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Home Front Economy
The bell tolls for Reaganism
2008-11-03
As Americans go to the polling booths today they have received the clearest evidence yet that their economy is going into a very deep recession.

The ISM manufacturing index has crashed to 38.9, its lowest level since 1982. Just two months ago this index was at 50, which is the neutral level that separates growth from recession.

And the most dramatic changes have been in prices and exports, although all components of the index are going backwards. But a month ago prices and exports were rising; now they are falling very sharply. They were both well above 50 and are now well below that level.

This morningÂ’s other news is that Ford has reported a 30 per cent drop in sales for October. Sales of Porsches are down 50 per cent, Toyota 23 per cent, and Mercedes Benz 24.5 per cent. Even the people who want to buy cars canÂ’t get finance.

In the circumstances itÂ’s tempting to think that all bets will be off when it comes to the economic policies of the US presidential candidates.

The campaigns began and the policies were written when there was a subprime mortgage problem and the beginnings of a bear market in stocks. Now there is a full-blown recession, the financial system is demoralised and dysfunctional and the stockmarket is down 45 per cent.

There has been a lot of talk lately comparing the current situation to the presidential election of 1932, won decisively by Franklin D Roosevelt and leading to two 'New Deals', in 1933 and again in 1935-36.

Some of the recent comparisons have been way off the mark, such as John McCainÂ’s accusation that Barack Obama is imitating Herbert Hoover, who lost in 1932 and is usually accused of helping cause the Great Depression. If anything, todayÂ’s Hoover is George W Bush.

In fact ObamaÂ’s economic advisors have recently been hinting that the Democrat President would imitate Roosevelt's 'First Hundred Days' legislative program of 1933, during which he met continuously with Congress and was granted every legislative request. One of the first of these was the closure of all of the nationÂ’s banks on March 4th, 1932.

If Barack Obama is elected President today it will decisively bring the Reagan era to an end, an era in which conservatives have been working to undo the New Deal state set up by FDR in 1933.

Bill Clinton’s eight years – the only Democrat administration since Ronald Reagan – did nothing to reverse that process; in fact, Clinton was a fiscal conservative who managed to balance the budget before George W Bush destroyed it again with tax cuts for the wealthy and laissez faire economics.

An Obama Presidency, with the impetus of a new Great Recession, would bring to an end the Reagan-inspired unwinding of the 1933 and 1936 New Deals and mark the beginning of a new era of activist government.

The germs of this are already present in his policies, but as I said at the start, all bets would probably be off after inauguration.

The most dangerous aspect of his economic policies is his tendency towards protectionism. He has condemned free trade and free trade agreements, opposing several of them in Congress. In this respect, the comparison with Herbert Hoover is valid: HooverÂ’s Smoot-Hawley Tariff was instrumental in turning the 1930 recession into the Great Depression.

Based on the policies released during the campaign, Obama would cut taxes less than McCain: $US2.9 trillion over the 2009-18 period, versus $US4.1 trillion, according to the Tax Policy Center.

McCain would cut the corporate tax rate from 35 to 25 per cent; Obama would raise the top two personal income tax rates to their Clinton levels of 36 and 39.6 per cent (from 33 and 35 per cent). This is behind the “socialist” tag that McCain has been flinging at Obama.

Both candidates, by the way, assume a baseline in which the Bush tax cuts become permanent, and do not expire as planned.

Normally youÂ’d say ObamaÂ’s tax policy is more responsible than McCainÂ’s, since he will be spending less of the deficit, but these are not normal times.

When the new President is inaugurated, the deepest recession since 1982 will have been officially confirmed – possibly the deepest since 1930, although we won’t know that for a year – so spending will be required and justified.

But unlike Roosevelt, the new President faces a massive blow-out in health care expenditures that will force a big increase in government spending as a share of GDP, and require government revenues to increase, not decline.

The estimates of the cost of each candidate's health care policies range from $US1.2 trillion to $US2 trillion, but in any case AmericaÂ’s health care problem must limit the incoming PresidentÂ’s room to move on the economy.

So it will have to be a Newish Deal.
Posted by:tipper

#5  WORLD MIL FORUM [paraph] > 2008 US ELECTION BENCHMARKS A FUNDAMENTAL CHIFT IN WORLD GEOPOLITICS, NAMELY THE FINAL END OF US-WESTERN GLOBAL DOMINATION AND THE STEADY RISE OF ASIAN ORDER IN EURASIA AND WORLD.
Posted by: JosephMendiola   2008-11-03 23:33  

#4  America doesn't have a health care problem it has a metastasis of lawyers problem.
Posted by: Bright Pebbles   2008-11-03 20:25  

#3  Reagan was about ensuring deregulation and getting political chicanery out of the economy. Sure wish we would have listened with regard to Fannie and Freddie. 


But yes, Obama would cut taxes less than McCain, since Obama will raise them sharply.
Posted by: Steve White   2008-11-03 18:05  

#2  It never ceases to amaze me how many domestic media members are such sage experts on everything American.
Posted by: Darrell   2008-11-03 17:19  

#1  It never ceases to amaze me how many foreign media members are such sage experts on everything American.
Posted by: tu3031   2008-11-03 17:06  

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