CBO:
Stimulus hurts economy in the long run
By
Stephen Dinan
The
Congressional Budget Office on Tuesday downgraded its estimate of the benefits
of President Obama’s 2009 stimulus package, saying it may have sustained as few
as 700,000 jobs at its peak last year and that over the long run it will
actually be a net drag on the economy.
CBO
said that while the Recovery Act boosted the economy in the short run, the
extra debt that the stimulus piled up “crowds out” private investment and “will
reduce output slightly in the long run — by between 0 and 0.2 percent after
2016.”
The
analysis confirms what CBO predicted before the stimulus passed in February
2009, though the top-end decline of two-tenths of a percent is actually deeper
than the agency predicted back then.
All
told, the stimulus did boost jobs and the economy in the short run, according
to CBO’s models. At the peak of spending from July through September 2010, it
sustained anywhere from 700,000 to 3.6 million, which lowered the unemployment
rate by between four-tenths of a percent to 2 percent.
The
Obama administration had promised 3.5 million jobs would be produced at the
peak of spending.
For
this current quarter CBO said the stimulus is sustaining between 600,000 and
1.8 million jobs, which has improved the unemployment rate by as much as 1
percent versus what it otherwise would have been.
The
White House did not return a message seeking comment Tuesday afternoon, but
officials there previously have said the Recovery Act stopped the economy from
falling into another Great Depression.
“The
point is, what is uncontestable is that those infrastructure projects that were
funded by the Recovery Act were very well managed, came in on budget or under
budget and led to the creation of many, many jobs by an outside, independent
analyst” White House press secretary Jay Carney said in September, as Mr. Obama
was proposing another round of stimulus spending.
That
new proposal called for $447 billion in expanded tax breaks, additional aid to
states to hire teachers and emergency workers, and more infrastructure
spending.
That
broad effort has stalled, though on Monday Mr. Obama signed a slim portion of
the package that offers tax breaks to businesses that hire veterans, and that
repeals a 3 percent contract withholding requirement for government contractors.
On
Tuesday, top House Democratic leaders sent a letter to House Speaker John A.
Boehner urging support for the extension of unemployment benefits, last year’s
payroll tax cut and higher payments to doctors who treat Medicare patients
before they all expire at the end of this year.
“Independent
economists from across the political spectrum estimate that failure to pass
these essential pieces of legislation could reduce economic growth by much as 2
percentage points next year,” the leaders, including top House Democrat Rep.
Nancy Pelosi and her two chief lieutenants, said.
CBO
has re-evaluated the stimulus every three months, and its estimates for the
total cost have varied. Initially the package was pegged at $787 billion, rose
as high as $862 billion at one point, and is now projected to be $825 billion
once all the money is paid out.
The
nonpartisan agency also has changed its model for the spending’s impact on the
economy, and the new calculations show the Recovery Act did less than originally
projected.
CBO
said it has concluded there is less of an indirect multiplier effect of federal
spending.
Those
changes caused it to drop its estimates for total employment sustained by the
spending in 2011 from between 1.2 million and 3.7 million down to between
600,000 and 3.6 million.
As
for the long-term situation, CBO said its basic assumption is that each dollar
of additional federal debt crowds out about a third of a dollar’s worth of
private domestic capital.
CBO
said there is no crowding out in the short term, which is why the Recovery Act
boosts the economy in the near term.
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