March 11, 2010 – 11:17 pm
This ought to kill off some shibboleths . . . assuming, of course, that the mainstream press will do its job and point out the fact that the Obama Administration is peddling misinformation about the economy, and about its own efforts to rescue the country from recession and depression.
I will say that I am more sympathetic to Ben Bernanke than the article appears to be. But that’s about my only major difference with it.
Peter Suderman’s article on why we cannot trust CBO estimates concerning the value of the stimulus is a must-read:
Here’s what the Congressional Budget Office’s (CBO) most recent report on the matter estimates the stimulus’ effects were in the fourth quarter of 2009: Thanks to the stimulus, America is somewhere between 1 and 2.1 million jobs richer than it would have been with no government intervention. Federal dollars have fattened up our GDP as well, adding somewhere between 1.5 and 3.5 percent to the GDP.
Naturally, the Obama administration is keen to take credit. And in touting the CBO’s stimulus figures, the White House repeatedly employed the phrase “created or saved.” After widespread eye-rolling at such an obvious rhetorical gimmick—not to mention significant evidence that many of the jobs it was claiming credit for were not, in fact, created or saved—the administration altered its lingo and started referring to jobs “funded.” But this too is not as accurate as it could be, at least in the context of the CBO’s reports; a better phrase might have been “created or saved or estimated or assumed.”
February 17, 2010 – 4:21 pm
The microphone goes to Megan McArdle:
February 17, 2010 – 4:17 pm
My friend and colleague, Francis Cianfrocca, has an op-ed for CBS News that further refutes Obama Administration spin regarding its stimulus package.
February 17, 2010 – 4:07 pm
Two big economic items for the day. The first is that the President has decided to create a debt panel that will supposedly lead us out of the fiscal mess that we are in. The second is that David Leonhardt has allied himself with the Administration’s spin machine to sing the praises of last year’s stimulus package.
By Pejman Yousefzadeh
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Posted in Blogs, Chequer-Board
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Also tagged Barack Obama, Budget Deficit, David Leonhardt, Economic Ignorance, economy, Entitlement Spending, Keynesian Stimulus, Matthew Continetti, Michael Boskin, National Debt, Obama Administration, Reihan Salam
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January 29, 2010 – 4:48 pm
It sounds really fantastic . . . until you read this:
January 26, 2010 – 3:37 pm
In his State of the Union, the President should acknowledge that the “liberal moment” he and his supporters were supposed to enjoy, has not come to pass because America is fundamentally a small-government country.
By Pejman Yousefzadeh
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Posted in Blogs, Chequer-Board
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Also tagged Barack Obama, budget, Budget Deficit, Democrats, economy, Entitlements, Keynesian Stimulus, National Debt, Obama Administration, Republicans, Spending, Spending Freeze
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January 25, 2010 – 3:28 pm
In the course of calling Americans stupid, merely because many Americans have a political opinion different from his, Joe Klein makes clear that he does not comprehend what the purpose of “stimulus” is. And it only takes the first paragraph for him to make his ignorance clear:
November 18, 2009 – 3:16 pm
The President informs us that he is worried about rising U.S. deficits. Too much of this, we are warned, and we will suffer a double-dip recession.
By Pejman Yousefzadeh
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Posted in Blogs, Chequer-Board
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Also tagged Barack Obama, Budget Deficits, Economic Ignorance, economy, Fiscal Policy, health care, Health Care Policy, Health Care Reform, Keynesian Stimulus, National Debt, Obama Administration
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October 30, 2009 – 8:56 pm
Jacob Sullum takes on the contention that the stimulus package is helping get us out of a recession:
October 1, 2009 – 10:44 pm
File under “Information that the Obama Administration Will Never Use To Make Policy, Despite Its Accuracy”: