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The New York Stock Exchange, Wall Street, New York.
Dr. Peter Morici: Fixing the US
economy; To accomplish robust growth and lower unemployment to pre-recession
levels, President Obama must temper his impulse to tax and regulate, and stop
appeasing China and Wall Street.
The Bush years were better than he admits, and a lot better than his policies
promise. The 24 months prior to the financial crisis, unemployment was less than
5%.
Now, Treasury Secretary Geithner and liberal intellectuals advising the
President say 10% unemployment is the new normal, tutelage to China is
inevitable, and Wall Street financiers deserve obscene bonuses for engineering
it all. The pre-crisis prosperity was created by bipartisan policies that
empowered Americans to create wealth. Freer trade championed by Presidents since
Kennedy, and deregulation begun by Carter with the airlines were critical. So
were cutting excessively high taxes on middle and upper-income Americans,
initiated by Ronald Reagan, interrupted by Bill Clinton, and reinstated by Mr.
Bush.
Now, Barack Obama threatens to
intrude into every dimension of private enterprise—not just in health care and
banking. Large non-financial corporations have almost $2 trillion dollars in
idle cash, because CEOs can’t identify profitable opportunities and worry ever
higher taxes and regulators on steroids will destroy their businesses.
Raising taxes on families earning more than $250,000—as President Obama obsesses
to do—would sink the recovery. Increasing marginal rates to about 50% on half
the income earned by proprietorships would leave small and medium sized
businesses with too few resources and incentives to invest and create new jobs.
Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner states repeatedly the growth of the past
several decades was unstable and riddled with crises. Yet, economists refer to
the mid-1980s through 2007 as the “Great Moderation.” Fluctuations in GDP,
industrial production and employment were mild, and inflation ceased to be a
problem.
Now, President Obama tells us we must endure higher taxes, higher health
insurance premiums and more expensive energy to enjoy the stability of crippling
unemployment, as he socializes large chunks of the economy and expands
federally-sponsored welfare to compensate the victims.
President Barack Obama’s impulse for broader state control, higher taxes and
more federal largess are wrongheaded, because problems in only two areas
instigated the financial crisis and destroyed the recent prosperity.
China and the big banks abused the opportunities created by free trade
agreements and repeal of Glass-Steagall, both crafted by the Clinton
Administration.
China undervalues its currency, blocks U.S. exports and otherwise subsidizes its
exports into the United States. Banks made reckless loans and hid risks in
arcane mortgage backed securities and structured investment vehicles to create
huge executive bonuses.
The trade deficit deflated demand for what Americans make, and the credit crunch
made business expansion impossible. Voila, the Great Recession!
The Bush tax cuts and deregulation in other industries did little to encourage
those abuses.
Mr. Obama continues the Bush policy of negotiating with China, obtaining few
meaningful results. The Obama’s bank reforms leave the big banks bigger than
before (still too big to fail), ineffectively regulates mortgage-backed
securities, and handicaps the 8,000 regional banks that do most of the lending
to small and medium-sized businesses.
Systemic ills unaddressed, the economy is mired in a weak recovery and may soon
double dip. Housing is depressed, consumers correctly distrust banks and are
fearful to use credit cards even for good purposes, and more than 450 thousand
Americans file for first-time unemployment benefits each week.
Anemic growth causes big deficits. And like the death bed physicians that bled
President Washington twice, President Obama wants to double down on higher
spending and taxes. Speaker Nancy Pelosi has put a national sales tax on the
table.
In 2007, federal spending was 19.6% of GDP and the federal deficit was a quite
manageable $161 billion. For 2011, President Obama projects spending at 25.1% of
GDP and the deficit at $1.3 trillion.
President Obama should dust off President Bush’s 2007 budget and spend less,
finally fix trade with China, craft policies that permit regional banks to
compete, and bust up the big banks that thrust the global economy into the
abyss.
Discussing on
July 28th, what
must be changed in Washington to restore confidence and growth, with Richard Socarides, Democratic strategist and Peter Morici, University of Maryland:
Peter Morici,
Professor,
Robert H. Smith School of Business, University of Maryland,