Paul Krugman
January 30, 2010, 10:35 am
Cossack Rahm Works For The CzarEzra Klein finds Rahm Emanuel’s apparent willingness to let health reform slide into the indefinite future very depressing. So do I. And it’s not just health reform that will die under this approach — it’s the road to a caretaker presidency.
It’s all very well to say “we’re going to focus on job creation”. But what does that mean? At this point, no major economic programs have any chance of getting passed. Think of it this way: a year ago the question was whether the stimulus would be $700 billion or $1.2 trillion, now we’re talking about $30 billion jobs tax credits.
Maybe financial reform will happen, or at least set up a “teachable moment” battle with the GOP. But by letting health reform slide, the administration is abandoning one really big policy initiative that is just inches from happening. Let this go, and there’s likely to be no achievements worth remembering.
But don’t blame Rahm Emanuel; this is about the president. After Massachusetts, Democrats were looking for leadership; they didn’t get it. Ten days later, nobody is sure what Obama intends to do, and his aides are giving conflicting readings. It’s as if Obama checked out.
Look, Obama is a terrific speaker and a very smart guy. He really showed up the Republicans in the now-famous give-and-take. But we knew that. What’s now in question isn’t his ability to talk, it’s his ability to lead.
http://krugman.blogs.nytimes.com/2010/01/30/cossack-rahm-works-for-the-czar/I want to take slight issue with something Krugman said in passing, that
no huge economic stimulus is politically possible. A massive stimulus effort possible as long as it is 100% tax cuts. When push came to shove most of the deficit hawks would embrace any tax cut. Gigantic tax cuts are not the most efficient way to do it but would work if they were gigantic enough. So there is a politically possible dynamite-charge stimulus available... it's just not optimal. Sad that we are at that point by it is what it is. Jobs can be directly stimulated by tax cutting also... inefficient, but possible. I will be curious to see whether some other stimulusII-minded folks are going to come to this same realization. There may eventually be calls for huge tax cuts from chagrined progressive economists who have done the political math.