Just after the US election last November I wrote a blog speculating about how Congress and the newly re-elected President would face the looming fiscal crisis. I hoped that the Republicans would see the need to accept tax increases on the ‘rich’ as part of a broader deal to address ballooning deficits, notwithstanding widely-held convictions that raising taxes in a time of economic stagnation was not a good idea. With many misgivings, they did. On the other side, I hoped that President Obama would accept the need to seriously address the ‘entitlements’ problem. I even used his own infamous aside to (then) President Medvedev to argue that since he (Obama) would personally require no further electoral support, he could defy his own left to achieve, in the national interest, a grand bargain with the Republicans. Boy, was I wrong!
It
now seems clear that the President will resist any serious limitations on government
spending because he believes in the welfare-state and in the central importance
of government for determining the well-being of a people. He may well be successful in this. He has a pliant media and continuing
sentimental support. Through these, he
thinks he can win the public relations’ battle and demonise the Republican
Party and the Republican-dominated House of Representatives to the extent that
they become politically impotent. In
consequence, he will be able to defend his health and other social programmes,
as well as inflicting significant electoral defeat on that party in the 2014
mid-term elections. It will be
interesting to see how successful he is.
But
it will be a pyrrhic victory. The
present path of mounting deficits cannot but lead to financial disaster. This has been widely observed; examples of
developed states that have failed to control their expenditures have been much
discussed in recent times. As if this
were not enough, the US Government’s own
official audit agency (the Government Accountability Office) has recently (17
January) made the point plain: “…. absent policy changes, the Federal Government
continues to face an unsustainable fiscal path.” Broadly the same point was made a few days
later (24 January) by the Managing Director of the International Monetary Fund,
Christine Lagarde. If nothing
substantial happens, America (and the rest of
us) face another period of financial crisis.
In
the face of all this, the Republican opposition plan seems to turn on tactical
use of the House’s power to withhold legislative approval for an increase in
the Government debt ceiling. I say
‘tactical’ because the House has already approved an extension for three
months. The real negotiations are
scheduled for the run up to this next occasion (when other matters, like the
‘sequester’, have been tidied away). The
question then is, how successful can the Republican opposition be in forcing
the President to address the problem of Federal debt? Of course, this remains to be seen but given
that he has already indicated that he will not, on principle, entertain such
discussions, the omens do not look good.
The ‘principle’, in this case is that Congress should take
responsibility for financing the expenditures it has already approved (for
which the money was borrowed).
Whatever
we may think of this argument, it provides an interesting contrast with Mr
Obama’s attitude to raising the debt ceiling when it came before him as a
Senator. Then, he thought it certainly
was a matter for the government of the day to address:
“The
fact that we are here today to debate raising America’s debt limit is sign of
leadership failure. It is a sign that
the US government can’t pay its bills.
It is a sign that we now depend on on-going financial assistance from
foreign countries to finance our Government’s reckless fiscal policies. Leadership means that the buck stops
here! Instead, Washington is shifting
the burden of bad choices today to the backs of our children and
grandchildren. I therefore intend to
oppose the effort to increase America’s debt limit.”
That
was 16 March, 2006. The US national debt
has doubled since then (from $8 trillion to $16 trillion). Senator Obama also referred to the issue in
his 2008 campaign. “(R)aising the debt ceiling is irresponsible and
unpatriotic.”
He
was right, wasn’t he? So what is
different now? What, indeed, is so
different now that it would be inappropriate for the President to even discuss
it? Perhaps I am wrong (again) but there
seems little hope that he will
seriously address the looming problem of national debt and no realistic prospect
of change.
Postscript
On
1 November, 2009 I posted a blog entitled, “The Chamberlain of the Twenty-first
Century?” It was the seventh in the
series (this present piece is the 83rd ). In it, I reviewed President Obama’s foreign
and diplomatic policy performance since he had taken office in the January of
that year and I detected a tendency to appeasement. I noted that “the crucial mistake that Prime
Minister Chamberlain made was to ignore the fact that there are times when
vital interests cannot be defended without fighting for them, however we might
wish that things were otherwise”, and that sometimes talking might not be
enough. This point found a curious echo
in last week’s inaugural address, which included a (perhaps unwitting) use of
Chamberlain’s memorable, but infamous phrase, “peace in our time”, which seemed
also to come in the ‘Munich’ context of trading future security for more
immediate political satisfactions. I
still think that the answer to my 2009 question is, ‘yes’. Obama still looks a lot like the Chamberlain
of the 21st Century!
3 comments:
Hi Ron,
I remember reading "Restoring the American Dream" (1979) by the American libertarian Robert Ringer. The book was forwarded by William E. Simon, an Ex Secretary of the Treasury. (Simon wrote "A Time for Truth" an eye-popping book on his experiences in government circles).
Even back then, both men highlighted the dangers of U.S deficit spending, a figure that seems paltry in comparison to 2013.
The spending just seems to go on and on and on...
But the music must stop sometime, somehow.
Stuart L.
Peace in our Time....Chamberlain.....and Politicians repeating the Past.
Like Dr. Smith I too, envisaged that President Obama in his last term would take the opportunity of addressing the United States debt problem by becoming a true colonial American in facing up to the fact that one can never borrow one’s way out of debt. Taking the hard decision which always separates the men from the boys.!
I do however; see a slight difference in the comparison between Neville Chamberlain in 1939 and President Obama in 2013. Yes, Chamberlain’s Munich was a betrayal. However in the period after the “Peace in our Time” Chamberlain very quietly took the opportunity to rectify Britain’s debased armed forces by allowing re-armament, all be it on a small scale. Thus avoiding any political embarrassment to himself and the Conservative’s, but mainly any vocal dissension from the peace loving Labour benches.
“Too late regretfully, in respect of the military in avoiding the Blitzkrieg of Panzer warfare in France during May 1940.”
It has be very obvious for some time that President Obama is a left wing President, bound by ideology and popularity, suitably equipped with a gift for oratory...a sort of modern day Tom Paine with cleaner edges!
We here in New Zealand should not be so critical of people in political glasshouses such as our Government and opposition. When they continue to borrow vast amounts of money to keep us in a standard of living (and themselves in power) which we and they have failed to earn, or may it be said even to deserve? (Maoris excluded)
The fairy tale of the Long White Cloud has storm clouds gathering on the horizon; and Utopia is, and always will be, a distant dream. Perhaps our leaders expect we will become a sort of socialistic Camelot with King Arthur riding to the rescue on a welfare debt ridden horse, carrying of course an appropriate flag.
What a nightmare!
Brian
Too true Brian, but I fear it will be a maori sovereignty flag with a big red border. More like king hori rather than king arthur and it wont be any sort of rescue.
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