limit. House Speaker John Boehner and most other GOP leaders agree on the need to raise the debt limit – and don’t want to be held responsible for a new financial meltdown. Still, they want Obama to make more concessions on spending cuts than he has done thus far. That isn’t sitting well with liberal Democrats, who think Obama has already given too much ground. One reason the two parties can’t find common ground: they can’t even agree on what’s causing high deficits. Democrats mostly blame it on policies of George W. Bush: two wars, tax cuts that continue to benefit the wealthy and an expensive prescription drug program. Republicans see government spending as the culprit, particularly on Obama’s watch. In fact, the main reason is the deep recession, which slashed tax revenues and led to hundreds of billions of dollars in recession-fighting spending by both Bush and Obama. The debt was $9 trillion in late 2007 before the start of the Great Recession, and it’s just a sliver under the $14.3 trillion limit today. Even though GOP leaders say they want to avoid more economic chaos, there is a large crop of tea-party aligned Republicans threatening to refuse to raise the cap under almost any circumstance. Polls suggest a large percentage of Americans oppose raising the debt limit. The debt limit has been raised ten times over the past decade. Obama voted against Bush’s debt-limit increase in 2006 as a senator, accusing Bush of “a leadership failure.” Obama recently apologized for “making what is a political vote as opposed to doing what was important for the country.”

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Conservative Strategists Warn GOP About Economic Risks Of Pushing Debt Ceiling Debate Too Far

April 23, 2011

Conservative strategists are warning that the GOP should not push the debt ceiling debate too close to the breaking point. “If there is a vote on raising the debt ceiling and it fails, there will be a significant market reaction,” said Tony Fratto, a former Treasury and White House official in the Bush administration. “Investors already believe that Congress doesn’t understand the financial markets. A failure to raise the debt ceiling will confirm this to them.” If the markets get spooked, U.S. treasury bond yields will spike, driving up interest rates and increasing the price of borrowing money for everyone from the federal government to municipalities to consumers, Fratto warned. The cascading effects on the economy would be severe and long-lasting. The negative market reaction would “come quickly,” Fratto said. “I think you can virtually guarantee that, and I hear it from everyone that I talk to in the markets, here and abroad.” He added, “I’m uncomfortable about the number of [Congress] members who don’t seem to understand that.” But the market’s reaction to any debt vote will depend on what expectations are set by political actors in Washington, cautions Doug Holtz-Eakin, a former top adviser to Sen. John McCain’s (R-Ariz.) 2008 presidential campaign. “If there was an up or down vote on the debt limit with nothing attached to it, that [investors] knew was not going to pass, I don’t think it would cause any trouble at all,” Holtz-Eakin said. “But if we get to July and it’s a deal that is perceived to be the deal and it fails — yeah, I think they’ll freak.” “Both sides are going to spend a lot of time setting expectations” for the markets and the voters, he said. For Democratic leaders, the narrative is relatively straightforward: The ceiling should be raised promptly, and some limited spending cuts would be appropriate. Republican leaders face a more delicate balancing act. They must get enough of their Congress members to vote for the debt ceiling increase at a time when most of their voters –- and especially those in the Tea Party -– oppose such a move. “The one thing we want more than anything else out of the debate over the debt ceiling: No increase in the debt ceiling,” said Mark Meckler, co-founder of the Tea Party Patriots. Rep. Tim Griffin, a freshman Republican from Arkansas’s Second District, told The Huffington Post that the feedback he has heard this week from voters back home has been “mostly just opposition to raising” the debt ceiling. Rep. Dennis Ross, another freshman Republican from Florida’s Twelfth District, responded to a question from The Huffington Post on Twitter about what he was hearing from constituents: “Universally, across parties and socio-economic levels, hearing ‘do not raise it.’” All of this is supported by a poll from the Tea Party group FreedomWorks, which found that 69 percent of all voters oppose raising the debt ceiling . While there is disagreement between Democrats and Republicans over when a default would occur if the government hit the debt ceiling, there is broad bipartisan agreement that such a scenario is undesirable and would likely have dire consequences for the economy and the nation. So the task for House Speaker John Boehner (R-Ohio) and Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.) will be to extract significant concessions from President Obama and Democrats in Congress that will not be rejected as a fig leaf by Tea Party activists. Judging from the Tea Party’s scathing reaction to the deal struck in the most recent fight over this year’s budget, that will be a difficult task. There are three main components to any potential deal that Boehner and McConnell must address. One is what kind of structural changes to spending can be enacted, such as spending caps for each year’s budget. A second is how deeply spending will be cut in the budget for fiscal year 2012, which starts in October. And the third is how high the debt ceiling will be increased from its current $14.3 trillion level, and whether that will last beyond the 2012 election or not. They must also deal with what are essentially two different Congressional Republican camps. Many GOP lawmakers are in the conventional wisdom crowd, which says that the debt ceiling has to be raised no matter what. This subset wants to avoid scaring the markets, but they also think the united GOP bloc has substantial leverage and can extract significant spending cut concessions from Democrats. The second Republican camp is the more hard line conservative group, which appears willing to press their case to the political and economic limit. They will not vote for a debt ceiling increase unless they receive significant concessions. This hard-line group is led by Sen. Jim DeMint (R-S.C.). In his view, the only achievement worth the price of raising the debt ceiling is an amendment to the Constitution that would require the federal government to balance its budget every year. His constitutional amendment is supported by all 47 Republican senators and in a test vote in March. Eleven Democrats also gave DeMint’s amendment their backing. That’s still far short of the the two-thirds majority needed in both the Senate and the House for a constitutional amendment. (Two-thirds of the nation’s 50 state legislatures must also approve.) But DeMint appears ready to go to the mat on this issue. He has promised to filibuster the debt ceiling increase, if the constitutional amendment is not included. Anything less, DeMint sees as capitulation and failure. “It’s balance or bust,” the Tea Party firebrand wrote in a fundraising email earlier this month. “Agreeing on the right policy is not enough to save our country. Republicans also have to be willing to fight to enact that policy, even if it means sacrificing their political careers,” he said. Certainly some portion of the GOP will line up behind DeMint. Yet even the most conservative group in the House, the Republican Study Committee, has not yet coalesced around what they want out of the debt ceiling fight. Republicans from both camps interviewed by HuffPost gave the balanced budget amendment virtually no chance of passing with a Democratic-controlled Senate and a Democratic president. Conservative congressional analysts agree. “It is going to be very difficult to get a two-thirds vote to pass a balanced budget amendment with so many big spending liberals in the Senate,” said Brian Darling, a senior fellow for government studies at the conservative Heritage Foundation. “The [amendment] has a good chance of passing in 2012 with a new Tea Party congress.” To give themselves some breathing room, Republicans are inoculating themselves against falling into a situation similar to 2008, when many in the GOP feel they were bum rushed into passing the TARP bailout by dire warnings from the Bush administration. The GOP vaccine is one half psychological and one half process-oriented. They argue that hitting the debt ceiling does not equal automatic default, because the Treasury Department can move money around and prioritize payments to ensure creditors continue to get paid for a time. So when Treasury Secretary Tim Geithner’s May 16 deadline arrives and the $14.294 trillion red line is reached, don’t expect the GOP to appear too worried. But the wild card in the debt ceiling fight is how the global credit markets will respond to what Congress does, and at what point there might be a negative reaction. If there is a chaotic spiral set off by a failed balanced budget amendment vote or some other development along the way, all bets might be off. Or, conversely, there is a chance that the axiom “what’s good for Wall Street is good for Main Street” will fall on deaf ears, and then be put to the test.

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Did Obama Plan His Budget Speech Months In Advance?

April 19, 2011

WASHINGTON — President Barack Obama’s much discussed speech last week on how to remedy the country’s fiscal future was part of a far broader, more strategically detailed political strategy than has been previously reported. Several high-ranking administration officials have confirmed that the White House laid out plans for the address as far back as the last calendar year, with the president’s economic team and other senior staff members “meeting regularly since February to put the policy together and work on the speech.” In presenting a fiscal roadmap, the administration aimed to demonstrate Obama’s fundamental seriousness towards what is widely perceived to be a looming deficit crisis. But the speech also illuminated both the lack of communication between the White House and Capitol Hill and a growing conviction among insiders that the president must move the deficit debate off center stage in order to tackle other domestic priorities. The address, delivered at George Washington University last Wednesday, outlined an expansive approach towards leveling the federal government’s balance sheet. Obama expressed a need for simplifying the tax code and raising the rates on the highest earners. He called for a “debt fail-safe” trigger, mandating Congress to pass across-the-board spending reductions if the nation’s debt does not decline. He advocated stronger cuts in the Pentagon’s budget and less waste in Medicare. His remarks, in all, were positively received by Democrats and derided as partisan waste by Republicans. Yet build-up to the speech illustrated more than reactions to it. Capitol Hill officials, including the White House’s top allies, say they were left completely in the dark. No one, it appears, knew Obama would deliver an address until his top aide, David Plouffe, announced plans on the Sunday shows. Key aides were briefed on its content only days (if not hours) before the president took the stage. “Members and staffs had no idea what they were going to say until about four hours before the speech—three days after the speech was announced,” said a senior Senate Democratic aide. “It was pretty ham-handed in its roll out and members weren’t pleased.” The abundance of secrecy left the impression that White House officials came up with the idea for Obama’s speech at the eleventh hour in an effort to divert attention away from the debate raging in Congress. “They were scrambling to change the subject from the budget debacle and this was what they latched on to,” said the aide. Having failed to effectively brief members of Congress on the details of his plan, few lawmakers could therefore amplify the president’s message. Administration officials, for their part, steadfastly refute the idea that they simply “winged” it. According to one Obama aide, the president and his team decided in December that he would have to “lay out a comprehensive plan” for deficit reduction “after the FY2011 funding debate had completed.” Another White House official described the planning as even more specific, asserting, “Its been on the schedule for the Wednesday after the [continuing resolution avoiding a government shut down] was resolved for months now.” Because a vote on the continuing resolution was delayed on several occasions, the date of the speech remained, consistently, in flux. According to these individuals, the President’s staff had been considering university locations near or in Washington, D.C. for venue well before the speech was announced, with an eye toward delivering subsequent deficit-focused addresses outside the nation’s capital the following week. Michelle Sherrard, a spokesman for George Washington University, did not have a specific date for when the administration first contacted the university. She noted only that “The White House and GW regularly communicate about the possibility of hosting upcoming events on campus.” One administration aide defended congressional outreach, adding, “Throughout this process the President’s team has been in touch with leaders on the Hill, including both the Gang of Six [Senators meeting on their own deficit proposal] and Congressman [Paul] Ryan, and other stakeholders like the deficit commission chairs.” “In touch,” however, remains an inherently subjective phrase. As late as the Tuesday night before the speech was delivered, one extremely close White House ally professed to not having a clue about what would be said. “I don’t think they have briefed anyone and I am not sure the speech is done!” In fact, the speech wasn’t done. According to an administration aide, “the president worked until late in the night Tuesday, and put final touches on the speech on Wednesday morning.” Why did it take so long to finalize the details on a speech planned months in advance? For one, various areas of policy disagreement within the White House remained unresolved. In particular, officials familiar with the discussions say, Obama’s economic advisers warned against calling for a final balance of three dollars in spending reductions for every dollar generated in additional tax revenue, arguing the ratio was too explicit. Medicare reform sparked another element of disagreement. In his speech, the president proposed strengthening the Independent Payment Advisory Board, a group tasked with finding excessive and unnecessary spending within the system. Several aides wanted him to further outline specific ways to empower Medicare to negotiate over drug prices and medical procedures. In the end, Obama kept the speech broad, leaving Democrats officials on the Hill largely pleased. Several members of Congress also expressed agitation with the timing. Obama’s speech came after Rep. Paul Ryan (R-Wisc.) unveiled his own budget plan , giving his own remarks the veneer of a presidential response rather than executive leadership. Moreover, by calling for additional talks on deficit reform, the president miffed lawmakers either working on or invested in the Gang of Six talks currently ongoing. “The fact that the president has come out with his vision should be a positive reinforcement, another indication that this is important work that needs to be done,” Press Secretary Jay Carney said on Monday in response to complaints Obama stepped into Gang of Six territory. “And the fact that the President built his vision by borrowing in many ways from the recommendations of the bipartisan commission on which a number of members of that Senate group sat… gives a good sign, a good indication, of the fact that there is a building consensus around the way to approach this problem. So he thinks it’s very complementary to the process.” But many Democrats don’t want “complementary.” The Gang of Six already gives progressives angina, with the Democratic members of the group — including Sens. Dick Durbin (D-Ill.) and Mark Warner (D-Va.) — openly supporting elements of Social Security reform and even extending the Bush tax cuts. Should the president end up complementing or even embracing their approach, the worry goes, no progressive counterpoint to Ryan’s proposal will emerge. Instead, the distance between the Gang of Six and the Republican alternative will become the “compromise.” The White House has been noticeably tight-lipped about its thoughts on Gang of Six conversations, perhaps because scarce information exists as to what, exactly, the lawmakers are discussing. But signs of mounting concern permeate both on and off the Hill. When Vice President Joe Biden hosts a deficit reduction meeting with members of Congress at the Blair House on May 5, no Democratic lawmakers from the Gang of Six will be present. Instead, Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid (D-Nev.) is sending Finance Committee Chairman Max Baucus (D-Mont.) and Appropriations Committee Chairman Dan Inouye (D-Hawaii). Gang of Six member and Budget Committee Chair Kent Conrad (D-N.D.), one Democratic Senate aide relayed, was more than “irked” by his absence from the talks. Other Democrats voiced relief over the Gang of Six absence, speculating that both Reid and Sen. Chuck Schumer (D-N.Y.) were growing wary about the bipartisan group’s role. Gang of Six criticism is more intense off the Hill, with several of the nation’s most powerful union groups laying down crisp lines in the sand over elements they consider non-negotiable, such as ending tax cuts for the richest Americans. “Any plan to reduce the deficit that does not include ending the Bush tax cuts — a clear contributor to the deficit — is not a serious plan,” said Michelle Nawar, Director for Legislation at the Service Employees. “Every middle class family should be offended if Congress calls on them to bear the burden for reducing a deficit they did not cause while continuing to handout more tax giveaways to millionaires and corporations. We’ll see what the Gang of Six proposes, but how could any Democrat support a plan that cuts needed services for seniors and children while continuing these expensive tax giveaways?” Nawar’s question presumably extends to Obama, who has punted once on letting the Bush tax rates for the wealthy expire (they will now lapse at the end of 2012). A far more immediate and pressing concern, however, is whether the administration’s attempt to jump ahead of the deficit debate will yield the type of political fruits the White House envisions. The president’s advisers — chiefly, former Senior Communications Aide David Axelrod –- have long seen benefits to deficit hawk-ery in private polling. But the payoff this time around has been limited: An ABC News/Washington Post poll released on Tuesday showed that 57 percent of Americans disapproved of the way Obama is handling the economy. “I think they were concerned about how to give the president credibility on this issue and how to win over some independents,” one top party strategist said of Obama’s speech on Wednesday. “The irony is it won’t give him any. He could have offered $10 billion more in cuts for the CR and it would never be good enough for the GOP.” Jen Bendery contributed to this report.

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Jim Millstein: Threats of Default Aren’t Free

April 14, 2011

Can you imagine the howls that would come out of the Republican side of the aisle if the Democratic leadership in the House and the Senate threatened not to increase the debt limit until the Republicans committed in advance to a roll back of the Bush tax cuts for the wealthiest one percent of Americans? Glenn Beck might even stay on Fox News for another season just to ride that huge wave of outrage. Yet, like the madman holding a gun to his own head and screaming: “Stop or I’ll shoot”, House Speaker John Boehner and Minority Leader Mitch McConnell recently indicated that there would be no increase of the debt ceiling without a commitment to substantial spending cuts from the Democratic side of the aisle, thereby threatening to put the Federal Government in default on its debt obligations in the very near future. So, let’s, for a moment, take Speaker Boehner and Leader McConnell at their word and assume that they’re prepared to allow the government to default on its debt. What then? First, since US Treasuries are a primary holding of virtually every major bank, every major insurance company, every major pension fund, and most money market funds in the world, a default by the federal government would surely plunge the entire global financial system back into crisis, making the fallout from the bankruptcy of Lehman Brothers in September 2008 look like a walk in the park on a sunny day. And since the federal debt is held in substantial part by Americans, a default would destroy the retirement accounts and savings of hundreds of millions of people throughout the country. The loss of wealth American households would experience would make the bursting of the housing bubble feel like a pin prick. While some Republicans have indulged the fantasy that we could stay under the debt ceiling and avoid a default by giving priority to interest payments over everything else in the federal budget, such an approach would require we immediately eliminate the $1.5 trillion difference between the government’s current revenues and its current expenditures. That sounds like a pretty good outcome until you realize just what would have to happen — and happen quickly. Let’s suppose we eliminated that $1.5 trillion solely by reducing government spending, as the Republicans would have it. To close that budget gap without any borrowing or new taxes, every major category of federal spending would have to be reduced by 40 percent. Not over the next few years, but right now, before the end of June. And that doesn’t mean just cutting foreign aid or the salaries of federal employees which represent relatively small portions of the overall budget. You’d have to go where the real money is: Defense, Medicare, Medicaid and Social Security. So, for example, take this year’s $700 billion budget for the the Defense Department and the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan: $280 billion would have to be immediately cut. Or take the $800 billion budgeted this year for Medicare and Medicaid: $320 billion of it would have to be immediately cut. And on top of all of that, cut 40 percent out of every Social Security check starting in July. You get the idea. The number of veterans, soldiers, seniors, students, teachers, doctors and nurses marching on Washington to protest those cuts would make the Tea Party look like, well, a tea party. So, the threat that Speaker Boehner and Leader McConnell would put our nation into default simply isn’t credible, because it would lead to the end of the Republican Party as we know it. The budget constraints that the Congress is now confronting are real. Resolving them requires leadership on both sides. It also requires an open discussion about how to balance tax increases and spending cuts so as to put the country back on a fiscally sustainable path without undermining the key commitments we have made to another that make this country the envy of all others in the world. Defaulting on the existing debt, however, would only make our budget problems worse. God forbid the markets start to fear that the Republicans are serious with their default threats. That would lead to a permanent increase in the interest rates the government has to pay to borrow money. To cover that increase in interest expense, even deeper cuts in other parts of the budget or even higher tax increases would be required. Threats of default aren’t free in the credit markets: if the Republicans succeed in spooking the bond market, it will make an already difficult set of choices even harder. So, it’s time to stop the reckless posturing, increase the debt ceiling and get down to the real business of putting the country on a sustainable fiscal path. Playing a game of chicken with the full, faith, and credit of the United States is simply irresponsible. Jim Millstein was, until February 2011, Chief Restructuring Officer at the US Department of the Treasury. He was previously Head of Restructuring and Managing Director at Lazard.

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Pat Choate: Banks Still Acting Badly

April 13, 2011

The big banks are still mugging America. They do so because they can, and they can because they pour tens of millions of dollars into our Presidential and Congressional elections. Their political contributions politically exempt them from our criminal laws and serious regulatory oversight. As William Grieder notes in The Nation , they are “too big to prosecute.” Since the financial crisis began more than three years ago, not a single financial executive has gone to jail, despite massive evidence of criminal fraud. When the evidence of criminal activity is so overwhelming that the Justice Department must act, the Administrations of George W. Bush and Barack Obama have chosen to defer prosecutions and impose civil fines that are rarely more than wrist slaps. The Bush Administration settled 108 such corporate cases through deferment and the Obama Administration did 53 in its first two years. Grieder points out that the refusal of the Bush and Obama Administration’s to hold corporate executives accountable, with no prospect of serious jail time or heavy personal fines merely continues the status quo… “so the corporate crooks will do it again.” In fact, the crooks never stopped “doing it.” Scott Pelley reported in a recent a 60 Minutes episode (4/1/2011) on how the same banks that got most of the TARP bailout monies were forging mortgage recall documents. When the big banks engineered the devastating mortgaged back securities that created the Great Recession several years ago, they sped the processing by eliminating most of the paperwork. When the economy collapsed and millions of jobless workers were unable to pay their mortgages, the banks began unraveling these securities and quickly discovered they could not prove their ownership. What did the banks do? They hired companies, such as one named Docx, that hired low-level unemployed workers off the street, paid them $10 per hour, sat them at a table, and handed them a pen which the workers used to sign phony mortgage documents as fast as they could. To speed up the signing, one of these processing mills used the short and easy to sign name of a worker named Linda Green . All the signers wrote her name again and again on these phony mortgage documents at a personal pace of 4,000 signatures per day. Among the papers they signed was the vital assignment of mortgage, which transferred the home ownership to the bank. The phony documents identified these robo-signers as vice presidents and executives of various banks. Low wage notaries then validated the signatures. The owners of many homes seized with these fake documents were not in default. Some owners owed nothing. Yet, their homes were seized and they were thrown into the street. The Attorney Generals in 50 states are investigating these big banks, with the prospect of major criminal and civil lawsuits forthcoming. Once again, however, the banks are getting the Obama Administration and Congress to let them off the hook. The U.S. Treasury is negotiating a deal with the banks in which they neither admit nor deny guilt, agree to better train their workers and henceforth to obey the law. The banks’ obvious goal is to preempt any state indictments. Federal indictments are not a worry to them. There is more. Congressional friends of the banks have tucked another bailout into the American Invents Act (the patent bill) that zipped through the Senate in March with a 95-5 vote and now awaits action in the House. Billions of dollars are at stake. Many of the major banks have been using patented business methods without permission of the patent owners or payment to them. The financial industry has persuaded the Obama Administration and the Senate and House Judiciary leaders to retroactively change Patent Office rules in a way that makes it impossible for these patent owners to enforce their Constitutional rights against the banks’ infringement. In effect, the Congress is voiding issued patents on behalf of the big banks. As all this suggests, America’s big banks are still out of control. In today’s corrupt political environment, the only way for We the People to stop this predation is to vote out of office those in the banks’ pay, whether it be a president, a senator or a representative. A slow and difficult process, for sure, but ultimately an effective one.

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Heather McGhee: President’s Deficit Plan Recaptures the Fiscal High Road — Almost

April 13, 2011

Today, the President of the United States laid out his vision for restoring fiscal responsibility in a way that does not impede our fledgling recovery or violate the core inter-generational promises made during the American Century. Demos applauds the President’s leadership. First, the positives. The President reaffirmed his commitment to the type of public investment that has made America great, such as education, infrastructure, and encouraging innovations in energy and science. He also recognized that we can no longer justify a defense budget that has contributed to 2 out of every 3 dollars in increased discretionary spending since 2001 . He addressed one of the real drivers of long-term debt — health care costs — by targeting the source of cost increases, instead of simply targeting the government or individual payers of these increases, as the Ryan plan does. His courageous approach — strengthening the Independent Payment Advisory Board and allowing more generics competition and government bargaining–directly challenges the insurance and drug lobby who hold far too much sway in Washington. The President also offered a strong counter to the worst elements of the conservative budget orthodoxy. He either explicitly or implicitly rejected the most economically damaging proposals, including: continuation of the Bush tax slashing ideology that brought us a job-growth-free decade; an 18 percent GDP spending cap that would guarantee our international decline; and privatization and block granting of Medicare and Medicaid. Unfortunately, the President has retreated from the urgency of joblessness. He resisted proposals that would send us back into Recession, yes, but where is the plan to put 29 million under- and unemployed Americans back to work ? He rejected the right-wing war against the American government, yes, but when will he wage war against economic inequality and middle-class decline, for which government is the most powerful weapon? With federal tax receipts at the lowest share of the economy in three generations — and corporate taxes at a record low , any legitimate deficit plan must raise considerable revenue. The President does not appear to have that intention. His plan embraces the same basic bad math of the Bowles-Simpson plan: $3 in spending cuts for every $1 in additional tax revenue. Fortunately, the inclusion of interest payments with spending will provide more balance than the economically unsound Bowles-Simpson approach. Nevertheless, we must admit that we have a revenue problem, and will in fact need more spending to rebuild a middle-class economy. We simply cannot power a 21st century, high-speed rail economy on a 20th century steam engine tax base. Let us be clear: the conservative fiscal vision is austerity for the vast majority of Americans and publicly-financed charity for a narrow elite. This cannot stand, and the President made that clear. Here are some ways that policymakers can improve on the strong foundation the President set today: • Look Beyond the Bush Tax Cuts . Given our record inequality and urgent national needs, why should we stop at simply reversing the Bush tax cuts on the highest income bracket, a group that is diverse in and of itself? The President should ask that those who benefit most in our society contribute much more to its survival. New, higher tax brackets should be created for millionaires, billionaires and wealthy heirs, along the lines of Rep. Schakowsky’s Fairness in Taxation Act. • “Corporate Citizens” Should Pay Like Citizens . The President reiterated his call to close corporate tax loopholes, but without raising more revenue, echoing the business lobby’s false complaint about the statutory rate’s effect on economic competitiveness. The truth is, corporations now account for just 9 percent of federal tax revenue (down from 27 percent in 1955) and contribute a percentage of taxes to our GDP that is lower than all other industrialized nations. Corporate tax reform must ask for more from American business. • Commit to Retirement Security . With employers failing to provide adequate private pensions, Social Security benefits will need to be higher for most future retirees to sustain today’s living standards. Young workers may be relieved that their benefits won’t be “slashed” in the President’s vision, but without major reform of our private retirement system , any decrease is unacceptable (and unnecessary, as higher payroll taxes could fund sustained benefit levels). In other, less-reported news, the Congressional Progressive Caucus unanimously voted yesterday to release its own alternative budget. The CPC’s fiscal plan delivers a bolder, more coherent vision of what’s broken in the economy, who broke it, and how to fix it.

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Obama Jumping Into Debt Debate

April 13, 2011

WASHINGTON — President Barack Obama, jumping into a debt-reduction debate that will help define the rest of his term, will outline his ideas Wednesday for curbing the costs of Medicare and Medicaid and taking other steps to turn around the nation’s spending habits. Ahead of his effort, House Republicans warned they would not consider any plan that includes tax increases. Obama will give congressional leaders of both parties a preview of his speech, scheduled for delivery at 1:30 p.m. EDT Wednesday, during a private meeting at the White House on Wednesday morning. The White House has refused to discuss details of the speech, but Obama is expected to call for a “balanced” approach of shared burdens that takes on entitlement programs, defense spending and taxes. The president’s move also is intended to serve as a counter to a major Republican proposal from Rep. Paul Ryan of Wisconsin. Ryan’s plan would seek to cut more than $5 trillion in spending over the next decade, built around a drastic reshaping of Medicare and other federal safety-net entitlement programs, and would lower the tax rate for the nation’s top payers. “The point is that balance is essential,” Obama spokesman Jay Carney said. “What is not acceptable in the president’s view – and we believe in the American people’s view – is a plan that achieves serious deficit reduction only by asking for sacrifice from the middle class, seniors, the disabled and the poor, and while providing substantial tax cuts to the very well off.” In a divided Washington, where a budget standoff between Obama and House Republicans nearly led to a government shutdown last week, the broader debt debate now begins in earnest. It is expected to shape both the course of legislation and a presidential campaign that already has Obama seeking a second term. Obama has renewed his call to end the Bush-era tax cuts for households earning more than $250,000 a year or individuals earning above $200,000. The White House has insisted that every aspect of the government must be considered as part of a serious discussion on debt, including revenues, which tends to be Washington-speak for taxes. “If the president begins the discussion by saying we must increase taxes on the American people – as his budget does – my response will be clear: Tax increases are unacceptable and a nonstarter,” House Speaker John Boehner, R-Ohio, said. “We don’t have deficits because Americans are taxed too little. We have deficits because Washington spends too much.” The top Senate Republican, Mitch McConnell of Kentucky, said Tuesday: “Hopefully the president will put forward a plan that doesn’t just pay lip service to the commitments we’ve made to seniors and the poor, but which acknowledges the unique problems that this generation and a rising generation of Americans face.” The ballooning year-by-year deficit has pushed the national debt above a staggering $14 trillion. The administration is clamoring for Congress to raise the government’s borrowing authority above $14.3 trillion to avoid a government default on its debt, but Republicans want spending cuts in return. That showdown helps sets the context for Obama’s speech. Obama is expected to meet at the White House with Boehner, McConnell, House Majority Leader Eric Cantor, R-Va., and Sen. Jon Kyl, R-Ariz., and top Democrats, too: Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid of Nevada, Sen. Dick Durbin of Illinois, House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi of California and House Minority Whip Steny Hoyer of Maryland.

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Sen. Don Riegle: Pay Back the Money Borrowed From Social Security

April 5, 2011

Throughout its 75 year history, Social Security has provided critical economic security to millions of retirees, families, children and the disabled. Social Security is paid for by the dedicated contributions of workers and their employers, has administrative costs of less than one percent, and since it cannot borrow to fund its operations, Social Security does not contribute to the deficit. No wonder that Americans from all walks of life consistently and overwhelmingly support our nation’s most successful social insurance program — a level of support that is not achieved by other governmental programs. Social Security currently has a $2.6 trillion surplus which has been building up since the 1983 amendments and is intended to help absorb the retirement of the baby boomers. This surplus is invested in US Treasury securities that are backed by the full faith and credit of the US government. According to the Social Security Trustees 2010 report , Social Security can pay full benefits until 2037, at which time, if nothing were done to strengthen its financing, Social Security would still be able to pay about 78 percent of benefits. This quarter of a century means there is time to strengthen its financing without cutting benefits for future beneficiaries. The American people will insist that Congress do what is needed for the program to pay full benefits and protect these benefits they were promised and have earned. Social Security Opponents Use Fear to Manipulate Debate Opponents of Social Security have been working for many years to tell a much different story about Social Security in order to influence how the media and Washington decision makers view it. One example of this is Wall Street insider Pete Peterson who has dedicated $1 billion of his Wall Street fortune to the destruction of Social Security as we know it. Peterson is joined in his efforts by other wealthy special interests that have much to gain if Social Security is cut or eliminated. Despite the overwhelming public support for Social Security and the critical retirement, survivors and disability insurance it provides to millions of Americans, Peterson and his Wall Street friends want to reduce Social Security’s protections and force average working Americans to put their future retirement, life and disability security in the hands of Wall Street — the same crowd that nearly caused a collapse of our economy and pushed the country into the Great Recession. It would be very unpopular for the opponents to simply state that their goal is to reduce or eliminate Social Security, requiring politicians to eat from a poison apple. Instead, the opponents try to create false fear about the future of Social Security by making it seem as if the program contributes to the nation’s budget deficit and debt. The same Wall Street firms that needed the taxpayers to bail them out — and individuals like Peterson who took advantage of a tax loophole that enabled him to pay taxes on his Wall Street profits at the same rate as a janitor cleaning his office — are conducting a massive lobbying campaign to reduce Social Security protections for working Americans and their families by claiming it is a way to lower the federal budget deficit. The opponents’ tactic of setting up Social Security as a false culprit in the deficit problem diverts attention away from the real causes of the deficit — two wars not paid for, the Bush tax cuts for the wealthy, and the costs associated with the economic crisis, such as the Wall Street bailout. If the opponents of Social Security are able to cut Social Security’s benefits, they will accomplish two objectives: (1) reducing Social Security protections while driving retirees into the hands of Wall Street; and (2) hiding the real causes of the deficit and the debt from honest budgetary scrutiny. A look at their claims about Social Security and the budget reveals the falsehoods they continue to promote. Social Security — the most fiscally responsible program Social Security is self-financed, cannot borrow, spends less than one percent on its administrative costs, has a $2.6 trillion surplus which will continue to grow for a number of years, and is off-budget. It does not contribute to the federal deficit or the debt. The Social Security surplus is invested in US Treasuries which enables the federal government to borrow less from other sources. The government borrows these Social Security funds to pay for other government spending — but is obligated to pay interest on these borrowings — and pay back the borrowed funds in full when they are needed by Social Security for benefit payments. Opponents of Social Security obscure the real facts, but they are easy to see in the graph below. The planned build-up of the Social Security Trust Funds since 1983 makes it clear that Social Security has a $2.6 trillion surplus today that will continue to grow: The Federal Budget — Red Ink A look at the federal budget over the same time frame reveals a starkly different picture — many years of deficits, with only a few years of surplus — a surplus that disappeared during the G.W. Bush Administration. In 1993, a Democratic Congress and President Clinton, without a single Republican vote in either the House or Senate, enacted a budget plan that put it on a path to elimination of the deficits –and brought the budget into balance, and then later into surplus. In his 1999 State of the Union address, with the budget then in balance, Clinton called for the Social Security surplus investments to be held in a special reserve and not used for other government spending. As a candidate for president, Vice President Gore made a central part of his campaign a plan to put Social Security’s surplus in a “lockbox” to keep its assets from being used for other government spending. When the Supreme Court decided the 2000 election in favor of Bush, however, a very different view of the Social Security surplus became operative. During the same time period in which Social Security was building a surplus the federal budget was more often in deficit than not, as shown below: The federal budget surplus of 2000 quickly disappeared when Bush took office, turning into a sea of red ink. Bush borrowed heavily from the Social Security surplus to help obscure the fact that federal taxes were not bringing in enough revenue to pay for the wars and his tax cuts. Given this history and the fact that Social Security has not and does not contribute to the deficit, Social Security should not be “on the table” for deficit reduction now. In fact, it should not be part of the deficit debate at all. The Costs Imposed on Social Security by Wall Street’s Failures In a recent paper on deficit reduction for the Roosevelt Institute, Nobel prize-winner and Columbia University Professor, Economist Joseph Stiglitz noted about the Wall Street banks: “Even if the banks were to pay back every dime that they received, they would not have come close to compensating the country for the full costs (now in the trillions of dollars) that they have imposed on others. ” These costs were imposed on Social Security as well — Wall Street’s failures have increased Social Security costs while also reducing revenues to Social Security. Social Security revenues were reduced by 1.13 percent of payroll from its annual balance in 2010 — more than $60 billion in one year — from what the Trustees projected last year “due to a deeper recession and slower recovery than had been expected.” This does not reflect the costs to Social Security in 2008-09, nor does it reflect future costs of continued high unemployment, which reduces revenue, and higher benefit payments to beneficiaries forced to take benefits sooner than they otherwise had planned. As a result of the Great Recession triggered by the economic bubble Wall Street created, Social Security revenues were less in 2010 than benefits paid out. This required Social Security to use a portion of its interest earnings on the surplus to pay benefits — an event that would have happened several years in the future were it not for the recent economic downturn. Opponents have used the negative impact of the economy on Social Security to make it seem as if Social Security was failing, as if it had fallen into a deficit of its own. These claims are false. The interest the government owes to the Social Security Trust Fund for the funds it has borrowed from Social Security represents a legal obligation of the government. Interest earned on Social Security investments has always been used to pay Social Security benefits. But opponents pretend the interest should not be counted as savings that add to Social Security’s annual balance. This makes no sense. When Social Security claims the interest it has earned to pay benefits, the government is required to pay back the interest it owes to Social Security. This is what the opponents don’t like. Social Security did not create the economic problem or the budget deficit. Wall Street and other government spending did. But the opponents of Social Security don’t want to pay back all the money that was borrowed from Social Security, including the interest earned. Instead, they want to cut Social Security benefits. The taxpayers of America bailed out the banks — wouldn’t it be fair now to ask the banks to pay back what they have cost Social Security? A tax on financial transactions and a tax on Wall Street bonuses, with revenues dedicated to Social Security, would pay back to Social Security and its contributors what has been taken from them. Pay Back Social Security — The Government Has Borrowed More from Social Security than any Other Entity or Foreign Government Another argument made by Social Security opponents to raise fear about the national debt is how much our government has borrowed from China. They never mention how much our government has borrowed from Social Security. In fact, the government has borrowed more from the Social Security surplus than it has from any other source in the world, including China. As a result, Social Security now “owns” nearly 18 percent of the federal debt, making it the largest single holder of US debt. The government owes almost twice as much to Social Security as it does to China and Hong Kong. Why aren’t the opponents worried about paying back Social Security — why aren’t they talking about repaying this debt to the American people? According to the U.S. Treasury Department’s “Monthly Statement of the Public Debt of the United States” (9.30.10), the total debt was $13.562 trillion and was held as follows: US Holders of Debt 42.1 % — US Individuals and Institutions 17.9 % — Social Security Trust Fund 6.0 % — US Civil Service Retirement Fund 2.1 % — US Military Retirement Fund Foreign Holders of Debt 11.7 % — Oil Exporting Countries 9.5 % — China and Hong Kong 6.3 % — Japan 1.4 % — United Kingdom 1.3 % — Brazil 1.6 % — All other foreign countries House Republican Majority Leader Eric Cantor (R-VA) provided some insight to their Social Security views in a recent NPR interview when he was talking about Social Security and said, “We are going to have to come to grips with the fact that these programs cannot exist if we want America to be what we want it to be.” If the American public were asked about what priority should be placed on the debt owed to Social Security, we have no doubt that they would resoundingly say: “Pay Us Back — pay back the money borrowed from Social Security!” Former Senator Donald W. Riegle , Democrat, represented Michigan for 18 years in the US Senate and 10 years in the House of Representatives. Lori Hansen served on the Social Security Advisory Board and was a Technical Assistant to Robert M. Ball, former Commissioner of Social Security, in his capacity as a member of the 1982-83 Social Security Commission.

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Michelle Chen: Anti-Muslim Bias Examined on the Hill, Still Hidden in the Workplace

April 2, 2011

A few weeks ago, Rep. Peter King of Long Island stirred up simmering prejudices with congressional hearings on Islamic “radicalization” in the U.S., which yielded little actual information about security risks and spread plenty of misinformation about Muslim communities. This past week, Sen. Dick Durbin of Illinois tried to counterbalance King’s blatherfest with a hearing on Muslim Americans’ civil rights . And this time, we did learn something: the bias against Muslims takes many forms other than police harassment, unjust detention, or even the occasional bomb plot . Pervasive anti-Muslim and anti-Arab discrimination impacts people’s lives at the intersection of workplace rights and civil liberties. Employment discrimination surfaced as a key issue during the hearing—and a textbook example of the low-grade alienation that Muslim, South Asian and Arab communities encounter every day. Sen. Durbin noted in his introductory remarks , “Some have even questioned the premise of today’s hearing: that we should protect the civil rights of American Muslims. Such inflammatory speech from prominent public figures creates a fertile climate for discrimination.” As if on cue,

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FDIC Proposes A Solution For ‘Too Big To Fail’

March 15, 2011

(Reuters) – Creditors who help authorities liquidate a troubled financial firm would be among those paid off first among unsecured creditors, according to a proposal issued by the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. Bank and financial services groups have complained that more clarity is needed about how unsecured creditors will be treated under the government’s new authority to seize large, failing companies. “This is an important step in providing certainty for the market in this new process,” FDIC Chairman Sheila Bair said on Tuesday. The liquidation authority is designed to avoid a repeat of 2008, when the Bush administration bailed out American International Group and other firms, but not Lehman Brothers. Lehman’s bankruptcy virtually froze capital markets. It was a major part of last year’s Dodd-Frank financial reform law and the FDIC would be responsible for carrying out the liquidation. The rule will be out for 60 days of public comment. At the top of the list for who or what will be paid off first are any debts the FDIC or receiver took on as part of the cost of seizing a firm, administrative expenses, money owed the Treasury and money owed to employees for such things as retirement benefits. Further down the list are general creditors. The lower an unsecured creditor sits on the payment priority list the less likely it is they will receive any of what they are owed by the failed firm. Bank and financial services groups want the new authority to resemble the bankruptcy process as much as possible because creditors are familiar with that system. The rule also would allow, as required by the Dodd-Frank law, the government to “clawback” any compensation senior executives or directors received in the two years before an institution was seized, if it is determined they are “substantially responsible” for the failure. If it is determined that the executive or director was engaged in fraud, the government could seek more than two years worth of compensation. The proposal also lays out how a creditor could contest any decisions about whether, or how much, they get paid during a liquidation and ultimately they could take their case to federal court. (Reporting by Dave Clarke, Editing by Dave Zimmerman and Tim Dobbyn) Copyright 2011 Thomson Reuters. Click for Restrictions .

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Simon Johnson: "A Healthy Financial System Cannot Be Built on the Expectation of Bailouts"

March 5, 2011

Testimony submitted to the Congressional Oversight Panel, ” Hearing on the TARP’s Impact on Financial Stability ,” Friday, March 4, 2011. I. Summary 1) The financial crisis is not over, in the sense that its impact persists and even continues to spread. Employment remains more than 5 percent below its pre-crisis peak, millions of homeowners are still underwater on their mortgages, and the negative fiscal consequences – at national, state, and local level – remain profound. 2) To the extent that a full evaluation is possible today, the financial crisis produced a pattern of rapid economic decline and slow employment recovery quite unlike any post-war recession – it looks much more like a mini-depression of the kind the US economy used to experience in the 19th century. In addition, the fiscal costs of the disaster in our banking system so far amount to roughly a 40 percentage point increase in net federal government debt held by the private sector, i.e., roughly a doubling of outstanding debt. 3) In this context, TARP played a significant role preventing the mini-depression from becoming a full-blown Great Depression, primarily by providing capital to financial institutions that were close to insolvency or otherwise under market pressure. 4) But part of the cost is to distort further incentives at the heart of Wall Street. Neil Barofsky, the Special Inspector General for the Troubled Assets Relief Program put it well in his latest quarterly report , which appeared in late January, emphasizing: “perhaps TARP’s most significant legacy, the moral hazard and potentially disastrous consequences associated with the continued existence of financial institutions that are ‘too big to fail.’” 5) Adjustments to our regulatory framework, including the Dodd-Frank financial reform legislation, have not fixed the core problems that brought us to bring of complete catastrophe in fall 2008. Powerful people at the heart of our financial system still have the incentive and ability to take on large amounts of reckless risk – through borrowing large amounts relative to their equity. When things go well, a few CEOs and a small number of others get huge upside. 6) When things go badly, society, ordinary citizens, and taxpayers get the downside. This is a classic recipe for financial instability. 7) Our six largest bank holding companies currently have assets valued at just over 63 percent of GDP (end of Q4, 2010). This is up from around 55% of GDP before the crisis (e.g., 2006) and no more than 17% of GDP in 1995. 8) With assets ranging from around $800 billion to nearly $2.5 trillion, these bank holding companies are perceived by the market as “too big to fail,” meaning that they are implicitly backed by the full faith and credit of the US government. They can borrow more cheaply than their competitors and hence become larger. 9) In public statements, top executives in these very large banks discuss their plans for further global expansion – presumably increasing their assets further while continuing to be highly leveraged. 10) There is nothing in the Basel III accord on capital requirements that should be considered encouraging. Independent analysts have established beyond a reasonable doubt that substantially raising capital requirements would not be costly from a social point of view (e.g., see the work of Anat Admati of Stanford University and her colleagues). 11) But the financial sector’s view has prevailed – they argue that raising capital requirements will slow economic growth. This argument is supported by some misleading so-called “research” provided by the Institute for International Finance (a lobby group). The publicly-available analytical work of the official sector on this issue (from the Bank for International Settlements and the New York Fed) is very weak – if this is the basis for policymaking decisions, there is serious trouble ahead. 12) Even more disappointing is the failure of the official sector to engage with its expert critics on the issue of capital requirements. This certainly conveys the impression that the regulatory capture of the past 30 years (as documented, for example, in 13 Bankers ) continues today – and may even have become more entrenched. 13) There is an insularity and arrogance to policymakers around capital requirements that is distinctly reminiscent of the Treasury-Fed-Wall Street consensus regarding derivatives in the late 1990s – i.e., officials are so convinced by the arguments of big banks that they dismiss out of hand any attempt to even open a serious debate. 14) Next time, when our largest banks get into trouble, they may be beyond “too big to fail”. As seen recently in Ireland, banks that are very big relative to an economy can become “too big to save” – meaning that while senior creditors may still receive full protection (so far in the Irish case), the fiscal costs overwhelm the government and push it to the brink of default. 15) The fiscal damage to the United States in that scenario would be immense, including through the effect of much higher long term real interest rates. It remains to be seen if the dollar could continue to be the world’s major reserve currency under such circumstances. The loss to our prestige, national security, and ability to influence the world in any positive way would presumably be commensurate. 16) In 2007-08, our largest banks – with the structures they had lobbied for and built – brought us to the verge of disaster. TARP and other government actions helped avert the worst possible outcome, but only by providing unlimited and unconditional implicit guarantees to the core of our financial system. This can only lead to further instability in what the Bank of England refers to as a ” doom loop “. II. TARP Compared 1) In the immediate policy response to any major financial crisis – involving a generalized loss of confidence in major lending institutions – there are three main goals: To stabilize the core banking system, To prevent the overall level of spending (aggregate demand) from collapsing, To lay the groundwork for a sustainable recovery. 2) IMF programs are routinely designed with these criteria in mind and are evaluated on the basis of: the depth of the recession and speed of the recovery, relative to the initial shock; the side-effects of the macroeconomic policy response, including inflation; and whether the underlying problems that created the vulnerability to panic are addressed over a 12-24 month horizon. 3) This same analytical framework can be applied to the United States since the inception of the Troubled Asset Relief Program (TARP). While there were unique features to the US experience (as is the case in all countries), the broad pattern of financial and economic collapse, followed by a struggle to recover, is quite familiar. 4) The overall US policy response did well in terms of preventing spending from collapsing. Monetary policy responded quickly and appropriately. After some initial and unfortunate hesitation on the fiscal front, the stimulus of 2009 helped to keep domestic spending relatively buoyant, despite the contraction in credit and large increase in unemployment. It was also consistent with parallel countercyclical fiscal moves in other countries. This was in the face of a massive global financial shock – arguably the largest the world has ever seen – and the consequences, in terms of persistently high unemployment, remain severe. But it could have been much worse. 5) There is no question that passing the TARP was the right thing to do. In some countries, the government has the authority to provide fiscal resources directly to the banking system on a huge scale, but in the United States this requires congressional approval. In other countries, foreign loans can be used to bridge any shortfall in domestic financing for the banking system, but the U.S. is too large to ever contemplate borrowing from the IMF or anyone else. 6) Best practice, vis-à-vis saving the banking system in the face of a generalized panic involves three closely connected pieces (see chapter 2 of 13 Bankers and the references provided there): Preventing banks from collapsing in an uncontrolled manner. This often involves at least temporary blanket guarantees for bank liabilities, backed by credible fiscal resources. The government’s balance sheet stands behind the financial system. In the canonical emerging market crises of the 1990s – Korea, Indonesia, and Thailand – where the panic was centered on the private sector and its financing arrangements, this commitment of government resources was necessary (but not sufficient) to stop the panic and begin a recovery. Taking over and implementing orderly resolution for banks that are insolvent. In major system crises, this typically involves government interventions that include revoking banking licenses, firing top management, bringing in new teams to handle orderly unwinding, and – importantly – downsizing banks and other failing corporate entities that have become too big to manage. In Korea, nearly half of the top 30 pre-crisis chaebol were broken up through various versions of an insolvency process (including Daewoo, one of the biggest groups). In Indonesia, leading banks were stripped from the industrial groups that owned them and substantially restructured. In Thailand, not only were more than 50 secondary banks (“Finance Houses”) closed, but around 1/3 of the leading banks were also put through a tough clean-up and downsizing process managed by the government. Addressing immediately underlying weaknesses in corporate governance that created potential vulnerability to crisis. In Korea, the central issue was the governance of nonfinancial chaebol and their relationship to the state-owned banks; in Indonesia, it was the functioning of family-owned groups, which owned banks directly; and in Thailand it was the close connections between firms, banks, and politicians. Of the three, Korea made the most progress and was rewarded with the fastest economic recovery. 7) If any country pursues (a) unlimited government financial support, while not implementing (b) orderly resolution for troubled large institutions, and refusing to take on (c) serious governance reform, it would be castigated by the United States and come under pressure from the IMF. Providing unlimited implicit guarantees does not help underpin financial stability. 8) At the heart of any banking crisis is a political problem – powerful people, and the firms they control, have gotten out of hand. Unless this is dealt with as part of the stabilization program, all the government has done is provide an unconditional bailout. That may be consistent with a short-term recovery, but it creates major problems for the sustainability of the recovery and for the medium-term. Serious countries do not do this. 9) As Larry Summers put it, in his 2000 Ely Lecture to the American Economic Association, “[I]t is certain that a healthy financial system cannot be built on the expectation of bailouts” ( American Economic Review , vol. 90, no. 2, p.13). 10) Seen in this context, TARP was badly mismanaged. In its initial implementation, the signals were mixed – particularly as the Bush administration sought to provide support to essentially insolvent banks without taking them over. Standard FDIC-type procedures, which are best practice internationally, were applied to small- and medium-banks, but studiously avoided for large banks. As a result, there was a great deal of confusion in financial markets about what exactly was the Bush/Paulson policy that lay behind various ad hoc deals. 11) The Obama administration, after some initial hesitation, used “stress tests” to signal unconditional support for the largest financial institutions. By determining officially that these firms did not lack capital – on a forward looking basis – the administration effectively communicated that it was pursuing a strategy of “regulatory forbearance” (much as the US did after the Latin American debt crisis of 1982). The existence of TARP, in that context, made the approach credible – but the availability of unconditional loans from the Federal Reserve remains the bedrock of the strategy. 12) The downside scenario in the stress tests was overly optimistic, with regard to credit losses in real estate (residential and commercial), credit cards, auto loans, and in terms of the assumed time path for unemployment. As a result, our largest banks remain undercapitalized, given the likely trajectory of the US and global economy. This is a serious impediment to a sustained rebound in the real economy – already reflected in continued tight credit for small- and medium-sized business. 13) Even more problematic is the underlying incentive to take excessive risk in the financial sector. With downside limited by government guarantees of various kinds, Andrew Haldane of the Bank of England bluntly characterizes our repeated boom-bailout-bust cycle as a ” doom loop .” 14) Exacerbating this issue, TARP funds supported not only troubled banks, but also the executives who ran those institutions into the ground. The banking system had to be saved, but specific banks could have wound down and leading bankers could and should have lost their jobs. Keeping these people and their management systems in place serious trouble for the future. 15) The implementation of TARP exacerbated the perception (and the reality) that some financial institutions are “Too Big to Fail.” This lowers their funding costs, probably by around 50 basis points (0.5 percentage points), enabling them to borrow more and to take more risk with higher leverage. 16) The Obama administration argues that regulatory reforms, including the Dodd-Frank Act and associated new rules, will rein in the financial sector and make it safer. Unfortunately, this assessment is not widely shared. 17) There was an opportunity to cap the size of our largest banks and limit their leverage, relative to the size of the economy. Unfortunately, the Brown-Kaufman to that effect was defeated on the floor of the Senate, 33-61, primarily because it was opposed by the US Treasury. (See BaselineScenario , which contains this quote from an interview in New York Magazine : “‘If enacted, Brown-Kaufman would have broken up the six biggest banks in America,’ says the senior Treasury official. ‘If we’d been for it, it probably would have happened. But we weren’t, so it didn’t.’”) 18) Regulation remains weak and many regulators are still captured by the ideology that big banks are good for the rest of the economy. Capital requirements will increase but are likely to remain below the level that Lehman had in the days before it failed (11.6 percent tier one capital). There will be no effective cap on the size of our biggest banks. They have an incentive to take on a great deal of leverage. This confers private benefits but great social costs – lowering economic growth, increasingly volatility, and making severe crises more likely. This article originally appeared on BaselineScenario .Testimony draws on joint work with Peter Boone, particularly “The Next Financial Crisis: It’s Coming and We Just Made It Worse ” (The New Republic, September 8, 2009), and James Kwak, including ” The Quiet Coup ” (The Atlantic, April, 2009) and 13 Bankers: The Wall Street Takeover and The Next Financial Meltdown .

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FDIC Chief: Too Big Banks Should Be ‘Downzied’

March 1, 2011

WASHINGTON (By Dave Clarke) – America’s big international banks should restructure their operations unless they can prove they can easily be broken up if they start toppling during a financial crisis, said U.S. regulator Sheila Bair. Multinationals will need to set up more foreign subsidiaries and realign their legal structures to make it easier for regulators to liquidate them if necessary, Bair told the Reuters Future Face of Finance Summit. “If they can’t show they can be resolved in a bankruptcy-like process… then they should be downsized now,” said Bair, chairman of the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. “There is no reason in the world why they should get some special treatment backstop that other businesses in this country don’t have,” Bair said. She also said investors need to accept that they will get lower returns from banks that hold higher capital and run safer operations. The aim of orderly liquidation is to avoid a repeat of 2008, when the Bush administration bailed out American International Group and other firms but not Lehman Brothers. Lehman’s bankruptcy virtually froze capital markets. The “living will” requirement mandated by last year’s Dodd-Frank financial reform law is also designed to end the idea that some firms are too big to fail. It would put the greatest burden on banks with complex businesses and big international presences such as Citigroup, Bank of America, JPMorgan Chase, Goldman Sachs and Morgan Stanley. By year’s end, big banks are expected to file with regulators their plans that would show how they can be closed down if they face a liquidity crisis. REGULATORS VS SHAREHOLDERS Bair said traditional deposit-taking banks in the United States probably can produce plans for a shutdown, but large multinationals with complex legal structures need to simplify. “The burden is on them initially to show us that they don’t think they need subsidiarization,” she said. “They need to give us a plan on how they can be resolved on an international basis without it.” A former general counsel at Bair’s agency said there may a tension between banks trying to meet these new regulations and maximizing shareholder value. “If you set up a business in a way to optimize ease of liquidation, that may not be the way to optimize running a successful business,” said John Douglas, now a Davis Polk attorney. Others said the changes may be more hassle than expensive and the changes would be legalistic. “This is just the latest in ‘Can you jump through this hoop backwards?’,” said Paul Miller, an analyst with FBR Capital Markets. Bair made clear she was not advocating that some large banks be broken up now — only that they need to make structural changes so that they could be broken up if they begin to fail. “Far too many of them, they manage their businesses along business lines as opposed to legal entity,” she said. INTERNATIONAL CHALLENGES Bair is now in the final months of her five-year term heading the FDIC, which she led during the tumult of the financial crisis. Her term ends in June. Bair said she hopes to have major aspects of new capital requirements and the liquidation regime in place before she departs. Among her concerns going forward is that new capital rules, known as Basel III, agreed to by leaders of the Group of 20 leading nations in November, will not be carried out with their intended strength. Banks have argued they are too strict and will impede their ability to lend and aid economic growth, an argument that may have traction with politicians. “I hope political leaders hold firm on this and understand that this is really something to protect their taxpayers and to protect their economies, this needs to occur,” she said. (Reporting by Dave Clarke in Washington; Additional reporting by Joe Rauch in Charlotte; Editing by Tim Dobbyn) thomsonreuters.com/products_services/media/brand_guidelines/legal_notice/” target=”_hplink”> Click for Restrictions .

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Scott Bittle and Jean Johnson: Fiscal Follies: How Long Can We Procrastinate?

February 21, 2011

There’s no shortage of evidence that humans procrastinate when faced with unpleasant experiences. Most of us know this personally. We’ve put in all-nighters in college or done our taxes on April 15 — or this year , April 18. Procrastination is a common enough failing, but it’s the one thing we really can’t afford when it comes to the federal budget debate. This is a problem that gets more fearsome and tougher to solve the longer we put it off. Yet procrastination is what we’re getting. Or worse, procrastination posing as bold action. President Obama’s budget request offered both spending cuts and tax increases to reduce our deficits by about $1 trillion, but offered little on the long-term problems of Medicare, Medicaid and Social Security. The House Republicans are celebrating their vote in favor of cutting $60 billion in federal spending this year, but given that (a) the deficit is expected to be $1.6 trillion and (b) there’s little chance the Senate and President Obama will go along, it may not amount to much. Meanwhile, the risks of inaction just get higher. Consider this: The bond market could de-friend us. For lo these many years, the United States has been able to spend more than it takes in because investors worldwide have been happy to keep lending to us by buying our Treasury bonds. Given the economic mess in Europe and how dicey things can be in the developing world, the U.S. government is still seen as a good place to park your money. But how long will that last if we can’t get our act together on the budget? The scariest part is that bond crises have a nasty habit of popping up out of the blue–like the iceberg materializing in front of the Titanic . In the terse words of David Brooks , “The bond markets are with you until the second they are against you. When the psychology shifts… the shock will be grievous: national humiliation, diminished power in the world, drastic cuts and spreading pain.” We are being warned. Sheila Bair heads the FDIC which closes banks when they’re about to go under, so she knows a thing or two about what happens when investors lose confidence. Bair is well-respected, and she’s worried : “Financial markets are already sending disquieting signals,” she recently wrote . She’s not the only one. The big bond rating company Moody’s has also made rumblings that our triple-A bond rating isn’t immutable. We could shell out nearly 5 trillion in interest in the next 10 years. According to the Congressional Budget Office, the country will spend about $4.8 trillion on interest payments between now and 2020 . And since the CBO is required to make its projections based on current law, these figures assume that the Bush tax cuts, all of them, will expire at the end of the two-year extension period. Almost no one thinks that will actually happen. In a decade, Medicare costs will top $1 trillion a year. All the budget wonks say health care is the undertow that could drown the budget — and the U.S. economy along with it. In 2010, the country spent $528 billion on Medicare and $280 billion on Medicaid. Together, that’s more than we spent on defense. But with rising health care costs and an aging population, those numbers are set to zoom skyward. By 2020, they will almost double to $1 trillion for Medicare and $458 billion for Medicaid. These numbers are truly fearsome, and no matter what you think of the Obama health plan, at least it included some cuts and cost containment provisions for Medicare. Repeal it without replacing those, and the costs for Medicare will be even higher. 2011 is the time to start. It’s encouraging that there are specific proposals on the table and that the political debate has finally begun. But with elections coming up in 2012–and with straw polls already dominating the news — we don’t have much time before the country goes into its quadrennial “all campaigning all the time” mode. Big national elections are generally not the best times for honest discussions about the budget, and besides everyone is distracted–candidates, journalists, and voters as well. But we still have a few months. We can’t solve the budget problem in that short a time, but if we don’t start, we could lose another two years while the risks continue to mount. Cutting federal spending or raising taxes won’t be pleasant. Local governments will not get money they’re used to getting, and companies and non-profits nationwide will lose government contracts and grants that have, in some cases, been keeping them afloat. There will be layoffs of government workers. The chorus of disapproval greeting President Obama and the Republicans now that they’ve started to get specific on spending cuts shows just how painful and controversial this will be. As for raising taxes, even the smallest uptick is bound to get millions of Americans upset. But there’s simply no way to do this without cutting spending and raising taxes. If we start now, at least we get to decide what to do when. If we wait until the country is up against a bond market crisis or other financial emergency, we’ll have to slash in every direction and raise taxes in one fell swoop. Surely we’re a sensible enough nation to avoid that. So now you can take your pick of advice from two great sources: There’s Lewis Carroll who wrote “‘The time has come’ the Walrus said, ‘to talk of many things.’” That’s true enough here. Or if you’re a boomer, maybe you’d rather go with “The time to hesitate is through ” from Jim Morrison and the Doors. Either way, the message is the same. This time, this year, we simply have to reduce the red ink.

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Miles Mogulescu: Wisconsin Is Ground Zero in America’s New Uprising Against the Corporate Oligarchy

February 18, 2011

About 30 years ago, shortly after finishing college, I produced and co-directed an Academy Award-nominated documentary called Union Maids about three courageous women who helped organize labor unions in 1930′s-’40s Chicago. It showed how unions were the product of struggle, organization, mass protests, and sometimes jail and beatings. I believed then, and I still believe now, that organized labor is the middle class’s best defense against an organized corporate oligarchy that has waged a one-sided 30-year long class war against the American middle class. That’s why I’m not surprised that the first stirrings of American resistance to the corporate oligarchy since Wall Street greed and malfeasance brought the American and world economy to its knees in 2008 are coming from the organized labor, centered today in the capital of Wisconsin, a state with one of the longest progressive traditions in America. And it’s why I’m not surprised that some of the first acts of newly minted right-wing Republican Governors are to try to destroy organized labor. When foreign dictators take power some of their first actions usually include either breaking unions or turning them into puppets of the state. And unions, like Solidarity in Poland, are often the first line of resistance that help bring down dictatorships. In Egypt, it was internet-savvy young professionals who helped initiate and organize the mass street protests against the Mubarak dictatorship. But the Egyptian army finally forced Mubarak out when labor unions also began to strike — particularly unions in the Suez Canal that control access to Egypt’s most valuable asset — thus threatening the economic interests of top army officers who own key sectors of the Egyptian economy. Remember that one of Ronald Reagan’s first acts as President was to break the air traffic controllers union. It was one of the first shots across the bow in a 30-year long war by America’s corporate oligarchy to transfer wealth from the working and middle classes to the rich and to deregulate the economy in order to increase the wealth and power power of the corporate and financial elite. As Jacob Hacker and Paul Pierson point out in their brilliant and essential new book, “Winner Take All Politics” , the share of income earned by the top 1% increased from 9% to 23.5% between 1974-2007 (the last year of available data). The share of the top 0.1% (the richest one in a thousand households) who collectively rake in more than $1 trillion a year, grew from 2.7% to 12.3%, a fourfold increase. From 1979-2007, the top 1%–the richest 1 in 100 households, received 36% of gains in household income and from 2001-2006, the heart of the Bush years, it was a startling 53%. “Even more striking, the top 0.1% — one out of every thousand households — received over 20 percent of all after-tax income gains between 1979 and 2005, compared with 13.5 percent enjoyed by the bottom 60 percent of households. If the total income growth of those years were a pie, in other words, the slice enjoyed by the roughly 300,000 people in the top tenth of 1 percent would be half again as large as the slice enjoyed by the roughly 180 million in the bottom 60 percent. Little wonder that the share of Americans who see the United States as divided between the ‘haves” and the ‘have nots’ has risen sharply over the past two decades — although…the economic winners are more accurately portrayed as the ‘have it alls,’ so concentrated have the gains been at the very, very top.” Equally important, Hacker and Pierson show how this staggering growth in the income of a tiny elite accompanied by a stagnation in the income of the majority of the middle class is not the inevitable result of economic markets. It’s result of a series of political decisions by corporate funded politicians to deregulate the economy while bankrupting government through tax cuts and ever less progressive taxation. This one-sided class war by the corporate oligarchy against the middle and working class has, until now, been met by remarkably little resistance from the latter. The progressive movement, such as there is one, has been primarily directed at electing Democrats who too often disappoint it by deregulating financial markets and passing “free” trade bills that reduce American jobs (Clinton) or appointing the same Wall Street friendly economic advisors who helped create the Great Recession and cutting deals with corporate special interests to pass inadequate health care and financial reforms (Obama). There’s been little of the mass progressive movements of the past which FDR said were necessary to “make him” (and other politicians) pass reforms like those of the New Deal. But perhaps enough is finally enough. By their extremism, right-wing Republicans may have woken a sleeping giant in organized labor that is just beginning to show its power in the streets of Wisconsin. It may be the beginning of a new mass movement of the middle and working class — both unionized and non-unionized — to take power back from organized corporate oligarchs and to restore a measure of social and economic equality to the nation. Just as what started Tunisia and Egypt is now spreading to Bahrain, Yemen and Libya, what started in Wisconsin may spread to Ohio, Illinois, New Jersey, California, and across the country. That’s why everyone who still believes in the American dream that your children can have a better life than you do should do everything they can to support the workers in Wisconsin. And that’s why it’s so vital that the union members in Wisconsin win their fight to keep their democratic rights to collectively bargain with their employers. Last week we were all Egyptians. This week we are all Wisconsin Badgers. On Wisconsin! On America!

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WATCH: Fannie CEO Explains Why He Deserves To Be Paid More Than Barack Obama

February 16, 2011

WASHINGTON (By Corbett B. Daly) – A key congressional panel charged with overseeing financial matters plans to question Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac executives over their multimillion-dollar compensation packages paid for by U.S. taxpayers. Texas Representative Randy Neugebauer on Tuesday said he would bring Fannie Mae chief executive Michael Williams and Freddie Mac chief executive Ed Haldeman before his House Financial Services Subcommittee on Oversight and Investigations. “I think we will be on a first name basis … because I think we will have them” testify, Neugebauer, a Republican, told reporters after a feisty hearing on the use of millions of taxpayer dollars to pay legal bills for former Fannie Mae executives accused of accounting fraud. Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac were seized by the Bush administration in late 2008 amid mounting losses from mortgages gone sour and are controlled by a government conservator, the Federal Housing Finance Agency (FHFA). Edward DeMarco, the acting director of FHFA, in 2009 approved compensation packages allowing the top executives at each firm to receive as much as $6 million each in annual compensation. “What is going on over at Freddie and Fannie and what is the conservator doing to make sure the taxpayers are represented?” Neugebauer asked. The comments come just days after the Obama administration outlined plans to wind-down Fannie and Freddie gradually and to take steps to make the $10.6 trillion U.S. mortgage market less dependent on the government, which now backs more than 85 percent of new home loans in some fashion. The Texas Republican said business as usual is not acceptable for the so-called government sponsored enterprises because “their business got taxpayers on the hook for a lot of money.” The pair have received more than $130 billion in direct taxpayer aid since being taken over by then Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson. The Obama administration on Monday said that tally could climb to $169 billion next year before slowing shrinking as losses are paid back to Treasury coffers. “So what we want to make sure is that they understand, and hopefully we will fire a shot here, of whose interests that they need to be most concerned about. It’s not the employees or the executives over at Freddie Mac and Fannie Mae, it’s the American taxpayers,” Neugebauer said. Asked after the hearing why he deserved to paid more than U.S. President Barack Obama, who earns about $400,000 annually, Williams told Reuters his salary is determined by the government. “My compensation is determined by the board of directors of FHFA and they determine what the appropriate compensation is for the executives of the company,” Williams said. Lawmakers debated with Williams and DeMarco over whether it was “reasonable” for taxpayers to foot more than $24 million in legal bills for former chief executive Franklin Raines and two other former Fannie executives accused of accounting misdeeds. Asked by Reuters if his own compensation was “reasonable,” Williams replied: “I leave it to them (FHFA) to determine what is appropriate compensation.” DeMarco has consistently said his agency aims to protect taxpayers by making sure the firms have executives with the technical expertise to oversee more than $5 trillion in assets traded in global financial markets. “We need, in the conservatorship, there to be talented, capable professionals that continue to operate the day-to-day operations of these companies,” DeMarco told the panel. A Freddie Mac spokesman declined comment. WATCH (Reporting by Corbett B. Daly; Editing by Gary Hill) Copyright 2010 Thomson Reuters. Click for Restrictions .

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Robert Creamer: No Mr. Boehner, America is Not "Broke"

February 15, 2011

Once again on the Sunday news shows, Republican Leader John Boehner declared that “America is broke” — his premise for why we “can’t afford” important investments that are critical to America’s future. In fact, of course, America is far from “broke”. It is the largest economy in the world. After collapsing as a result of the recklessness of the big Wall Street banks — and Republican economic policies in late 2008 — the economy has, in fact, grown for six consecutive quarters. The stock market has almost doubled since the crash — regaining most of its value. Corporate profits are soaring. And American corporations are now sitting on close to two trillion dollars in cash. What’s more, we still have the same highly-skilled, productive labor force and the same stock of plants and equipment that we did before the financial meltdown — the same ability to create the goods and services that are the real measures of economic wealth. The problem isn’t that America is “broke.” The problem is that economic growth is not being shared with most Americans. The problem is that the very rich are wealthier than ever and everyone else is falling behind. Not only does that mean that the massive store of wealth that we create today is not widely shared. It also means that — taken together — we have less wealth as a nation because so many Americans who could be creating goods and services are unemployed, creating nothing. Of course the implication of the “America is broke” mantra is that we have to make massive cuts in programs and services that benefit the middle class and poor because we “can’t afford them” — us being broke and all. Frankly, you have a hard time taking that kind of talk seriously from a guy who just recently demanded that America continue to give massive tax breaks for the wealthy for the next two years — and who wants to flat out abolish the estate tax that, by definition, benefits only the sons and daughters of multimillionaires and billionaires. Is America broke? Have a look at John Paulson. In 2007, as the financial crisis descended, he made $4 billion in personal income betting against subprime mortgages that helped sink the rest of the economy. Last year he made a record $5 billion in personal income as the manager of a hedge fund. By the way, had he somehow managed to make that astronomical sum of money laying bricks or sweeping floors, he would have paid taxes at a rate of 35% on the bulk of that income. Instead, he paid at a rate of only 15%, since he earned his money by speculating as a hedge fund manager instead of making a useful good or service. Makes sense, right? Last year Mr. Paulson made as much as 100,000 of his fellow citizens who earned $50,000 per year. Paulson’s haul may have been a record, but Appaloosa Management’s founder David Tepper and Bridgewater Associates chief Ray Dalio each did pretty well too — between $2 and $3 billion each. And the rest of Wall Street was back in the money as well. Boehner’s attempt to justify massive cuts in investments that will grow the economy in the future — like education and infrastructure; or his insistence on cutting money that is used by the states to pay firefighters and police; or cuts in programs that take food out of the mouths of poor children — are outrageous so long as most of our economic growth goes into the hands of the wealthy few. Let’s remember a few key facts about our current federal deficit: The last time the federal budget was actually in balance was not under the Republicans — but rather under Bill Clinton. The current deficit was caused exclusively by the Bush tax cuts, two unpaid-for wars that cost trillions, and the largest recession in eighty years — caused by the same Republican economic policies Boehner is trying to sell today. Between 2001 and 2008, the Bush Administration and the Republican Congress rolled up more federal debt than all other Administrations in the history of the United States combined. It is entirely possible to deal with the federal deficit without making the middle class and poor pay the bill. My wife, Congresswoman Jan Schakowsky, who was on the President’s Fiscal Commission, outlined precisely such a proposal last fall. It makes many cuts to spending that go for unnecessary tax expenditures like subsidies to Big Oil and it relies on making the wealthiest among us pay their fair share. It makes the people who had the economic party over the last two decades pay the bill — not middle class and low income Americans who didn’t even get an invitation. The deficit is not some inevitable consequence of our being “broke” — or some law of nature. It was caused by human decisions to allow wealthy people to reduce their contribution to our common activities and to use them, instead for themselves. For example, it is entirely possible to raise the same amount that Boehner has proposed cutting in the 2011 (this year’s) federal budget simply by adding a few new tax brackets to the tax code for those who make more than a million dollars. You bump the tax rate up at a million dollars, at ten million, at fifty million — and a billion. You don’t even have to raise them that much. Right now people who make5 billion per year — America’s economic royalty — pay taxes at the same rate as upper middle class professionals who make360,000 — where the current highest tax rate of 35% kicks in. Often, because of tax loopholes — or because they’re hedge fund managers — they actually pay less. The reason why this approach works so well is that all the new income is going to that tiny percentage of the population. To fix the deficit, you have to go where the money is. Yesterday the President proposed his fiscal 2012 budget. It makes major investments in precisely the areas that will help us out-build, out-educate and out-compete the rest of the world in the 21st Century. His budget includes new investments in education, clean energy and infrastructure. Many of these initiatives have already been attacked by Republicans because “we can’t afford them — after all, American is broke.” We may not be broke now, but we really will be broke if we don’t invest in the future. The President also proposed cuts in a number of areas that we truly can’t afford (and really never should have done in the first place) — like subsidies to the oil and gas companies that are making record profits. He also proposes $78 billion cuts in military spending over the next five years. But the President was also forced to propose cuts in important programs that benefit average Americans. He proposed cutting the home-heating program, community block grants that are critical to low-income communities, and even the fund to clean up the Great Lakes. These are important programs that are critical to real people and to our future. The President himself supports these programs. He was not forced to propose the cuts in programs like these because America is broke — he made these proposals because the Republicans insisted on continuing the Bush tax cuts for the wealthy for the next two years and that limits investment in important priorities. Think of it. It is outrageous that we should cut money that assures that people don’t freeze in the winter so that the likes of John Paulson — the $5,000,000,000,000 dollar man — will not have to pay a couple of percentage points more on his income taxes. But that is exactly the consequence of Republican insistence that the Bush tax cuts for the rich continue. And it is just the beginning of the menu of Republican “priorities” that we will see laid out over the next several weeks. All of this “America is broke” — “just stop the spending” — rhetoric sounds very appealing until you start looking at who is hurt by the cuts, and who benefits by not paying their fair share to finance government — the things we do together. Over the next few weeks, the budget debate will shift from the rhetorical and abstract to the personal and concrete. If progressives can make that happen, the Republicans will be forced into a full retreat when it comes to the budget debate. It’s about time. Robert Creamer is a long-time political organizer and strategist, and author of the book: Stand Up Straight: How Progressives Can Win, available on Amazon.com .

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Obama Budget Proposal

February 14, 2011

WASHINGTON – President Barack Obama, less than two months after signing tax cuts for the wealthiest Americans into law, is poised to propose a budget to congress that attacks programs that assist the working poor, help the needy heat their homes, expand access to graduate-level education and undermine that type of community-based organizations that gave the president his start in Chicago. Obama is expected to propose cutting deficits by roughly a trillion dollars over the next decade — or roughly $100 billion each year — by squeezing social programs. A deal struck to extend the Bush tax cuts for just two years, meanwhile, increased the deficit by $858 billion dollars. More than $500 billion of that bargain constituted tax cuts, with billions more funding business tax breaks and a reduction in the estate tax. Roughly $56 billion went to reauthorize emergency unemployment benefits. The president’s budget is expected to mostly target “non-defense discretionary spending,” which makes up less than one-quarter of the overall budget, making balancing the budget with such cuts mathematically impossible. Indeed, the driver of the deficit is tax cuts. The Wall Street Journal is reporting that as a result of the tax cut deal, the projected deficit in Obama’s budget will reach a record level of $1.6 trillion this year, though even that number, relative to GDP, is far lower than many other governments around the world, according to data compiled by the Central Intelligence Agency. And the figure is well below the levels of the 1940s, a time of economic prosperity. “President Barack Obama’s 2012 budget proposal projects this year’s deficit will reach $1.6 trillion, the largest on record, as December’s tax-cut deal begins to reduce federal revenues, a senior Democrat said Sunday,” the Journal reported Sunday evening. (The deficit is only a record if it is neither adjusted for inflation nor considered relative to the size of GDP.) A closer look at surveys suggests that when people say they are concerned about the deficit, they are actually worried about the economy. The president’s official budget proposal will be released Monday morning and we’ll update with breaking news and reactions throughout the day.

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Video: Crocker Says Mubarak Setting Terms for End of His Tenure

February 11, 2011

Feb. 11 (Bloomberg) — Ryan Crocker, former U.S. Ambassador to Iraq and current dean of the Bush School of Government and Public Service at Texas A&M University, discusses the outlook for Egypt after President Hosni Mubarak defied calls for his resignation. Crocker talks with Betty Liu on Bloomberg Television’s “In the Loop.” (Source: Bloomberg)

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