[x-posted with permission from New Economic Perspectives -- selise]
Worse than Hoover
By Marshall Auerback
It’s actually a bit over the top and unfair to compare Barack Obama with Herbert Hoover – unfair that is, to the memory of Herbert Hoover. The received image of the latter is the dour, technocrat who looked on with indifference while the country went to pieces. This is actually an exaggeration. As Kevin Baker convincingly argued in his Harper’s Magazine piece, “Barack Hoover Obama”, President Hoover did try to organize national, voluntary efforts to hire the unemployed, provide charity, and sought to create a private banking pool. When these efforts collapsed or fell short, he started a dozen Home Loan Discount Banks to help individuals refinance their mortgages and save their homes. Indeed, the Reconstruction Finance Corporation, which became famous for its exploits under FDR and Jesse Jones, was actually created by Hoover. Often tarred with the liquidationist philosophy of his Treasury Secretary, the establishment of the RFC was, as Baker suggested, “a direct rebuttal to Andrew Mellon’s prescription of creative destruction. Rather than liquidating banks, railroads, and agricultural cooperatives, the RFC would lend them money to stay afloat.”
Hoover’s tragedy lay in the fact that whilst he recognized the deficiencies of the prevailing neo-classical laissez-faire nostrums of his day, he could not ultimately break with them and accept that the economic tenets which he had grown up with were deficient in terms of dealing with the huge unemployment challenges posed by the Great Depression. By contrast, Roosevelt was himself instinctively a fiscal conservative throughout much of the early stages of his political career (and campaigned as a gold standard man during the election of 1932), but ultimately had the vision (or, at least, excellent political instincts) to recognize the need to cut himself off from the dogma of the past and try something new in a persistent spirit of experimentation. Not everything FDR did worked, but his lack of rigid ideology and his bold spirit of economic experimentation ultimately did much to reduce the scourge of unemployment, even though such policies brought him into significant conflict with the economic royalists of his day.
Barack Obama’s style of governing largely reflects an acceptance of the status quo. His “economic experts” also reflects this preference. As Baker argued, “it’s as if, after winning election in 1932, FDR had brought Andrew Mellon back to the Treasury.”
To the extent that he displays any kind of radicalism, it is to roll back the frontiers of the New Deal and Great Society, in effect gutting the Democratic Party of its core social legacy. This assertion will no doubt inflame the diminishing Obama supporters, who insist the president would never cut Social Security or Medicare, that he’s merely been exploring every possible route to a deal with the GOP. But the evidence increasingly suggests otherwise.
Perhaps, as Salon.com’s Joan Walsh suggests, the president sincerely believes that the intense polarization of American politics isn’t merely a symptom of our problems but a problem in itself – “and thus compromise is not just a means to an end but an end in itself, to try to create a safe harbor for people to reach some new common ground”. One finds further support for this view within Barack Obama’s own writings. A major theme of his 2006 book The Audacity of Hope is impatience with “the smallness of our politics” and its “partisanship and acrimony.” He expresses frustration at how “the tumult of the sixties and the subsequent backlash continues to drive our political discourse.”
There appears little question, then, that the President values compromise, indeed appears to enshrine it as the apex of all great Presidencies (ironically citing Lincoln’s compromise on slavery as a perfect illustration of this ideal). But the problem with Walsh’s supposition is that the President’s accommodation with his political enemies, his apparent infatuation with a “third way”, suggests that he is being forced to compromise on a particular set of ideals and principles which he has hitherto embraced dearly.
But what is this President’s ideal? The only time in our national discussions where Mr. Obama has evinced any kind of passion has been during the debt ceiling negotiations. He has, since the inception of his presidency, elevated budget deficit reductions and the “reform” of entitlements as major transformational goals of his Presidency (rather than seeing deficit reduction as a by-product of economic growth). As early as January 2009, before his inauguration (but after the election, of course), then President-elect Obama pledged to shape a new Social Security and Medicare “bargain” with the American people, saying that the nation’s long-term economic recovery could not be attained unless the government finally got control over its most costly entitlement programs (http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2009/01/15/AR2009011504114.html)
In other words, Obama has been on about this since the inception of his Presidency. Recall that it was Barack Obama, NOT the GOP, who first raised the issue of cutting entitlements via the Simpson-Bowles Commission. The President has also parroted the line of most Wall Street economists as he has persistently characterized our budget deficits and government spending as “fiscally unsustainable” without ever seeking to define what that meant. One of his earliest pledges was to cut the deficit in half by the end of his first term, in effect paying no heed to the economic context when he made that ridiculous assertion.
In essence, the debt ceiling dispute is not forcing a compromise on this President, but is instead is viewed by him as a golden opportunity to do what he’s always wanted to do. That also explains why he won’t ask for a clean vote on the debt ceiling, why he has ignored the coin seignorage option, and why he has persistently avoided the gambit of challenging its constitutionality via the 14th amendment, even though his Democrat predecessor has already suggested that this is precisely what he would do: Bill Clinton asserted last week that he would use the constitutional option to raise the debt ceiling and dare Congress to stop him (http://www.nationalmemo.com/article/exclusive-former-president-bill-clinton-says-he-would-use-constitutional-option-raise-debt).
It also explains why President Obama remains infatuated by bigger and bigger “grand bargains”, which seem to take us further away from averting the immediate economic catastrophe potentially at hand, which is to say national default. The Administration, then, is not going for a bipartisan compromise, but going for broke on something which the President apparent holds sacrosanct. In reality, true compromise would start with the notion of a clean vote on the debt ceiling or, at the very least, a minimal series of spending cuts that would avert the immediate risk of a default, whilst creating less deflationary pressures.
Have you actually seen the President ever get angrier than he was at his press conference announcing the collapse of the negotiations on the debt ceiling extension? Not even on health care “reform” can we ever recall seeing Obama this engaged, and manifesting something close to real emotion as he has here. That does suggest something beyond mere political calculation; it hints at core beliefs.
And to what end? Neither he, nor the Congress appear to recognize the downward acceleration in GDP triggered when the spending limits are reached if the automatic stabilizers are disabled because they are no longer funded as a consequence of the debt ceiling limitations (again, a LEGAL, rather than operational constraint – the debt ceiling reflects an UNWILLINGNESS to pay, rather than an INABILITY to pay).
So spending will be further cut, debt deflation dynamics will intensify, sales will go down more, more jobs will be lost, and tax revenues will collapse even further. Which will set the whole process off again: more spending is cut, sales go down more, more jobs are lost, and tax revenues fall more, etc. etc. etc. until no one is left working. All are radically underestimating the speed and extent of the subsequent damage.
Unlike President Hoover, who inherited the foundations of a huge credit bubble from the 1920s and found himself overwhelmed by it, this President is worse. He is, through his actions, creating the conditions for a second Great Depression because of his misconceived belief that too much government spending “crowds out” private investment, and takes dollars out of the economy when it borrows. And therefore, goes the perverse logic, when the government stops borrowing to spend, the economy will have those dollars to replace the lost federal spending.
And so after the initial fall, Obama believes, it will all come back that much stronger.
Except, that as my friend Warren Mosler insists, he is dead wrong, and therefore we are all dead ducks.
As Warren notes, have you ever heard anybody say ‘I wish they’d pay off those Tsy bonds so I could get my money back and go buy something.’
Of course not! Notes Warren:
“Treasury borrowing gives dollars people have already decided to save a place to go. Dollars that came from deficit spending- dollars spent but not taxed. If they were spent and taxed, they’d be gone, not saved.
Treasury bonds provide a resting place for voluntary savings. They are bought voluntarily. They don’t ‘take’ anything away from anyone.
For example, imaging two people, each with $1 million. One pays a $1 million tax. The other doesn’t get taxed and decides to buy $1 million in Treasury bonds. Pretty obvious who’s better off, and who’s still solvent and consuming.”
Someone please explain this basic economic tenet to the President so that he can effect a genuine compromise, not a destructive “grand bargain” which will suck trillions of demand out of a still fragile economy. The predictable result is of his current stance is that, even as he claims to recognize the interlocking nature of the problems facing us and vows to “solve the problem” once and for all via a “grand bargain”, Obama is in fact tearing apart most of the foundations which were tentatively initiated under Hoover, but which came to full fruition under FDR. If he continues down this ruinous path, $150 billion/month in spending will be cut. Such economic thinking isn’t worthy of Mellon, let alone Herbert Hoover.



38 Comments

Nailed it. But I see little or no hope of persuading the Pres. how wrong this is.
if the people are persuaded, the leaders will follow.
That is so 20th century.
LOL!
(gotta laugh or else i’m gonna cry)
i especially like this bit:
“As early as January 2009, before his inauguration (but after the election, of course), then President-elect Obama pledged to shape a new Social Security and Medicare “bargain” with the American people, saying that the nation’s long-term economic recovery could not be attained unless the government finally got control over its most costly entitlement programs” ——-but who was listening?
Good article.
It does seem that dislike of conflict is one of the key motivators behind many of Obama’s actions – he was recently lecturing students aout it (of all things). Maybe it’s his Hawaiian upbringing what with the Aloha spirit of inclusiveness and all. But whatever the origin, he’s got to get over it – in this case one side has been winning consistently for 40 years straight and now they want it all; what’s left to compromise?
I think Marshall’s analysis is spot on. Obama doesn’t understand the first thing about Macro Economics. Corporations are sitting on 2+ Trillion USD, and they have for almost 2 years- but because unemployment is the highest it’s been for 75 years, they ain’t hiring cause nobody’s buying.
Clearly we have a Keynesian Demand problem which is only solved by Govt Spending/Investment, but Obama is too stupid to realize that. If he wins re-election we will enter the Great Depression 2.0.
God help us all…
Big Zero’s lecture on compromise reminded me of Robert the Bruce’s leprous father in Braveheart. “It is the ability to compromise which makes a man noble”, and all that other horseshit. The man’s soul was as rotten as the flesh on his face.
An excellent item from WaPo. I’ve cited it at least two dozen times in the past couple of months.
That 1/16/09 article mentioned that he was planning mid-February “fiscal responsibility summit.” According to Jane Hamsher, he was planning to feature Pete Peterson as his keynote speaker, but that was too controversial.
Throughout his campaign, Robert Rubin was his key adviser and by the end of the campaign, he had become an avid neoliberal, though he showed some signs of that in his January 2008 Las Vegas Sun hagiography of Ronald Reagan and the GOP as the party of ideas.
Obama is literally shutting down the U.S. economy. This Bang-for-the-Buck chart from Mark Zandi says it all: http://www.econbrowser.com/archives/2008/10/zandi.gif
This is all deliberate.
It’s all scripted.
The markets are stable! Why so stable with this “impending” problem???
Come on.
A deal will be made last second.
In it, Boner, the good shine man, will somehow triumph over O. O will shrug his shoulders and say “couldn’t help it”.
And SS/Medicare/Medicaid will be gutted. Not a major gut. But the start of a major gut.
Then in September, we will attack Iran. With Israel attacking first of course. And we “back our allies” BS as the excuse.
Come on people.
The only possible issue is the Israelis are doing mass protests and tent cities for the “rent being too damn high”. http://972mag.com/tent-city-politics-really-is-a-dirty-word-lets-try-revolution/
And that’s actually fairly a small issue.
The “tussle” with Iran will be bloody and vicious. When October 2011 (illegitimi non carborundum) rolls around, it can go either way. Either the protest will be seen as steering back into rational waters, or as complete and utter betrayal of US war policy. In which case things end like they did for the Bonus marchers. But with more blood. In DC.
“Will no one rid us of this meddlesome president?”
’12, buh by dims, top to bottom . . .
Rcc’d . . . nice read and thanks for your thots Selise . . .
I will take the obvious next step and engage in some Andrew Mellon revisionism. :o)
After a series of tax cuts Secretary Mellon pushed through Congress in the 1920s, at least 80% of Americans paid no income taxes (something Republicans shocked, shocked that 47% pay no income taxes today never mention). For his part, Andrew Mellon would not endorse the current policy of taxing capital gains and dividends at a lower rate than wage income.
“The fairness of taxing more lightly income from wages, salaries or from investments is beyond question. In the first case, the income is uncertain and limited in duration; sickness or death destroys it and old age diminishes it; in the other, the source of income continues; the income may be disposed of during a man’s life and it descends to his heirs. Surely we can afford to make a distinction between the people whose only capital is their mettle and physical energy and the people whose income is derived from investments.”
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Andrew_W._Mellon#The_Mellon_plan
Hey selise, as always great post and many thanks for sharing this. By coincidence I was listening to Marshall today courtesy of the link you provided a few months back. How amazingly relevant and insightful it is.
I’ll link to it. I truly believe this will open many eyes. It did mine.
http://feeds.feedburner.com/MMT-podcast
Hi Selise, thanks for posting this. Very good stuff.
Another person who appears to have had an influence on Obama is Peter Orszag, another Rubin protoge. He co-founded the Hamilton Project along with Rubin in 2006 and the keynote speaker at their opening was Senator Obama.
When Obama got elected, the Hamilton Project turned out to be a government in waiting, and had to more or less shutdown because all of their personnel moved to the White House, Orszag to become Budget Director. Peter is considered to be one of the world’s leading experts on retirement systems. Jane Hamsher has indicated that he was involved with the various attempts to establish the Catfood Commission in 2009.
do you know who funded the hamilton project? i haven’t looked — i should.
lol, must send this to marshall!
thanks psalongo! and thanks for sharing the link!
hi wigwam. easy for me…. many thanks to marshall auerback.
what a great diary
you know, even though plenty of firedogs were warning us bfore the election obama demonstrated a corporate agenda, it was also said he was an ardent student of fdr
I had high hopes he would follow the fdr template for bringing us back
it seems he studied fdr because he thought he was wrong and his predecessor was right
gonna be a hard road back if we can get there at all
I wish it was true that “if the people are persuaded, the leaders will follow.”
Marshal – and Warren – nail it (indeed Warren’s common sense is unfortunately not that common – but is spot on here and needed at the WH).
obama’s own actions warned us…. but i think we all had some hopes.
indeed wigwam ! as Jane has been forecasting since 2/12/09 – the most significant of Obama’s proposals here have all been ‘sampled’ from the Diamond-Orszag White Paper (05 Brookings)
chained CPI, raising retirement age, etcetera etcetera
note to POTUS – ‘you never go full Orszag’
most excellent piece btw selise – rec.
and thanks for introducing me to the MMT School
you’re most welcome… thanks go to galbriath for (indirectly) introducing me too!
It is/was affiliated with Brookings, and I presume that it was funded by Robert Rubin and friends. Per the Wikipedia:
Many considered it to be something of a replacement for the DLC.
The best source for information is an FDL article by Kirk Murphy entitled “Bouncing the Rubble …” (It having a server error right now.) That article is very good as are the sources it links to.
Both Peter Orszag and his brother Michael, who works in the UK, are well-known experts on pension system.
Interesting.
I’ve been wondering about the relationship between Galbraith and the MMT school.
I had noted the similarity in perspective, and that Galbraith had written a forward to Warren’s book. But, I never saw his name listed on MMT stuff, and IIRC his Wikipedia page called him a “neokeynsian” or something like that.
We knew for sure that Hillary was DLC but couldn’t be sure about Obama. And, he talked a rather progressive line, which gave us the audaciy to hope. Alas!
Jamie’s MMT all the way. Not only did he do the forword to Warren’s book; but Jamie, Warren, and Randy Wray have co-authored testimony for Congress. Jamie also is with us on coin seigniorage.
wigwam, i think you’d have to ask him, but you might want to take a look at this comment. personally, i think of galbraith as unclassifiable. heterodox for sure. maybe some combination of keyensian / post keynesian / institutionalist ? but wtf do i know?….
btw, if you haven’t already read it, i highly recommend the predator state
Took me all day to get to it but, man, was the wait worth it. Great piece. Thanks, selise. As usual, you’re on top of it.
I always hoped I wouldn’t get shot. Worked pretty well. Not so much with Obama.
I like that. Not dogmatic. It’s the way I approach all this stuff. A little from here, a little from there to make something that works.
The best analogy I can think of is, laugh if ya must, from The Good, The Bad and The Ugly. In one scene Eli Wallach is in a general store, looking for a pistol. None in the display cases fits his needs so he goes through the pistols, taking a part from this one, a part from that one and makes the pistol he wants.
Damn, Bill Mitchell writes long letters. Have to wait til I’ve fed the tigers to read it.
I’m told that Galbraith is quite a hero in China for the advice he gave them on few of occasions. Apparently they faired much better than their neighbors on those occasions and attribute that to the excellence of his advice.
wigwam, any linky for that? i’ve heard galbraith (in the talks i listen to) tell a story about eisner and china. i don’t remember which talk it was though… will see if i can find it.
p.s. speaking of galbraith, did you see this?