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Friday, January 30, 2009
Larry Kudlow :: Townhall.com Columnist
Shelve the Stimulus
by Larry Kudlow
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Was the Copenhagen Global Warming Summit Walk-Out a Win for the U.S.?


Wednesday night’s House tally on the Democratic stimulus package, where not a single Republican voted in favor, was another shot across the bow for this incredibly unmanageable $900 billion behemoth of a program that truly will not stimulate the economy. Sure, the Democrats won on a party-line count. But Team Obama is now regrouping in the face of mounting criticism of this package.

GOP economist Martin Feldstein revoked his prior support of a stimulus plan in Wednesday’s Washington Post. "In its current form," Feldstein wrote, "[the plan] does too little to raise national spending and employment. It would be better for the Senate to delay legislation for a month, or even two, if that’s what it takes to produce a much better bill. We cannot afford an $800 billion mistake."

Clinton economic adviser Alice Rivlin made the same point in testimony before the House Budget Committee. Her message: Divide up the package and slow down the process.

And Sen. Richard Shelby told CNBC that Washington should "shelve the stimulus package" and instead attack the banking and credit problem first -- probably with a government-sponsored bad bank that would relieve financial institutions from their toxic-asset problem. Mr. Shelby believes the credit crunch remains the biggest obstacle to economic recovery.

Later in the day when I interviewed Senate Republican leader Mitch McConnell, he agreed with Shelby that the stimulus plan should be shelved. For the first time -- as far as I know -- McConnell pledged to vote no on the package. Instead he wants larger tax cuts and smaller spending. McConnell might be willing to change his mind if the package changes, but he told me he didn’t expect that to happen.

And in what may prove to be the biggest stimulus-package hurdle of all, news reports suggest that Team Obama is contemplating as much as $2 trillion in TARP additions to rescue the banking system in one form or another. That would be $2 trillion on top of the nearly $1 trillion stimulus package.

Government spending, deficits, and debt creation of this magnitude is simply unheard of. So the added TARP money will surely imperil the entire stimulus package as taxpayers around the country begin to digest the enormity of these proposed government actions. Financing of this type would not only destroy the U.S. fiscal position for years to come, it could destroy the dollar in the process. What’s more, the likelihood of massive tax increases -- which at some point will become front and center in this gargantuan funding operation -- would doom the economy for decades. Continued...

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Lawrence Kudlow is host of CNBC's Kudlow & Company

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Saudi Pay off
The stimulus package has gaurnteed that the Saudis will keep buy some of our debt. Note the lack of anything that suggests of producing energy.

We need a Roosevelt building plan. We need energy independance. We need self determination. What lovely campaign rhetoric. Where is the money to actually produce enough energy to get us off 1/8th the foriegn oil? Hundreds of billions and we can not produce one major power plant to lower our imports. JOKES ON US.

Our government will talk about the transmission end of the energy equation.

Wonder if it was the Saudis who made up this global warming thing. Who bennefits if we rely on sources which will never produce more than 10% of our energy needs? But Americans can be made to feel good about saving the planet.

We are getting into dangerous territory
I read somewhere that deficits in the range of 4% are OK. I don't know what the limit is, but I'm sure there is one, and it seems to me that if the growth in the economy dwarfs the deficit, as it does in most years, we're OK. I guess that among other things, a reasonable deficit can be tolerated for a year or two -- like, now.

But the 2009 deficit may be 10% or more of GDP. I would think that, basically, it's just too much, too fast.

I've also read that as long as the total government debt is well below 100% of GDP, that's OK, too, for much the same reason. But Obama is moving us quickly to where government debt is over 100% of GDP, and that scares the s**t out of me. For example, we have a national debt in the $10 trillion range, but the GDP is in the $14 trillion range. And as much as I hate it, a $20 trillion national debt might be OK if the GDP is, say, $30 trillion. But I don't know if we'll be able to absorb a national debt that is skyrocketing by $1 trillion a year or more, with the GDP stagnant or contracting.
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