hamster143 said:
The stimulus will be largely spent by the end of 2010.
What is "largely"? It is a 10 year plan and he's behind in spending. Regardless of the trajectory, it is $787 Billion he intends to spend.
Also, I'm not sure what the point of that graph is, particularly since it ends at the beginning of 2008...
Here's what he does intend to do long-term:
Obama said:
...as we come out of this recession, we must return to the path of fiscal responsibility.
That's not a plan and in any case, we all know how bad Obama is at understanding economic realities and the effects of his attempts to deal with them (8% unemployment...). Heck, he may be saying his plan
already does that. I, however, expect he is overly optomistic, has he has been so far...
However, if you're right and Obama really does intend to return to some fiscal sanity, he's either going to have to vastly increase taxes or vastly decrease spending and I don't really expect him to do either. He's going to have an election to win.
Science tells us that it's the correct response to engage in deficit spending during recessions, when your economy is not functioning at full capacity. You incur some debt, but you stimulate the economy by reducing unemployment and increasing GDP, and that typically more than offsets the cost of stimulus.
I'd like to see a citation of where "science" tells us that because the numbers I've cited say that "some debt" Obama is givinig us is a doubling of the federal debt, with no path to recover it in the next 10 years. I'm not willing to take on faith the economic knowhow of a President who thus far has been so wildly detached from reality.
There are different and competing economic theories out there. The one I subscribe to says the policies of Reagan helped get us out of the doldrums of the '70s and helped lead to the prosperity of the '90s
But then you have to stop spending and start paying off your debt when unemployment is back down to healthy levels.
Yeah - that's the part that I don't expect a democrat to do.
In a way, Bush administration was justified in passing its tax cuts, even though direct stimulus would've been preferable. The real problem was that it failed to close the deficit when the situation improved circa 2004-05.
The aftermath of 9/11 threw a real monkey wrench into the equation. He spent money on two wars and a new federal agency. It would have been a lot better if he hadn't done the Iraq thing, but due to 9/11 I don't think a balanced budget was a realistic possibility in his term.
And now, for some reason, the same people who pretended back in 2005 that everything was fine are suddenly rediscovering virtues of fiscal responsibility, even though this is probably the worst possible time to do so.
Virtually no one saw the bubble that was getting ready to burst on us.