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Politics : PRESIDENT GEORGE W. BUSH -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Raymond Duray who wrote (303536)10/2/2002 7:47:39 PM
From: Skywatcher  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 769667
 
White House Economic Policies Are
Bankrupt
By JOSEPH E. STIGLITZ, Joseph E. Stiglitz, a professor at Columbia
University, is a recipient of the 2001 Nobel Memorial Prize in economics.
He was chairman of the Council of Economic Advisors under President
Clinton.

Although the economy was slowing even before
President Bush took office, he has made the
situation much worse than it had to be. What could
have been a mild and brief recession has instead
turned into a prolonged downturn likely to last more
than two years.

In terms of increases in unemployment and the gap
between the economy's actual and potential
performance, the downturn is already substantial.

The president appears to believe that every
economic problem is spelled T-A-X.

That misguided thinking has precluded him from
adopting a sound policy program.

The centerpiece of his economic agenda, the tax cut
that he pushed through Congress, was fiscally irresponsible.

The administration also disingenuously disguised the true cost of the tax cut,
both by having it magically disappear in 2010 and by using the little-known
alternative minimum tax to reduce the recorded revenue loss.

The administration belatedly tried to sell the tax cut as a short-term stimulus
measure, but that is like arguing that a few new Ferraris are the solution to a
city's public transportation problems. The cost-effectiveness is abysmally low.

A much better alternative to the sports car approach to economic stimulus
would have provided assistance to states and localities to meet the fiscal
shortfall that inevitably develops as the economy goes into a downturn.

This assistance would have provided more generous unemployment benefits to
displaced workers, who will almost immediately spend the money on goods
and services.

Similarly, on the corporate scandals, the Bush administration should have acted
faster and more resolutely.

The administration still has not advocated legislation forcing companies to
properly report stock options as expenses. The indiscriminate awarding of such
options has been shown to be an important underlying source of the problems
facing corporate America; they provided strong incentives to report large
profits, and top executives did better for themselves by increasing these
reported profits than by improving the fundamentals of the corporation.

To be sure, I believed that the Clinton administration should have supported
such a reform in the 1990s.

At the time, my argument was based on the theory that bad information leads
to bad decisions, with adverse consequences for the economy. Now we have
the evidence.

And yet the Bush administration still refuses to take the action.

Some of my other qualms about economic policy during the 1990s apply with
much more force now.

For example, partly in an attempt to break the legislative deadlock with the
conservative Republicans who took over Congress in 1995, the Clinton
administration allowed the deregulation agenda to be pushed too far. But that
does not mean Republican conservatives should be allowed to push it still
further.

Even today, the administration has not owned up to the excesses of the
past--the mistakes, for instance, evidenced by electricity deregulation in
California and elsewhere--nor has it set forth a program for dealing with the
myriad scandals facing the financial industry, from allocations of initial public
offerings of stock to distorted advice given by brokerage houses with clear
conflicts of interest.

As we should have learned long ago, market-friendly government regulation is
necessary if markets are to work well.

I wish that we had done more to address corporate welfare in the 1990s, but
we didn't. Now Bush has made this situation much worse. Indeed, corporate
coddling has reached new heights with soaring agriculture subsidies, most of
which go to rich farmers and corporate farms, and new steel tariffs, which have
rightly exposed us around the world to charges of hypocrisy.

It's no secret that I am a tough grader on economic policy. The Bush
administration may want to pretend that its F is really an A. But that won't
change the reality.

We'd all be better off if the administration would spend more time rethinking its
policies and less time muddling the debate with doublespeak.
CC