Friday, February 6, 2009

Atrios is right, though I’d put it a bit differently: centrism is a pose rather than a philosophy

From Paul Krugman:

"
Appeasing the centrists

Atrios is right, though I’d put it a bit differently: centrism is a pose rather than a philosophy. And to support that pose, the centrists are demanding $100 billion in cuts in the economic stimulus plan — not because they have any coherent argument saying that the plan is $100 billion too big, not because they can identify $100 billion of stuff that should not be done, but in order to be able to say that they forced Obama to move to the center.

Which raises the obvious question: shouldn’t Obama have made a much bigger plan, say $1.3 trillion, his opening gambit? If he had, he could have conceded to the centrists by cutting it to $1.2 trillion, and still have had a plan with a good chance of really controlling this slump. Instead he made preemptive concessions, only to find the centrists demanding another pound of flesh as proof of their centrist power."

Me:

Wait a second, here’s my plan:

1) Social Safety Net spending is not part of a stimulus. This can include aid to states for such services. It will cost what is necessary to truly help people suffering through this crisis. I have no set figure in mind.
2) $100 Billion for Infrastructure.
4) $300 Billion in Tax Cuts.
A. Sales Tax decrease or Payroll Tax decrease.
B. Tax Cuts for Investment.

Here’s Bloomberg on Jan.15th:

“Jan. 15 (Bloomberg) — House Democrats unveiled a $825 billion stimulus plan aimed at helping lift the economy out of recession through a combination of tax cuts for families and businesses and a half-trillion dollars in new federal spending.

The plan would provide tax cuts totaling $275 billion( NB ), including a $500 payroll tax cut for individuals and $1,000 for families. The plan would spend $550 billion more on infrastructure projects, an expansion of jobless benefits, renewable energy initiatives, aid to the poor, school repairs, college tuition assistance and scores of other initiatives. ”

“He estimated $310 billion of the new spending would go to state and local governments and non-profit organizations”

“A summary of the proposal released today said it would provide $90 billion for infrastructure projects( NB ), including $30 billion for highway construction and $10 billion for transit and rail projects. It would spend $43 billion on unemployment and job-training programs, including a $25-per-week increase in jobless benefits. ”

As near as I can tell, my plan is very close to the Congressional Plan noted above. I would argue that my use of tax cuts is much better than the current proposal. To confuse Moderates with the GOP is asinine.

Also, your we’ll go it alone idea is simply the opposite of the GOP Plan. Namely, compromise is bad. In an economic crisis, compromise is not only appropriate, it is entirely sensible. We don’t need unnecessary posturing and excessive demands in a crisis. As Burke said:

“All government, indeed every human benefit and enjoyment, every virtue, and every prudent act, is founded on compromise and barter. ”

He also said this:

” Mere Parsimony is not economy Expense and great expense may be an essential part in true economy Economy is a distributive virtue and consists not in saving but in selection Parsimony requires no providence no sagacity no powers of combination no comparison no judgment Mere instinct and that not an instinct of the noblest kind may produce this false economy in perfection ”
Although the GOP doesn’t have anyone reading Burke, it doesn’t follow that we need to be that foolish in the Democratic Party.

— Don the libertarian Democrat"

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