[identity profile] badlydrawnjeff.livejournal.com posting in [community profile] talkpolitics
The failure of the stimulus isn't exactly news, and hasn't been for some time. Thankfully, more and more people are getting on board.

For instance, it looks like we might not have needed it to begin with. Granted, since stimulus of this nature doesn't work, we never need it, but the justification for it isn't so strong anymore:

"We had to hit the ground running and do everything we could to prevent a second Great Depression," Obama told supporters last week.

...

IBD reviewed records of economic forecasts made just before Obama signed the stimulus bill into law, as well as economic data and monthly stimulus spending data from around that time, and reviews of the stimulus bill itself.

The conclusion is that in claiming to have staved off a Depression, the White House and its supporters seem to be engaging in a bit of historical revisionism.

...

The argument is often made that the recession turned out to be far worse than anyone knew at the time. But various indicators show that the economy had pretty much hit bottom at the end of 2008 — a month before President Obama took office.


Stanford's John Taylor showed us that tax credits and directed spending was fairly worthless:

Individuals and families largely saved the transfers and tax rebates. The federal government increased purchases, but by only an immaterial amount. State and local governments used the stimulus grants to reduce their net borrowing (largely by acquiring more financial assets) rather than to increase expenditures, and they shifted expenditures away from purchases toward transfers.

Some argue that the economy would have been worse off without these stimulus packages, but the results do not support that view.


Even Harvard's Robert Barro is on board to an extent. While he has yet to come around on the fact that stimulus has not ever been shown to work, he's at least noting that the merits of spending need to be more important than the stimulating impact:

"In the long run you have got to pay for it. The medium and long-run effect is definitely negative. You can't just keep borrowing forever. Eventually taxes are going to be higher, and that has a negative effect," he said.

"The lesson is you want government spending only if the programmes are really worth it in terms of the usual rate of return calculations. The usual kind of calculation, not some Keynesian thing. The fact that it really is worth it to have highways and education. Classic public finance, that's not macroeconomics."


With murmurings that we may need a second stimulus, the question remains as to why we'd pursue such a thing given the track record of the first. At this point, if you're still a proponent of Keynesian-style stimulus, why? What will it take to convince you that it will not succeed?

(no subject)

Date: 6/7/11 21:42 (UTC)
From: [identity profile] xforge.livejournal.com
I hope you don't think he's ever going to address that.

(no subject)

Date: 6/7/11 21:44 (UTC)
From: [identity profile] underlankers.livejournal.com
No, you said that Manzanar was equal to the Gulag. I wasn't aware that the USA's NVKD had prisoners of Manzanar shot. Nor was I aware that FDR regularly shot his entire officer corps the way Stalin did.

(no subject)

Date: 6/7/11 21:55 (UTC)
From: [identity profile] underlankers.livejournal.com
Yes, you did.

My quotes, then yours, in sequential order:

And just to be clear-is this stating that FDR and the New Deal was Stalinist, meaning the forcible collectivization of US farms, a massive military build-up, a secret police empowered to murder its way through everything it wanted to, a gigantic set of slave-labor camps that were the biggest employer in the system, and a system of centralized economic planning with mandated state quotas, and NKVD-led enforcement of said quotas. You are saying that this was the FDR Administration, am I correct?

Pretty much. The only parts that aren't 100% accurate are the secret police and the slave-labor camps. I'm not sure the internment camps actually involved slave labor.

One more time-you are saying that FDR and Josef Stalin's leadership of the USA and USSR, respectively, were exactly the same?

Not exactly, but more similar than you're willing to admit.

So this again is another lie. You did claim that they were the same. I mentioned mass murder, but you said the only thing that was not accurate was the slave labor camps and secret police. Indicating that yes, you did say that FDR was a mass murderer on par with Stalin.

(no subject)

Date: 6/7/11 23:00 (UTC)
From: [identity profile] gunslnger.livejournal.com
So, pretty obviously, we can conclude that you make sweeping generalizations from specific claims and believe that they apply, and you don't understand how this isn't logical, nor factual.

(no subject)

Date: 7/7/11 00:28 (UTC)
From: [identity profile] underlankers.livejournal.com
So pretty obviously Jeff lies and when he said "the only parts that aren't 100% accurate are the slave labor camps and secret police" he really means that George C. Marshall was the moral equal of Georgi Zhukov and the director of OSS was Lavrenti Beria.

(no subject)

Date: 7/7/11 02:45 (UTC)
From: [identity profile] gunslnger.livejournal.com
See, there you go again. You take a simple statement, expand it hyperbolically and then create a new claim that you attribute to the other person, and then claim they're lying when they try to explain to you that that isn't what they said. So, you're either delusional and don't understand that you're doing this, which can be fixed and you can interact productively, or you're doing it intentionally, which makes it pointless to respond to you.

(no subject)

Date: 7/7/11 00:37 (UTC)
From: [identity profile] underlankers.livejournal.com
Not exactly, but more similar than you're willing to admit.
________

In my reality, Stalin was a member of the Politburo who during the Russian Civil War had already proven he was a treacherous, murderous sonofabitch who became ruler of the Soviet Union by being a master politician, relative to a Politburo filled with idiots. Stalinism began with collectivization, and at its height Stalinism's murderous assuming complete power over Russia and the rise of the NKVD gave it clear and nearly-identical natures to Hitler's party-state.

FDR, by contrast, won four terms in regular elections, embarked on rather limited social-welfare programs, and led the USA to victory in the largest war in US history. His Administration is rather narrowly "government" based and he was too much the New England aristocrat, moreso than Theodore in fact, to make it so. This to me is the difference: FDR was democratically elected and represented a 1930s democracy. Stalin's dictatorship only lacked Treblinkas and Sobibors, but otherwise every atrocity done by Hitler has a Stalinist counterpart.

Claiming that Ioseb Besarionvich Jugashvili and Franklin Delano Roosevelt were at all similar in terms of the political systems both steered is a ludicrous, idiotic idea of a crank who's read too much Rand.

(no subject)

Date: 7/7/11 00:29 (UTC)
From: [identity profile] underlankers.livejournal.com
See, I though you were referring to the OSS. That comment was not clear and I've had this go-round with you before where you've claimed that fascism, anarchism, and communism are the same and that FDR was both fascist and communist at the same time. So yeah, I actually do tend to think when you say fascist and communist you mean the actual murderous ideologies of the time period in question. But of course this is all your inability to own up to what the hell you actually say.

(no subject)

Date: 7/7/11 00:33 (UTC)
From: [identity profile] underlankers.livejournal.com
And when you're claiming that FDR and Stalin's administrative styles are similar to any great degree, I'm just going to note that Stalin depended heavily on Lavrenti Beria and on Yezhov before him, and that the Soviet state was a terror-state, dependent on the backhand to control its people. The USA of WWII had segregation and internment camps, but was a democratic society that held elections in the middle of a war.

If there's no NKVD in the WWII USA that in itself immediately makes Rooseveltian USA and Stalinist Russia night and day. They were never similar, and your myopic insistence that they were is the problem. You say that it's not claiming they were identical, but in reality, in my world where words mean what they mean, not what you want them to mean, the claim that Roosevelt and Stalin were similar means that you consider the New Deal equivalent to the Holodomor and the NVKD's murder squads.

(no subject)

Date: 7/7/11 00:39 (UTC)
From: [identity profile] underlankers.livejournal.com
Yes, you linked to the thread. I'm curious as to what you meant when you said FDR practiced extreme authoritarianism on par with Stalin's. Stalin murdered his way through Europe from 1928-1953, and his Red Army was as terrorized by the NVKD as the Wehrmacht was by the SS, with as many atrocities to its record as the Wehrmacht had to it. Stalin depended on terror too much for his own good to judge by how he died.

What in the fucking Hell did FDR do to remotely equal any of this in terms of authoritarianism? Social Security? Medicare? The draft?

(no subject)

Date: 7/7/11 01:02 (UTC)
From: [identity profile] underlankers.livejournal.com
No, neither he nor Stalin were fascists. If they had been, no Jews would have survived in Europe. Stalin was a Marxist, and thus his mass murder targeted classes more than ethnicities (there were exceptions, but he expelled as oppose to simply murdering them industrially, not that big a difference but a key one). Stalinism, unlike Nazism, was prudish, its lethality was more concentrated, and it made much better use of its potential as a conquering force.

FDR's Administration was undoubtedly authoritarian in some aspects, but then the USA as a whole has always had that strand in it, whether from slavery or its segregation-and-sharecropping successor.

(no subject)

Date: 7/7/11 01:02 (UTC)
From: [identity profile] underlankers.livejournal.com
None of which were FDR's fault, I might add.

(no subject)

Date: 7/7/11 01:08 (UTC)
From: [identity profile] underlankers.livejournal.com
I think that fascism is about what the fascists said it was about, yes. That puts me in a minority, even where "academics" as Root Fu would define the term are concerned. People have an extraordinary difficulty taking the fascists seriously by contrast to their nemeses. What makes that so is not apparent to me, the Stalinists weren't exactly any more accurate on things.

Credits & Style Info

Talk Politics.

A place to discuss politics without egomaniacal mods


MONTHLY TOPIC:

The AI Arms Race

DAILY QUOTE:
"Humans are the second-largest killer of humans (after mosquitoes), and we continue to discover new ways to do it."

December 2025

M T W T F S S
123 4 567
89 1011 121314
15161718192021
22232425262728
293031    

Summary