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Politics : Stockman Scott's Political Debate Porch -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: T L Comiskey who wrote (55403)9/11/2004 6:12:31 AM
From: T L Comiskey  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 89467
 
The Dishonesty Thing
By PAUL KRUGMAN

Published: September 10, 2004

Center on Budget and Policy Priorities

Treasury Department

It's the dishonesty, stupid. The real issue in the National Guard story
isn't what George W. Bush did three decades ago. It's the recent
pattern of
lies: his assertions that he fulfilled his obligations when he
obviously
didn't, the White House's repeated claims that it had released all of
the
relevant documents when it hadn't.

It's the same pattern of dishonesty, this time involving personal
matters
that the public can easily understand, that some of us have long seen
on
policy issues, from global warming to the war in Iraq. On budget
matters,
which is where I came in, serious analysts now take administration
dishonesty for granted.

It wasn't always that way. Three years ago, those of us who accused the
administration of cooking the budget books were ourselves accused, by
moderates as well as by Bush loyalists, of being "shrill." These days
the
coalition of the shrill has widened to include almost every independent
budget expert.

For example, back in February the Center on Budget and Policy
Priorities
accused the Bush administration of, in effect, playing three-card monte
with budget forecasts. It pointed out that the administration's deficit
forecast was far above those of independent analysts, and suggested
that
this exaggeration was deliberate.

"Overstating the 2004 deficit," the center wrote, "could allow the
president to announce significant 'progress' on the deficit in late
October
- shortly before Election Day - when the Treasury Department announces
the
final figures."

Was this a wild accusation from a liberal think tank? No, it's
conventional
wisdom among experts. Two months ago Stanley Collender, a respected
nonpartisan analyst, warned: "At some point over the next few weeks,
the
Office of Management and Budget will release the administration's
midsession budget review and try to convince everyone the federal
deficit
is falling. Don't believe them."

He went on to echo the center's analysis. The administration's standard
procedure, he said, is to initially issue an unrealistically high
deficit
forecast, which is "politically motivated or just plain bad." Then,
when
the actual number comes in below the forecast, officials declare that
the
deficit is falling, even though it's higher than the previous year's
deficit.

Goldman Sachs says the same. Last month one of its analysts wrote that
"the
Office of Management and Budget has perfected the art of underpromising
and
overperforming in terms of its near-term budget deficit forecasts. This
creates the impression that the deficit is narrowing when, in fact, it
will
be up sharply."

In other words, many reputable analysts think that the Bush
administration
routinely fakes even its short-term budget forecasts for the purposes
of
political spin. And the fakery in its long-term forecasts is much
worse.

The administration claims to have a plan to cut the deficit in half
over
the next five years. But even Bruce Bartlett, a longtime tax-cut
advocate,
points out that "projections showing deficits falling assume that
Bush's
tax cuts expire on schedule." But Mr. Bush wants those tax cuts made
permanent. That is, the administration has a "plan" to reduce the
deficit
that depends on Congress's not passing its own legislation.

Sounding definitely shrill, Mr. Bartlett says that "anyone who thinks
we
can overcome our fiscal mess without higher taxes is in denial." Far
from
backing down on his tax cuts, however, Mr. Bush is proposing to push
the
budget much deeper into the red with privatization programs that
purport to
offer something for nothing.

As Newsweek's Allan Sloan writes, "The president didn't exactly burden
us
with details about paying for all this. It's great marketing: show your
audience the goodies but not the price tag. It's like going to the
supermarket, picking out your stuff and taking it home without stopping
at
the checkout line to pay. The bill? That will come later."

Longtime readers will remember that that's exactly what I said,
shrilly,
about Mr. Bush's proposals during the 2000 campaign. Once again, he's
running on the claim that 2 - 1 = 4.

So what's the real plan? Some not usually shrill people think that Mr.
Bush
will simply refuse to face reality until it comes crashing in: Paul
Volcker, the former Federal Reserve chairman, says there's a 75 percent
chance of a financial crisis in the next five years.

Nobody knows what Mr. Bush would really do about taxes and spending in
a
second term. What we do know is that on this, as on many matters, he
won't
tell the truth.