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


To: George Coyne who wrote (423963)7/7/2003 8:20:08 PM
From: American Spirit  Respond to of 769670
 
9-11 and two wars, a big war bump help GW temporarily. But bottomline a bad economy and many other failures, and GW Bush can easily follow in his father's footsteps. Bush Sr. had significantly higher approval ratings than Junior at this stage in his term. And he lost in a landslide due to a poor economy.

The recent stock market gains I believe are unsustainable. They are pricing in the best possible scenario. More important, the jobs continue to be lost, layoffs continue and even the jobs you can get are lower-paying with fewer benefits. And the local and state taxes offset the federal tax cuts so nobody is better off under Bush except a few special interest buddies in defense and oil mainly. Also real estate due to low-low rates, but they can't they low for long. Nor can real estate prices stay so high. Something's got to give. There's actually a bubble in the economy now, a pretty big one.



To: George Coyne who wrote (423963)7/7/2003 9:17:46 PM
From: Skywatcher  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 769670
 
Well, they're gonna be turning back

June 2, 2003

E-mail story


Print

Ronald Brownstein:
Washington Outlook
Regardless of Bush's Rationale, Tax Cut
Could Invite a Fiscal Meltdown
Is George W. Bush deliberately trying to run up the
federal deficit with the new tax cuts he signed into law
last week?

That allegation is beginning to bubble up throughout
Washington. Among critics, the theory is that Bush
privately welcomes the record deficits — up to $500
billion a year — projected in the tax cut's wake. The
reason: The shortfalls could make it tougher for
Democrats to advance new spending initiatives and
create a climate more conducive to Bush's calls for
restructuring Social Security and Medicare.

The Financial Times of London started this ripple when
it wrote recently that the most conservative
Republicans would welcome a "fiscal crisis" that
provides a justification for cutting spending. Liberal
economist Paul Krugman then amplified the accusation
in his New York Times column Tuesday.

Now some leading Democrats are joining in. Sen. Jon
Corzine (D-N.J.), a former investment banker now on the Senate Budget
Committee, says that while some Bush officials may have a supply-side faith that
the tax cuts will pay for themselves through faster growth, he believes that "the
ideologues in the administration" have a two-stage strategy: Engineer large
deficits now and then use the red ink later to argue "for downsizing the role of
government," particularly by retrenching Social Security and Medicare.

Not surprisingly, the Bush team denies that. One Republican strategist close to
the White House says Bush believes that his tax cuts are the best way to
stimulate the economy, which would increase government revenue and eventually
reduce the deficit. "This is not a hidden attempt to reduce spending," says the
strategist, who spoke on condition of anonymity. "It's more simple; he thinks his
plan will help the economy."

This recalls the argument during Ronald Reagan's presidency when critics —
notably the late Daniel Patrick Moynihan, then a Democratic senator from New
York — charged that the administration knew all along that Reagan's 1981
supply-side tax cuts would open huge deficits. No one found a smoking gun to
prove that charge, though enough conservatives defended the deficits as a way to
"starve the beast" (in other words, de-fund the government) to keep the
suspicion swirling.

It's not much more likely that this dispute over Bush's motivation will ever be
entirely resolved. As Gene Sperling, director of the National Economic Council
under former President Clinton, notes, there rarely is a single impetus for any
major presidential policy. Many Bush officials may like the tax cut primarily
because they think it will juice the economy. Others may want to starve the
beast. Some may hope for both.

Yet whatever the motivation, what matters most is the effect. And whether
deliberately or not, Bush is setting in motion forces that could produce a fiscal
meltdown in the years ahead. "There have been a lot of analogies used, like
'perfect storm,' 'train wreck,' " says Robert Bixby, executive director of the
Concord Coalition, a nonpartisan deficit-watch group. "The depressing thing is
they are all true."

Three trends are converging to create this storm.

The first is the cost of the tax cut. Though Bush and Congress masked the true
price tag by "sun-setting" almost all of the key provisions so they expire in the
next few years, Treasury Secretary John W. Snow has already indicated that the
administration will seek to make those reductions permanent. If all the new cuts
are extended, the bill's 10-year cost soars from the official $320 billion to about
$1 trillion.

And that comes on top of the $1.35-trillion, 10-year tax cut Bush signed into law
just two years ago. Combined, these tax cuts will reduce federal revenue by
roughly $400 billion a year by 2013 — just as the second trend kicks into high
gear.

The second trend is the retirement of the baby boom generation. As baby
boomers go gray, the number of senior citizens in America will increase by about
half over the next 20 years. That means big new bills for retirement programs.
Today, Social Security, Medicare and Medicaid (which helps fund nursing-home
care for low-income seniors) consume about 7.5% of the gross national product;
by 2015, that will rise by one-third.

To help bear that burden, Clinton wanted to use the surplus temporarily
accumulating in Social Security to pay off the publicly held national debt. That
would have allowed Washington to shift the $200 billion it now pays in annual
interest on the debt to funding for the boomers' retirement.

Terrorism, war and recession probably doomed the prospect of entirely
eliminating the debt. But the cost of Bush's tax agenda has compounded the
problem. The huge deficits forecast after the latest tax cut mean that, rather than
paring the debt, the government will be forced to borrow up to $500 billion
annually.

Thus trend three: a rising national debt that some analysts say could double by
2012. By paying off the debt, Clinton had hoped to eliminate federal interest
payments by about 2008. Stan Collender, a budget expert at the public affairs
firm Fleishman-Hillard in Washington, now estimates that, as all the new debt
accumulates, interest costs by then will instead soar to $350 billion a year.

Which means that by decade's end, the baby boom will present its children with
the bill not only for its retirement, but the debt it ran up in voting itself, as today's
highest earners, a series of huge tax cuts.

Hey, thanks Mom and Dad!

Faster economic growth, as the Bush camp argues, could relieve some of this
strain. But even the administration doesn't imagine growth alone can solve the
problem.

Bush's own long-term budget estimates show deficits persisting for decades; in
the short term, his economic team has calculated that even if the economy is
running at full tilt, the deficit will remain at nearly $200 billion a year through
2008.

They will be lucky if the damage is nearly that small.

One of Bush's best defenses against the charge of engineering deficits to shrink
government is that he's still proposing new spending, particularly a big
prescription-drug plan for seniors.

Yet, amid tax cuts, that will only enlarge the debt looming over the next
generation. Future taxpayers may never agree whether Bush amassed that debt
by accident, design or indifference, but they will feel its crushing weight all the
same.

*CC



To: George Coyne who wrote (423963)7/7/2003 9:20:50 PM
From: Sidney Reilly  Respond to of 769670
 
LmAO!!