^Search our news archive of 9,085,944 headlines
>switch to our U.S. site U.S. versionLast update: New York 20:21
London 00:21
Tokyo 09:21
One News Page » Category » Money » Tuesday, 13 October 2009 » The 800 Billion Deception

Information / Related NewsOpen Full Story in New WindowThe $800 Billion Deception

Reported by The Big Money on Tuesday, 13 October 2009 (on October 13, 2009)
The Big Money
From the moment it passed, the $787 billion American Recovery and Reinvestment Act—the stimulus bill—has been the subject of controversy. Many critics have deemed it a debacle, since unemployment has continued to rise in the months since its passage. The Republican Party declared the bill a failure over the summer, and House Minority Leader John Boehner recently deemed it a waste: "You can't spend $800 billion of taxpayer money and not create jobs when you say that's what the goal was." At a dinner several weeks ago, I heard a cable news reporter, one whose job is to report numbers accurately, declare that "we've already spent $800 billion and it was a waste." I suppose it's too much to ask political hacks and TV reporters to get the size and timing of the stimulus package right. But I expect better from my colleagues at the Washington Post editorial page, which on Sunday argued against further stimulus measures because they would add to the scary national debt and because "the government still hasn't run through half of the $787 billion in tax cuts and spending increases enacted this year."
Some things about the stimulus are indeed complicated. How precisely do you measure the number of jobs "saved" when the federal government cuts checks to states, thus allowing them to avoid budget cuts? But some things about the stimulus are quite simple, including its size and the amount of it that has been spent so far.
To begin with, the stimulus was $787 billion, not $800 billion. (Those of you who think there isn't much of a difference, please make out a check for the difference to Daniel M. Gross.) The more egregious error has to do with the timing. Many critics act as if the entire amount has already been spent. They're completely wrong. Even to argue that it's been half-spent, as the Post, does, is only half-right.
As was planned from the start, in fact, only a small portion of the $787 billion has been spent. The Council of Economic Advisers recently issued a comprehensive report on the impact of the stimulus. "As of the end of August, $151.4 billion of the original $787 billion has been outlaid or has gone to American taxpayers and businesses in the form of tax reductions," the CEA reports. That's 19 percent. If projections made for September expenditures are right, "between one-fifth and one-quarter of the total $787 billion" was spent by the beginning of October.
This is not surprising. The ARRA is divided into six different types of components, from tax cuts to infrastructure investments. Some can be done quickly (cutting and mailing tax rebate checks) while others (building bridges) take longer. "The areas where stimulus has been largest in the first six months are individual tax cuts, state fiscal relief, and aid to those most directly hurt by the recession," the CEA reported. Through the end of August, in fact, tax cuts accounted for $62.6 billion of expenditures, and government investment outlays accounted for only $16.5 billion.
In other words, nearly eight months after its passage, a large majority of the stimulus has yet to start impacting the economy—as was the plan. And as was also the plan, the most visible parts of the stimulus are only taking effect now and will remain active through 2010. As you drive around town, it's difficult to visualize tax rebates or aid to states—the fast-acting components of the stimulus. But as I drive around my town today, I can see workers laboring at a $4 million, stimulus-backed road project that is just getting started and will run through the spring of 2011.
The Obama administration believes the stimulus is working. "There is broad agreement that the ARRA has added between 2 and 3 percentage points to baseline real GDP growth in the second quarter of 2009 and around 3 percentage points in the third quarter," the CEA reports. Given that Macroeconomic Advisers is projecting the economy grew at about a 3 percent clip in the third quarter, it's possible that stimulus activity could have meant the difference between growth and contraction in the just-ended quarter. And far from being out of ammunition, the government still has about 75 percent of the $787 billion Congress appropriated to spend during the next two years. Of course, the debate over whether the stimulus worked will ultimately be settled in 2012—as voters go to the polls and economists crunch the 2011 data. Until then, we should avoid jumping to rash conclusions.












Links: Open full story in new window Full news story 

Post this: FacebookFacebook  EmailE-mail  TwitterTwitter  MixxMixx  StumbleUponStumbleUpon  FriendFeedFriendFeed
Recent related news
Business Insider
3 days ago - Business
Information / Related NewsOpen Full Story in New Window

How Lehman's Executives Lied About Their Assets To Fool Everyone About Their Financial Health

[IMG:dick fuld lehman]Most of the stories you will read today about the that lays out how used...
Business Insider
4 days ago - Business
Information / Related NewsOpen Full Story in New Window

We Need Real Financial Reform That Directly Ends Too Big To Fail

/[IMG:Delaware Senator Ted Kaufman](In a speech on the Senate floor this morning, Ted Kaufman...
Huffington Post
1 week ago - World
Information / Related NewsOpen Full Story in New Window

Alemayehu G. Mariam: Ethiopia: Licensed to Steal

If democracy is a government of the people, kleptocracy is a government of thieves. Last week the...
Industry Standard
2 weeks ago - Computer Industry
Information / Related NewsOpen Full Story in New Window

The Subscription Trap

How can companies make more than a billion dollars selling a service that almost no one wants? By...
Huffington Post
2 weeks ago - Politics
Information / Related NewsOpen Full Story in New Window

Mike Green: Ron Paul Should be President ... of Fox News

When I was growing up, the most trusted name in news was Walter Cronkite. Today, it\'s Jon Stewart...
Huffington Post
3 weeks ago - Business
Information / Related NewsOpen Full Story in New Window

Francine McKenna: Mine, Mine All Mine: Can Anyone Catch Lehman Stealing?

\"late late night after the show at leeds university...\" Most of what\'s been written about the...
Huffington Post
3 weeks ago - Politics
Information / Related NewsOpen Full Story in New Window

J. Bradley Jansen: Bizarre Bernanke

Federal Reserve Board Chairman Ben Bernanke got grilled today at the House Financial Services...
Huffington Post
3 weeks ago - Politics
Information / Related NewsOpen Full Story in New Window

Frances Moore Lappe: The Most Dangerous Man in America

If you can remember Nixon, you probably know the name Daniel Ellsberg. Either way you\'ve almost...
Huffington Post
3 weeks ago - Business
Information / Related NewsOpen Full Story in New Window

Consumer Complaints Soar On Mortgage 'Rescue' Schemes (VIDEO)

As many Americans sank deeper into financial trouble last year, a record number reported that they...
Twitter   Tweet the News!92
Twitter login: password:
Register to store your twitter account details
There don't appear to be any related tweets.
Be the first to tweet the news!

Tip: Sign up as a Member now - FREE access to news alerts, news bookmarking and more.

Environmentally friendly: One News Page is hosted on servers powered solely by renewable energy
© 2010 One News Page Ltd. All Rights Reserved.  |  About us  |  Press Room  |  Terms & Conditions  |  Privacy Policy  |  Content Accreditation
One News Page - Top Headlines RSS Feed Top News RSS Feed  |  News for my Website  |  Archive  |  Advertise  |  Help  |  Enquiries  |  Bookmark this site  |  U.S. version U.S. version
-