Robert Kuttner Writes the Speech He’d Like Obama to Deliver on Recovery Policy
The President I Voted for
by Robert Kuttner
Huffington Post, June 21, 2010
My Fellow Americans,
You and I have been hearing a great deal of advice about the importance of cutting the federal deficit. As part of the challenge of restoring America to a condition of economic soundness, we do need to lower the deficit and bring down the national debt relative to our total economic output.
But a lot of the Cassandra voices have the sequence backwards. Right now, we have more urgent business than cutting the deficit.
Thirteen million Americans are out of work, half of them for six months or more. Twelve million more Americans are working part time but want full time jobs, or have given up even looking because there are so few job openings to be had–five people seeking work for every available job vacancy. Even the official unemployment rate is stuck near ten percent.
The last few months have been disappointing. The private sector has begun generating some jobs, but not nearly enough. In May, there were more than 400,000 jobs created, but nearly all of them were temporary jobs with the U.S. Census Bureau. Just 41,000 were private sector jobs. We are never going to put America back to work at this pace.
The private sector is not generating enough jobs because private business isn’t entirely confident that this recession is fully over. Businesses are not willing to invest enough or to hire enough. And who can blame them? With nearly ten percent of America’s workforce unemployment and anxious, families are watching every penny.
We averted a Great Depression, but this is not good enough. Workers idle, businesses hesitant to invest and hire, consumers deferring spending–that’s a recipe for a Great Stagnation.
If America found itself in an all-out war, we would spend whatever it took to be victorious, as our grandparents did during World War II, and our parents did during the Cold War. In those years, we bought a lot of prosperity as an incidental byproduct of our military buildup. If we can spend what it takes to defeat a foreign enemy, surely we can spend what’s needed to vanquish the risks of permanent recession.
In many ways, our current economic situation is as dire a threat to our way of life as a war. We face the risk of a stunted generation: Young people who feel like failures before their adult lives have really begun, because they were born at the wrong time. Elderly people who have lost much of their home equity, and their 401 k savings, and either have no pensions or face financial threats to the ones they have. People in the prime of life who are losing everything they have struggled for, including their self respect–all through no fault of their own.
In these circumstances, you have to have a heart of stone to be calling for cuts in Social Security and Medicare, or new taxes on the struggling middle class, as the cure for deficits that are mainly the result of the recession itself. But there are billionaires who lead lives of ease who want struggling Americans to tighten their belts as the solution to a deep jobs recession created by excesses on Wall Street.
I reject their values and I reject their counsel, even as I embrace a better strategy to return America to fiscal and economic health.
Today I am sending Congress legislation that will spend an additional $500 billion in this fiscal year and $500 billion next year, to put America back to work; to refinance mortgages at affordable monthly payments so that housing values stabilize; and to stop the hemorrhage in state and local finances that are leading to cuts in services and layoffs of workers. The money will also finance an emergency Reclamation Corps along the Gulf Coast.
Virtually all Republicans, and even some members of my own party, have refused to approve the smaller sums that I have asked Congress to authorize–money to extend unemployment insurance, and emergency COBRA coverage for people who’ve lost their health insurance; and to keep 300,000 schoolteachers from being laid off. They block this urgently needed help, either because they are ideologically opposed to government playing its necessary role in a national emergency, or because of concerns about the deficit–concerns that never bothered Republicans when they were increasing deficits to pay for tax cuts for the wealthiest, or needless wars of choice.
Some of these legislators represent America’s hardest hit communities. If they vote against this bill, let them explain themselves to America’s unemployed workers and their families; and to breadwinners losing their healthcare; and children losing their teachers. I may not succeed in getting Congress to appropriate every nickel of this request, but I am going to fight for this recovery package like I have never fought before.
There are those who say that we need to cut the deficit to reassure financial markets that are worried about inflation. I wonder if these people read the financial pages. Today, the money markets are willing to lend the U.S. government money, by buying government bonds, for thirty years at about four percent. A normal rate of return is around 3 percent. That means markets believe that the next thirty years will be almost inflation-free.
When markets behave like this, it means inflation is the furthest thing from their minds. And, there is not much inflationary pressure when the economy is becalmed. As chief executive, it would be irresponsible of me not to take advantage of this borrowing climate to invest in the jobs America needs at very low borrowing costs to the taxpayer.
Now, what about that deficit? Yes, it is too big. But the best and least painful way to get it under control is to put America back to work, so that more workers and businesses are paying taxes again.
The previous administration dug us quite a hole. And even a full recovery will not quite solve all of the long term deficit and debt problem. But it would be insane and perverse to tackle the deficit before we achieve the recovery. We will need to increase some taxes, but I pledge to you that they will not be taxes on the middle class.
And although we need to run an efficient government as possible, I further pledge to you that we will not balance the budget on the backs of Social Security or Medicare. If my Republican friends think that course necessary policy or smart politics, let’s have that debate.
Now, the fiscal commission that was jointly appointed by the Congressional leadership and by me is charged with recommending a long term plan to get the budget back to near-balance, after we achieve a full economic recovery. I support that goal. And I expect the commission to produce a plan that does not tamper with social security or raise taxes on the middle class. Otherwise, it goes straight into my waste-basket.
I also expect the Commission to recognize that recovery comes first. I will look forward to a report that proposes a plan to fiscal stability built on a strong recovery. I will reject one that is built on austerity.
Recently, people as different as David Walker of the Peter G. Peterson Foundation, and Lawrence Mishel of the Economic Policy Institute have agreed that we need more deficit spending in the short term so that we can create more jobs now and get to eventual budget discipline in the future without further needless economic sacrifice on the part of American working families.
To those who commend belt tightening, I remind you that for three years now, working Americans have been tightening their belts–and worse. Why is it always those with ample waistlines who want others to make sacrifices? Let them lead the way, by stepping aside and not resisting tax reform, or financial reform, or adequate public investment to put America back to work.
We need to be focusing on possibility, not on austerity. That will be the great cause of my presidency.



June 26th, 2010 at 1:23 pm
As the past week has shown, President Obama can be forceful when pushed to. As the recent postings by Andy on FDR have demonstrated, the latter did not wait, but led the country in a direction–a progressive, moral, and strong direction which was broad enough to care for the working class as well as the bankers, to mention but a few.
I wish Obama would do the same. Perhaps soon…..
June 26th, 2010 at 2:26 pm
Austerity measures are in vogue at the G8; Cut backs on deficit spending and, jack up the taxes as revenues fall. This piece shows Obama living off the credit card as most Americans have been doing. But the collapse in the global system is fuelled by lack of stimulus, but was caused by the wealthy elites attending the conference; but Europe is determined to support austerity measures for fear of crushing the poor, while Obama hands billions to the banks and billions upon billions for the military establishment, without structural spending on social services, education, infrastructure and research directed at technology to counter global warming. He does one thing, while Europe does another and the Asians are surging forward on run-away exports to the bankrupt. The imminent financial collapse of Japan, is an ominous harbinger of what awaits the beleaguered American people, who, as usual are led by those with forked tongues; not a historical precedent.
June 26th, 2010 at 9:23 pm
Well, I can think of few speeches I’d like Obama to give myself. The chances that he would do it are slim, and even slimmer are the chances of a meaningful follow-through. I sincerely hope Kuttner gets his wish, but I can no longer hold my breath in anticipation. Here are some further thoughts from Kuttner:
“I think there is a chance — I don’t think I would bet my life on it — but I think there’s a possibility that by the fall of 2010, looking down the barrel of a real election blowout, you could see him change course, if only for reasons of expediency, but hopefully for reasons of principle as well, if he feels that the public doesn’t have confidence that he is delivering the kind of recovery that the public needs. This is a guy who is a very smart, complicated man. And I think don’t speak too soon, for the wheel’s still in spin. I don’t want to totally give up.”
“Totally give up”? Public confidence is already nonexistent. This kind of wishful third-party hypothesis, following on the heels of so much disappointment, doesn’t inspire much more of it. And yet, in the context of the dominant paradigm, maybe it’s the best we can “hope” for.
June 27th, 2010 at 1:29 am
I would also like to hear him give this speech. And mean it.
June 27th, 2010 at 4:55 pm
Austerity measures WILL “crush the poor.”