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Wednesday, January 30, 2008
Thomas Sowell :: Townhall.com Columnist
A "Stimulus Package"?
by Thomas Sowell
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Both political parties seem determined that the federal government should create a "stimulus package" of things designed to cushion a downturn in the economy.

That alone should be enough to make us remember that "the devil is always in the details," because things that are bipartisan are often twice as bad as things that are partisan.

A bipartisan intervention is virtually guaranteed to be a grab bag of inconsistent policies thrown together in order to get the votes of people with contradictory ideas of what ought to be done.

The idea of a stimulus package is based on the general notion that there are things the government could do to make things better in the economy.

Unfortunately, there is a vast difference between what the government could do and what it is likely to do.

Economists can give you all sorts of scenarios in which government intervention could make things better, whether when fighting off a recession, regulating domestic markets or controlling international trade.

Some people even believe that whenever there is "market failure," the government ought to step in.

Of course markets can fail. Everything human can fail. But if Alex Rodriguez strikes out, do the Yankees take him out of the game and send in a pinch hitter for him?

No one would dream of suggesting such a thing. We are far more rational when discussing sports than when discussing politics.

The fact that the market is not doing what we wish it would do is no reason to automatically assume that the government would do better.

There are too many examples of government interventions that made things worse, the Great Depression of the 1930s being the most tragic.

Those on the left love to believe that the stock market crash of 1929 showed the failure of the free market and that the New Deal interventions in the 1930s saved the day.

But the stock market crash of 1987 was just as big and Ronald Reagan resisted loud calls for him to intervene. The result was not another Great Depression but the beginning of a decades-long period of prosperity.

Before Presidents Herbert Hoover and Franklin D. Roosevelt came along, there was no expectation that the federal government would intervene when the stock market crashed or when there was a downturn in the economy. Continued...

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About The Author
Thomas Sowell is a senior fellow at the Hoover Institute and author of The Housing Boom and Bust.
 
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Just cut spending.
It's simple. The market takes care of itself. And once again, the government feels compelled to "fix" a faltering economy. First, it's arguable if the US is near or currently in a recession. The market is cyclic and it's expected to behave this way. It's presumptuous to freak out because of a potential recession in our economy. The mainstream media likes to portray this potential recession as a "weeping and gnashing of teeth" scenario, but constant talk and speculation is only fueling a potential recession. Stop worrying! It will be okay.

Yes, the stimulus could prove to be a fix to our slow economy, but it's only a quickie. But the quick fix is extremely out weighed by the long-term consequences of the stimulus package. Let me explain...

With a deficit near 11 trillion dollars, how is this stimulus packaged being funded? Well, it's all borrowed on interest and it's mostly from China. Now, is this smart for US government to spend money it doesn't have? Of course not! The government is racking up a bill for future tax payers to pay. O, what a burden! The long-term consequences out weigh the short-term fix.

A logical solution would be to cut spending. The stimulus package puts money that the government would have spent carelessly into the hands of taxpayers. So, instead of spending on inefficient social programs and endless wars, taxpayers can now buy the coveted iPod touch.

Just cut spending. Balance the budget. Lower taxes. These are all good solutions for a lowering economy. Giving out borrowed money is not a solution, it's the problem.

it's just a wee little package
No, no, that's not a shot at your size problems. I mean the "stim". It's not big enough to cause probs. Of course, when you don't want to spend money you talk about how many MILLIONS OF DOLLARS it is and when you do want to spend it one talks percentages. This is apparently both so huge a stim it is going to enslave us to yellow-skinned creditors forevermore and not big enough to do any good, right chappie? Granted it would be better to actually drop money from helicopters, but the distribution doesn't work well. I like the direct payment idea. Usually, they lower target rates to banks and only the banks and people taking out a loan get more money to spend. This spreads it out, spreads it out in cash, and everybody decides for themselves. Each is free to save, spend or send it back to the govie.
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