I'm not so sure. Bush was spending at a prodigious rate for eight years and Obama expanded on that and yet the economic problems are still with us.
My thought is that a lot of the economic problems are due to the borrowing. The US borrows money to buy things from the Chinese and American workers lose their jobs and the government spends more money which leads to more borrowing to deal with the unemployed workers.
This just isn't true. It is empirically false.
First, couching it as "borrowing money from the Chinese," is meant to make the process sound sinister. What's happening is that because of the world-wide economic downturn, America is the safest, best investment in the world. Investors, including the Chinese, are so anxious to put their money in our country, that the ten year bond rates (the best guage of investor attitude toward our nation) are at historical lows.
And right now workers are losing jobs BECAUSE the government won't spend money. The fiscal crisis caused a massive drop in aggregate demand. Because interest rates are at the zero bound, the economy cannot be stimulated by dropping the rates. Private spending has crashed.
In this situation, the government is the ONLY entity that can make up for that lack of private spending. That's why government spending has to increase right now. We need to be running higher short term deficits while we can borrow money at rates that are a fraction of our growth.
We have lost 500,000 government jobs during Obama's term, mostly from cutbacks at the state level. The real problem is not one of debt, it's of persistent high unemployment. Cutting spending more will deepen our problems, not solve them.
My sense of it is that Obama inherited a lot of very serious problems caused by the failed governance of the Bush administration. And way up on that list was massive unfunded spending. Unfortunately in my view, a lot of well meaning advisers told Obama that the answer was to spend lots of money to rev up the economy. One argument is that this averted a more serious recession, but has it or did it just delay the time when the unfunded spending needed to be dealt with?
Again, you have to look at the actual causes of the economic problems.
The stimulus "failed" because it was too small. Even with the stimulus being too small for the problem (which was explained when it was passed), it still saved around 3 million jobs, boosted GDP by as much as 4 points, and lowered the unemployment rate by 2%
What exactly did the rush of Democratic inspired spending accomplish? I think it might have harmed employment.
It didn't.
http://cboblog.cbo.gov/?p=967
The government got the money either from taxes or borrowing to pay for the stimulus package and if the government hadn't used tax money for stimulus purposes the private sector would have hired more people with the taxes that they kept and if the government hadn't borrowed more money from the Chinese the economy would not have had a lot of money borrowed from the Chinese to buy Chinese goods and further displace American workers.
Again, this is just empirically wrong. The stimulus funds are being pulled right now.
http://www.cbo.gov/ftpdocs/100xx/doc10008/03-02-Macro_Effects_of_ARRA.pdf
A small fraction of what was spent in 2010 was spent this year, and it basically disapears next year. Businesses are sitting on around $2 trillion of cash:
http://online.wsj.com/article/SB100...8652567988246.html?mod=WSJ_business_whatsNews
Tax rates are at their lowest since the 50's, the stimulus is no longer in effect, businesses have massive stocks of cash, if you are correct about your assessment of the world, why is unemployment ticking back up? The conditions you want are happening, and the economy is deteriorating.
This is, of course, because the problem is one of demand. There is only one entity capable of making up for the gigantic demand deficit.
I don't feel confident I understand this, but it looks like the US is at a crossroads to me. We can either bite the bullet and suffer in the short term while the government contracts the unfunded spending that was creating an unsustainable boom or the US can continue to destabilize itself with massive unfunded spending and suffer a financial collapse when the house of cards comes crashing down.
"Biting the bullet" in the short HARMS the economy. England "bit the bullet," engaged in austerity measures, and their economy is contracting. Austerity in the face of the empirical facts we're facing is a terrible, terrible idea. We learned this in the Depression, but for some reason we seem intent on making the same mistake.
But yes, I agree with you 100% that the unfunded liabilities incurred in the last decade were ill-advised and largely responsible for our problems. But that shouldn't stop us from taking proper steps right now.
The long term budget is an issue, but that outlook is harmed by a continued economic slump. SHort term deficit increases will lead to long term stability. Austerity measures will not.
I understand that the great left wing notion is that there are a bunch of rich white guys out there that the government could tax at higher rates to solve all our problems. I think they're wrong. The tax rates for wealthy people are probably close to revenue maximizing right now, especially the capital gains rate which might be the most important issue as far as taxing rich people is concerned. Maybe the government can scratch up a few more bucks by raising the taxes on rich people a bit, but the reality is that this is not going to come close to making up the massive budget short falls.
Again, this is just empirically false:
Entitlements and the military need to be cut, although some of the pain of this can be mitigated by going after some sacred cows like the agricultural subsidies which are wildly against the national interest.
Entitlements definitely need to reformed, I don't agree that there's any need to cut them. The problems with Medicare and Social Security are decades away. The real issue is the cost of health care in general, which, again, we know how to solve, but we won't.
As for the rest of the cuts, we do need to restructure payments, and we could do that now, but what we need is a net increase in government spending to close the demand gap until the economy recovers.
And while we're at trying to return to a sustainable economy we will probably need to take a good look at regulations that raise the cost of American labor. This means environmental laws, special interest union laws, workers comp laws, medical insurance tied to employment and anything else that prevents the American worker from being competitive in the world market. Undoubtedly this kind of talk horrifies the average liberal who has come to believe that the unintended consequences of noble sounding legislation don't exist. But they do, and the wasteland that is Detroit and the massive loss of manufacturing jobs in the US in general is just a small part of the evidence that they do exist.
If you want to start another thread on this, we can get into it, but this is a massive subject slightly different from the one we're discussing, which is already a slight derail of the OP.