Friday, February 05, 2010

A TRILLION right there

Roll back the remaining unspent $500 billion in stimulus funds, uphold the law and direct the $500 billion in TARP repayments to reduce the deficit.

If the president is serious about fiscal discipline he ought to commit to this right now. As a down payment on paying down the astronomical federal debt that is bringing this country to its knees.

The president's budget as outlined must not pass.

More. Rasmussen. Americans Reject Keynesian Economics:

While influential 20th Century economist John Maynard Keynes would say it’s best to increase deficit spending in tough economic times, only 11% of American adults agree and think the nation needs to increase its deficit spending at this time. A new Rasmussen Reports national telephone survey finds that 70% disagree and say it would be better to cut the deficit.

In fact, 59% think Keynes had it backwards and that increasing the deficit at this time would hurt the economy rather than help.

To help the economy, most Americans (56%) believe that cutting the deficit is the way to go.

Eighty-three percent (83%) of Americans, in fact, say the size of the federal budget deficit is due more to the unwillingness of politicians to cut government spending than to the reluctance of taxpayers to pay more in taxes.

More. Heritage: Second Stimulus, Same as the First
When President Barack Obama was sworn into office, the U.S. economy employed 134.6 million people and the unemployment rate stood at 7.6%. In response to growing job losses, President Obama passed an $862 billion stimulus plan that his economic experts promised would help the United States employ at least 138.6 million people by 2010. Reality has not been kind to President Obama's hope. Today, the Bureau of Labor and Statistics released its monthly jobs report showing the U.S. economy shed another net 20,000 jobs, leaving only 129.5 million jobs, almost 10 million short of the President's promises.

Anticipating this bleak job news, the President announced in his State of the Union address last week: "That is why jobs must be our number one focus in 2010, and that is why I am calling for a new jobs bill tonight." It is understandable why the President wants to call this new legislation a "jobs bill" instead of what it really is: his second stimulus. But that would mean admitting that his first stimulus completely failed, which both the objective evidence and the opinion of the American people show it has.

And why did the President's first stimulus fail? For the same reason his second stimulus is destined to fail: Only the private sector in pursuit of opportunity can create jobs on net. The best we can hope from government is that it keeps to a minimum the jobs it prevents and the income and wealth it destroys.

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