Our Troubled Economy Is a Response to Barack Obama's Policies
by WSJ.com
Tuesday, March 3, 2009
As 2009 opened, three weeks before Barack Obama took office, the Dow Jones
Industrial Average closed at 9034 on January 2, its highest level since
the autumn panic. Yesterday the Dow fell another 4.24% to 6763, for an
overall decline of 25% in two months and to its lowest level since 1997.
The dismaying message here is that President Obama's policies have become
part of the economy's problem.
Americans have welcomed the Obama era in the same spirit of hope the
President campaigned on. But after five weeks in office, it's become clear
that Mr. Obama's policies are slowing, if not stopping, what would
otherwise be the normal process of economic recovery. From punishing
business to squandering scarce national public resources, Team Obama is
creating more uncertainty and less confidence -- and thus a longer period
of recession or subpar growth.
The Democrats who now run Washington don't want to hear this, because they
benefit from blaming all bad economic news on President Bush. And Mr.
Obama has inherited an unusual recession deepened by credit problems, both
of which will take time to climb out of. But it's also true that the
economy has fallen far enough, and long enough, that much of the excess
that led to recession is being worked off. Already 15 months old, the
current recession will soon match the average length -- and average job
loss -- of the last three postwar downturns. What goes down will come up
-- unless destructive policies interfere with the sources of potential
recovery.
And those sources have been forming for some time. The price of oil and
other commodities have fallen by two-thirds since their 2008 summer peak,
which has the effect of a major tax cut. The world is awash in liquidity,
thanks to monetary ease by the Federal Reserve and other central banks.
Monetary policy operates with a lag, but last year's easing will
eventually stir economic activity.
Housing prices have fallen 27% from their Case-Shiller peak, or some
two-thirds of the way back to their historical trend. While still high,
credit spreads are far from their peaks during the panic, and corporate
borrowers are again able to tap the credit markets. As equities were
signaling with their late 2008 rally and January top, growth should under
normal circumstances begin to appear in the second half of this year.
So what has happened in the last two months? The economy has received no
great new outside shock. Exchange rates and other prices have been stable,
and there are no security crises of note. The reality of a sharp recession
has been known and built into stock prices since last year's fourth
quarter.
What is new is the unveiling of Mr. Obama's agenda and his approach to
governance. Every new President has a finite stock of capital -- financial
and political -- to deploy, and amid recession Mr. Obama has more than
most. But one negative revelation has been the way he has chosen to spend
his scarce resources on income transfers rather than growth promotion.
Most of his "stimulus" spending was devoted to social programs, rather
than public works, and nearly all of the tax cuts were devoted to income
maintenance rather than to improving incentives to work or invest.
His Treasury has been making a similar mistake with its financial bailout
plans. The banking system needs to work through its losses, and one
necessary use of public capital is to assist in burning down those bad
assets as fast as possible. Yet most of Team Obama's ministrations so far
have gone toward triage and life support, rather than repair and recovery.
AIG yesterday received its fourth "rescue," including $70 billion in
Troubled Asset Relief Program cash, without any clear business direction.
(See
here.) Citigroup's restructuring last week added not a dollar of new
capital, and also no clear direction. Perhaps the imminent Treasury
"stress tests" will clear the decks, but until they do the banks are all
living in fear of becoming the next AIG. All of this squanders public
money that could better go toward burning down bank debt.
The market has notably plunged since Mr. Obama introduced his budget last
week, and that should be no surprise. The document was a declaration of
hostility toward capitalists across the economy. Health-care stocks have
dived on fears of new government mandates and price controls. Private
lenders to students have been told they're no longer wanted. Anyone who
uses carbon energy has been warned to expect a huge tax increase from cap
and trade. And every risk-taker and investor now knows that another tax
increase will slam the economy in 2011, unless Mr. Obama lets Speaker
Nancy Pelosi impose one even earlier.
Meanwhile, Congress demands more bank lending even as it assails lenders
and threatens to let judges rewrite mortgage contracts. The powers in
Congress -- unrebuked by Mr. Obama -- are ridiculing and punishing the
very capitalists who are essential to a sustainable recovery. The result
has been a capital strike, and the return of the fear from last year that
we could face a far deeper downturn. This is no way to nurture a wounded
economy back to health.
Listening to Mr. Obama and his chief of staff, Rahm Emanuel, on the
weekend, we couldn't help but wonder if they appreciate any of this. They
seem preoccupied with going to the barricades against Republicans who
wield little power, or picking a fight with Rush Limbaugh, as if this is
the kind of economic leadership Americans want.
Perhaps they're reading the polls and figure they have two or three years
before voters stop blaming Republicans and Mr. Bush for the economy. Even
if that's right in the long run, in the meantime their assault on business
and investors is delaying a recovery and ensuring that the expansion will
be weaker than it should be when it finally does arrive.
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