The net is buzzing with the rumor that Barack Obama is clinically depressed. Why wouldn't he be? An official diagnosis is unnecessary.
Obama swept to office on a wave of hope. It didn't get better, from there. Where George W. Bush was the great "decider"-- and a delusional one, at that, who relied too much on a trigger happy, paranoid vice president, Dick Cheney-- Obama retained the economic team that influenced the White House during the failed Bush term.
That Obama did so was based on his determination that the risks of change, to the economy, were too severe and that continuity in policy was critical to ensure the survival of the US financial system. So he trusted that the same team, including Larry Summers, Ben Bernanke and Tim Geithner, who presided over the collapse. What concerned skeptics in his own party, when Obama vaulted ahead of the dour Hilary Clinton, has proven out: inexperience combined with a management style mismatched to the scope of the nation's economic problems.
These flaws are explored in the new Ron Suskind analysis of the first half of the president's term ("Confidence Men: Wall Street, Washington, and the Election of a President"). No one could have moved into the White House believing his or her response in those initial days would set the course for the rest of his term.
The last American president to take office amidst a maelstrom was Harry Truman, who launched the Pecora Commission to investigate Wall Street and the causes of the 1929 crash of the stock market. Obama could have taken a similar course, but he did not have a measure of his opposition and he harbored the unrealistic hope of bridging a partisan divide that had been nurtured by the same forces that wrecked the economy.
We are ten years into a war in Afghanistan that looks perversely similar to the last war we failed to win hearts and minds. (Joseph Steiglitz, Nobel Prize economist, is among those who Obama cast aside when he came into the White House. A Bilmes/Steiglitz OPED from the LA Times last weekend, is reprinted below.)
As Obama himself has recently noted; no president was ever re-elected by claiming that the economy is less worse than it would otherwise have been, for interventions he lead. But in neglecting his own base, Obama is now at considerable risk from an opposition that took quick measure of his flaws, as Suskind reports, and has been aiming to make him a one-term president ever since.
The Federal Reserve, in 2009, had one chance with the American public to use fiscal stimulus against the severe recession. But we know so very little about the operations of the Fed or the Treasury for that matter, and whatever course these behemoths undertook to revive markets, it was not enough to turn the economy around and, now, with the GOP wolves at the door, the chances of larger federal intervention on a Paul Krugman-scale course of investment in America are slim to none.
So why not be depressed? For my part, I am depressed because issues I have spent two decades fighting: for protection of our Everglades, our air and water, have been decimated by the right-wing. In Congress, the GOP lead House of Representatives is in the midst of a Holy War against the US EPA, using the economic crisis as a rationale to dismantle regulatory authority under the premise that protecting the environment is costing "jobs!" It is depressing that the environmental community responds to these attacks by mounting the same arguments as it did in the 1980's -- a kind of "forward to the past" -- as though Americans are either indifferent to or simply too preoccupied to understand the greed and moral collapse represented by environmental failures.
It was possible for environmentalists to anticipate the economic crisis of 2007 tied to the housing bubble-- based on evaluating the ascendant politics of Florida anchored to construction and development in wetlands. But I was wrong to believe that the crisis would resolve through a spirit of shared sacrifice like that which defined America's response to the Great Depression.
In Barack Obama, the people elected a candidate who was the right one at the right time for America. Now, as we approach 2012, the fires are glowing on the political horizon like the ones that ran rampant this summer. Soon, the second season of "The Walking Dead" will begin on AMC. On HBO, "Game of Thrones" will continue with its tag line, "Winter is coming." And winter is coming.
http://www.latimes.com/news/opinion/la-oe--bilmes-war-cost-20110918,0,999206.story?track=rss
Los Angeles Times
September 18, 2011
America's Costly War Machine
Fighting the war on terror compromises the economy now and threatens it in the future.
By Linda J. Bilmes and Joseph E. Stiglitz
Ten years into the war on terror, the U.S. has largely succeeded in its attempts to destabilize Al Qaeda and eliminate its leaders. But the cost has been enormous, and our decisions about how to finance it have profoundly damaged the U.S. economy.
Many of these costs were unnecessary. We chose to fight in Iraq and Afghanistan with a small, all-volunteer force, and we supplemented the military presence with a heavy reliance on civilian contractors. These decisions not only placed enormous strain on the troops but dramatically pushed up costs. Recent congressional investigations have shown that roughly 1 of every 4 dollars spent on wartime contracting was wasted or misspent.
To date, the United States has spent more than $2.5 trillion on the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan, the Pentagon spending spree that accompanied it and a battery of new homeland security measures instituted after Sept. 11.
How have we paid for this? Entirely through borrowing. Spending on the wars and on added security at home has accounted for more than one-quarter of the total increase in U.S. government debt since 2001. And not only did we fail to pay as we went for the wars, the George W. Bush administration also successfully pushed to cut taxes in 2001 and again in 2003, which added further to the debt. This toxic combination of lower revenues and higher spending has brought the country to its current political stalemate.
There is only one other time in U.S. history that a war was financed entirely through borrowing, without raising taxes: when the Colonies borrowed from France during the Revolutionary War.
Even if we were to leave Afghanistan and Iraq tomorrow, our war debt would continue to rise for decades. Future bills will include such things as caring for military veterans, replacing military equipment, rebuilding the armed forces and paying interest on all the money we have borrowed. And these costs won't be insignificant.
History has shown that the cost of caring for military veterans peaks decades after a conflict. Already, half of the returning troops have been treated in Veterans Administration medical centers, and more than 600,000 have qualified to receive disability compensation. At this point, the bill for future medical and disability benefits is estimated at $600 billion to $900 billion, but the number will almost surely grow as hundreds of thousands of troops still deployed abroad return home.
And it isn't just in some theoretical future that the wars will affect the nation's economy: They already have. The conditions that precipitated the financial crisis in 2008 were shaped in part by the war on terror. The invasion of Iraq and the resulting instability in the Persian Gulf were among the factors that pushed oil prices up from about $30 a barrel in 2003 to historic highs five years later, peaking at $140 a barrel in current dollars in 2008. Higher oil prices threatened to depress U.S. economic activity, prompting the Federal Reserve to lower interest rates and loosen regulations. These policies were major contributors to the housing bubble and the financial collapse that followed.
Now, the war's huge deficits are shaping the economic debate, and they could keep Congress from enacting another round of needed stimulus spending to help the country climb out of its economic malaise. Many of these war debts are likely to continue to compromise America's investments in its future for decades.
For years, the public failed to adequately question how it was possible that we could spend and borrow so freely, with so few consequences. But now the painful legacy of these decisions has become clear. Throughout the past decade, Congress routinely approved huge "emergency" appropriations to pay for the wars. This process preempted the usual scrutiny and debate that accompanies large spending bills. In part, this is because the U.S. lacks the basic accounting tools necessary for informed debate. Our future debts from the war are not listed anywhere in the federal government's budget. We don't even know for certain where the money has been spent. The Pentagon hasn't produced a clean financial audit in the 20 years since government auditing began, nor has it developed an accounting framework that would allow an assessment of the future costs of current decisions. This has almost certainly increased the overall cost of the war.
Our response to Sept. 11 has weakened both the current economy and our future economic prospects. And that legacy of economic weakness — combined with the erosion of the credibility of our military power and of our "soft power" — has undermined, rather than strengthened, our national security.
Nearly 10 years into the Afghanistan war, the violence in that country shows little sign of abating. August was the deadliest month of the war yet for U.S. troops, and there were also multiple attacks on Afghan security forces, government officials and civilians. The surge in violence comes as NATO is drawing down and handing over security control to national forces. But tens of thousands of U.S. military personnel are scheduled to remain in Afghanistan through the end of 2014.
The costs of fighting the war on terror have already been far higher than they needed to be. The U.S. should not take on even greater war debt without understanding the true costs of continuing down that path.
Linda J. Bilmes is a faculty member at Harvard University. Joseph E. Stiglitz is a professor at Columbia University and the recipient of the Nobel Prize in economics. They are coauthors of "The Three Trillion Dollar War: The True Cost of the Iraq Conflict."
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4 comments:
May want to change the name to "eye on the nation" vs. "eye on Miami"
No wonder we are feeling depressed over here at EyeontheNation. What's good on the horizon?
Now is not the time to sorrow. Engage a newer generation of activists and artists. If you can't take being an activist anymore (burn-out), mentor others. And never, never, never give up. And even if you have given up, don't tell anyone. You might change your mind the next day.
Shake your Obama blues and understand the stakes! Some context from Andrew Sullivan:
Every time you think the ultras in the current GOP won't go there, they do. They'll sabotage economic growth for short term political advantage. They'll sabotage their own president in negotiating with allies. They're happy for the US to default if it means they can damage Obama. Their own plan for immediate, drastic austerity would be catastrophic for the global economy. Their pre-Arab Spring belligerence would shut America out of a critical opportunity to ease tensions with the growing and burgeoning Muslim world. And they have no problem treating the world economy as a partisan plaything.
If they claw their way back to power this way, our system really will be broken for a long time. And the great possibility of an adult conversation on pragmatic grounds to help the economy will be lost. And this is emphatically not Obama's fault. He tried. They threw it back in his face again and again. Which means, I believe, that we should double down in backing him, instead of the ear-splitting whine coming from the left.
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