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Busch: Blinder & Zandi—Our Stimulus Worked!
CNBC Contributor
The NYT reports today the findings of two Keynesian economists on the policy prescriptions they gave to solve the economic crisis.
It worked!
Honestly, can anyone argue that $862 billion of spending won’t help? Actually, they lump the Wall Street bailout, the bank stress tests, the emergency lending and asset purchases by the Federal Reserve, and the Obama administration’s fiscal stimulus program all together to say that it all worked. (Read more: CNBC's Special Report - Wall Street in Crisis)
The better analysis would’ve extended the thought to: what are the costs and what are the benefits of these programs? Also, what would’ve been the costs and benefits of a supply side program? This is what is maddening to anyone in the markets. It’s like we’re all accepting the “Keynesian” belief that government can effectively counterweight the shortfall in private sector demand with no downside.
Andrew Busch
BMO Capital Markets
And now, Blinder and Zandi are playing the “it would’ve been worse” game that is almost impossible to disprove. Not surprisingly, this is exactly the same plan that the President and Democrats are wisely pursuing. It is not surprising that this study and those comments appear in the same week.
This is why the Op-Ed by the WSJ entitled, “The Democratic Fisc” is an important counterweight. The piece reviews the behemoth-like deficit numbers that the White House released late Friday. Then it compares/contrasts them with the Reagan deficits. “The Obama deficits are double that (of Reagan’s), and more than one-third higher than even the Gipper's worst year.”
However, it’s the future that the markets are concerned about and this is where the big disconnect comes between Reagan and Obama. The Reagan Administration’s policy choice was permanent across-the-board cuts in marginal tax rates. “Revenue didn't fall nearly as much as Keynesian economists predicted it would, and the economy roared back. Growth and spending restraint then reduced the deficit over time.” After 18 months, the Reagan economy returned to GDP and job growth.
This is what is troubling with the “spend-now-and-hope-things-improve” experiment. It has no thrust for restoring economic growth via incenting businesses to grow and hire through higher profits by lower taxes. Keynesians can rearview mirror all they want, but it’s what’s coming down the road that needs attention.
________________________
Andrew B. Busch
Director,
Global Currency and Public Policy Strategist at BMO Capital Markets, a recognized expert on the world financial markets and how these markets are impacted by political events, and a frequent CNBC contributor. You can comment on his piece and
reach him here and you can follow him on Twitter at http://twitter.com/abusch .









