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Month: April 2011

Blue America welcomes Norman Soloman

Blue America welcomes Norman Soloman

Howie Klein:

We don’t always get even close to a perfect Blue America candidate. But Norman Solomon is. He’s running for the Marin-Sonoma County seat widely believed to being given up by Lynn Woolsey. It’s a sturdy Democratic bastion and it deserves strong progressive leadership, not another cookie-cutter Democrat who will just go along and get along with the mostly Conservative Consensus in Washington. No one ever accused Norman Solomon of going along to get along. I hope you can jump over to Crooks and Liars at 1pm this afternoon and meet him for yourself. John Amato has known him for many years– ever since he read Norman’s book, Made Love Got War— and will be interviewing him today. Please consider making a contribution to his campaign.
[…]
Norman is a lifelong movement progressive, not someone who will reluctantly be dragged along in a progressive direction from time to time. It pains me to see Democrats who opposed “Bush’s” war in Afghanistan but still want to give Obama more… something. They keep supporting spending billions of dollars there, in Iraq and elsewhere. We won’t have to worry about Norman Solomon ever doing anything like that. “Martin Luther King Jr. denounced what he called ‘the madness of militarism,'” he reminded me. “When I went to Afghanistan in 2009, I could see the human consequences of that madness– and the ongoing tragedy of U.S. military intervention. After more than 40 years of anhttp://www.blogger.com/img/blank.gifti-war activism, I’m determined to bring that commitment to the United States Congress… From climate change to economic fairness to civil liberties to war, the Obama administration has let progressives down. We have two overarching responsibilities– to defeat the Republican right wing and to implement truly progressive policies. We’ve got to fight the right, and we’ve got to fight for what we believe in.”

And that’s what Blue America believes in as well. Please join us over at

The speech

The Speech

by digby

For those of us who don’t think the deficits really are the biggest problem facing the country at the moment or that a Democratic president ever should capitulate to the idea that spending is the cause of our current problems, this speech was never going to be very pleasing. But who cares about that? People like me are clearly irrelevant to this process. But there was still much to like about it. (For me the highlight was his historical framing of how the deficits were created and a strong denunciation of the Ryan plan.)

As with the earlier health care process, he has now established the leftward baseline for the coming negotiations with a speech that lays out a moral case for the social safety net and takes the other side to task for their destructive nihilism. I don’t know how many people will see it — “the deficit” makes even the wonkiest political junkie’s eyes glaze over. But it’s out there and if Obama makes this case over and over again on the road, it will penetrate.

The devil is in the details, of course, and this is an opening bid in the coming negotiations. His plan, as enunciated today, will not be the one that’s enacted, I think we know that much. As I said, Obama has defined the leftward rhetorical pole of the debate and all negotiations will undoubtedly lead to the right. So it looks to me as if the sweet spot, if there is one, will be found — again following the Health Care strategy — in the Senate. And they are quite far along on creating a “balanced” bipartisan plan that he will probably find acceptable as the middle ground between his “liberal” vision and the House Ryan trainwreck.

Here’s where they stand today:

Dick Durbin urges action on Social Security

Social Security reform and boosting government revenues are among the provisions that could be included in a deficit-reduction package being negotiated by a bipartisan group of senators.

The so-called “Gang of Six” is expected to unveil its proposals after the congressional Easter break, Sen. Dick Durbin (D-Ill.), the Senate’s No. 2 Democrat, told reporters at a breakfast meeting hosted by Bloomberg News.

“If we can pull it off, we are the only bipartisan show in town. I think that means something,” he said.

The proposal would represent yet another option in a cacophonous debate over government spending and reducing the nation’s deficit that is just beginning in Washington.

The House on Friday is scheduled to begin debate on House Budget Committee Chairman Paul Ryan’s proposal to trim more than $6 trillion over the next 10 years by revamping Medicare and Medicaid, slashing other entitlement programs, and cutting taxes.

President Barack Obama is expected to unveil his deficit-reduction plan in a speech Wednesday afternoon.

Durbin wouldn’t disclose specific proposals in the Senate measure, but said it will borrow significantly from the report issued by the president’s bipartisan deficit reduction commission last year.

The commission offered a pathway to cutting $4 trillion over the next 10 years.

[…]

Ryan gave Social Security only passing attention in his House budget proposal, and advocates for the retirement program are pressing to separate it from the debate, noting that while it may need some reform it, doesn’t add to the deficit.

But Durbin, a staunch supporter of Social Security, said putting the program on sounder financial footing now “is a lot easier” than waiting until it is nearly broke in 26 years.

In addition to representing the Senate Democratic leadership in the talks, Durbin has become a bridge to a liberal community chafing over a perceived lack of support for programs and issues it considers crucial.

The senator acknowledged he, too, was dubious of some of the apocalyptic predictions offered up by conservatives, including fellow-gang member Coburn, whose mantra on the deficit issue Durbin jokingly dubbed the “doomsday speech.”

He said he’s been convinced, however, that action is vital, and he’s urged progressive allies to consider their priorities in light of today’s fiscal realities.

It looks like he’s got some other Democratic allies:

Several Democratic senators are separating themselves from their leadership and encouraging President Obama to cut Social Security benefits by raising the retirement age in order to keep the entitlement solvent.

Sens. Tom Carper (D-Del.) and Sen. Dianne Feinstein (D-Calif.) and Sen.Joe Lieberman (I-Conn.), who caucuses with the Democrats, are all openly calling for reform, and making it plain that the party is disunited on the issue when a titanic debate over debt is gathering momentum.

Aside from the inevitable tug-of-war over “entitlements” which I think are still very much on the table (the semantics of slashing vs “fixing” notwithstanding) the big question will be if they actually get any tax increases or if the president and the Democrats sign off on the the notion that cutting “tax expenditures” (aka the corporate tax attorney’s full employment act”) is the same as raising taxes. If Obama keeps his word this time and refuses to extend the Bush tax cuts and they are able to get Republicans and conservative Democrats to sign on to real tax hikes in an election year, I will be stunned and gratified. I can guarantee you that Norquist and the boyz are going to hang it around politicians’ necks — his entire reason for being will be called into question if he doesn’t. So it’s a big deal — indeed, it’s an act of hara kiri for quite a few Republicans. Maybe they’re just that patriotic, who knows?

I like it when Obama speaks about values and frames these arguments in moral terms and I think he did it well today. The concept of “balance” in today’s Washington sends chills down my spine, but again, my opinion on this irrelevant. The vast majority of Democrats trust the president to look after their interests and Independents like the idea of bipartisan solutions regardless of the details, so this makes sense for him. But the themes he struck about the commitment to seniors and the less fortunate are important themes for the president to reiterate, for the good of our society as a whole.

I also think, however, that the dynamics in Washington, the nature of the opposition and our experience of two years of negotiations dictate that we keep a close eye on how these values and themes are defined as we go forward. After all, the liberal Dick Durbin is saying that cutting social security is the moral thing to do. Let’s just say that these rhetorical lines in the sand have a way of being conveniently re-interpreted when they hit the sausage making machine.

Still, this was a good first speech of the 2012 re-election campaign. I have no doubt that it will reassure most of the Democratic base and appeal to the independents who are skeptical of the Tea Party Republicans.

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It’s Morning!

It’s Morning

by digby

This piece from National Journal explains all:

“The White House shows little sign of worrying about a dip in growth
and how it might affect the unemployment rate, which has fallen by a
percentage point since the year began but still sits at 8.8 percent,
danger territory for an incumbent president seeking reelection.

Obama advisers largely believe, instead, that the economy has moved on
from what White House officials call a “Phase 1” recovery—in which the
government was forced to cut taxes and spend heavily to pump up
consumer demand and rescue the nation from the brink of another Great
Depression.

Now, the officials believe, the recovery has reached “Phase 2,” where
the prospects of a double-dip recession are slim, expanding growth can
survive a hit in government spending, and the total level of spending
cuts is less important than the composition of them. (That reasoning
helps explain why the White House was willing to agree to $38.5
billion in cuts to the current-year budget in negotiations last week,
while insisting on protecting education and research programs the
administration sees as key drivers to future growth.)”

There you have it. 8.8% unemployment is no reason not to cut spending and we need to think about the future. But I have a sneaking suspicion that the futures of people who are financially suffering are impacted quite a bit. It’s not an abstraction to them — every day they are out of work is another day or a family has less money or freedom to better themselves, the future is impacted.

Whatever. It doesn’t matter anyway. The di has been cast and it’s a matter of waiting to see if the country will slowly crawl out of its economic hole or if deficit mania pushes it back in. The long term danger is in this notion that cutting spending for the future will somehow speed up the recovery now. If you don’t have a strong philosophical commitment to the social contract, it could be very tempting to arbitrarily slash spending on people who won’t feel it until many years down the road.

The spech tonight should give us some clue about how that’s going to go.

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Village Assessment

Village Assessment

by digby

I knew you were wondering how they were synthesizing all this budget talk. What could be more important right?

Here’s Dana Bash, Ed Henry, John King and Gloria Borger to fill us in. Dana Bash explained that one of the biggest divides in the impending Grand Bargain is around taxes and tax cuts, with a large group of Republicans coming out today saying they will not agree to any tax increases whatsoever.

We pick it up with John King:

King: There are some Republicans Saxby Chambliss for one, Tom Coburn of Oklahoma for another, who come to mind, who say “I don’t want tax increases, I don’t like tax increases, but it that’s what I have to pay, if I have to get modest tax increases as long as I get other things, as long as I get spending cuts, I get changes to Medicare, changes to social security …”

Borger: Right, right …

[Chambliss has not actually signed on to “modest tax increases” he’s signed on to “raising revenue” which is not the same thing in this debate and relies on magical thinking about loopholes — and tax cuts! — ed]

King: Does the President have any, do any of us, have a realistic belief that they will cut a big deal now or are we likely to have a big debate and carry this into the 2012 presidential cycle.

Henry: Sounds more like a big debate that carries on. Now obviously there are some impending problems here, the debt ceiling and lifting that by May 16th. As part of lifting that Speaker Boehner is saying “look you’ve got to put some deficit reduction on the table” so some event like that may force the president’s hand, may for both parties, frankly, to do something, but I think it’s much more likely to be a 2012 issue and here’s a reason why: the day after the big speech, where’s the president going? he’s going to Chicago. he going to officially launch the fundraising for 2012. So even if they say it’s not about politics, within 24 hours, he’s out on the campaign trail.

Borger: But here’s something that came out of those negotiations John that came out the government to avoid the government shutdown. I was talking to a senior White House adviser who said to me when I asked him what he learned about John Boehner. And he said, “what I learned about the House Speaker is that he knows how to negotiate. That he played it close to the vest. That he didn’t talk to his caucus about all the details until he had to. And the we liked negotiating with him. That he was a good tough negotiator.” So ironically, the administration that has promised openness is going to cut its deals in private because that is the way they work the best.

King: One of the reasons people are cynical about this is that the president just a few weeks ago submitted a budget to the congress. If he wanted to put his proposals on paper that was the place to do it. So the a few weeks later he comes in says essentially “Oh I want to amend my own budget.”

You know Dana, we know that’s why the Republicans are going to say, oh he doesn’t mean it, he’s late to the game. What are the Democrats on Capitol Hill saying? We talked about the interest groups, Move-on saying “hold on Mr President, don’t you dare.” What about his Democrats on the Hill?

Bash: There’s similar trepidation, no doubt about it. But they also realize, the Democrats realize, that they need to get into the game. The Republicans in the House had this big splash with Paul Ryan’s budget which obviously they don’t like.They still have not done, the Democrats obviously run the Senate, they have not seen the Democrats answer here, so they do feel like they want the President to get into the game but they are concerned as you said in the beginning of the segment.

The President is looking over his left shoulder. There’s a reason for that. A lot of people here are concerned, to be blunt, that he’s selling them out.

King: And it’s hard for an incumbent President, Ed, especially an incumbent president who has to do business with the other party, to do the two things that you just talked about. Number one he has to seem responsible, he has to try to negotiate with them, he has no choice. On the other hand, he’s gearing up a campaign where he knows his base, especially if unemployment is still around 8%, he’s got to get every single one of them out to vote.

Henry: He’s got to get the base excited, you’re right and the base is pretty upset with him right now going back to what you mentioned before, which is the December tax deal, extending the Bush taxcuts. They were mad about that. They’re mad about last week’s budget deal and they are very apprehensive about what he’s going to lay out here.

I was talking to a senior Democrat who advises the White House, outside the White House today who was sayinbg look, every time this president sits down with Speaker Boehner, to Gloria’s point about negotiating skills, the president seems to give up another 5 billion dollars, 10 billion dollars, 20 billions dollars. It’ s like the spending cuts keep going up. If you think about where the congressional Democrats started a couople of months ago they were talking about no spending cuts on the table. It keeps going up.

But this president has a much different reality than congressional Democrats.

Borger: (sagely) right

Henry: He’s going for re-election, him going to the middle and having liberal Democrats mad at him is not a bad thing.

Borger: exactly

So there you have it. If you have a better understanding of the politics or the policy of this issue more power to you. I am going to adjourn for a tall drink.

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Step right up: rogressiveCongress.org Online Auction

Progressive Congress.org Online Auction

by digby

Did you know that ProgressiveCongress.org puts out a daily news clipping service for people on Capitol Hill to see some stories that don’t come from Politico and the Drudge Report? They do. You can sign up for it right here.

You can also participate in their online auction featuring some really great stuff — and you’ll be supporting a very important organization to boot:

The Progressive Congress News Spring Fling Auction is now open. The auction will run from April 11, 2011 to April 15, 2011, with proceeds going to Progressive Congress News. We have one of a kind items like a Doodle by Rep. Raul Grijalva and a genuine Voting Machine from Florida 2000 complete with Hanging Chad and lots more. Be sure to visit this page daily as new items are still coming in!

Bid early, Bid often

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Raising revenue without raising taxes

Raising revenue without raising taxes

by digby

Yesterday I wrote about an interview between Jessica Yellin and Saxby Chamblis and Mark Warner that featured this exchange:

Yellin: Senator Chamblis do you believe that Senate Republicans will agree to a package that includes any sort of tax changes?

Chambliss: Well, the fact of the matter is that you can’t solve this debt problem just with reductions in discretionary spending. You can’t solve it just by attacking and reforming entitlements. You’ve got to look at the revenue side also.

What we are looking at proposing is actually a reduction in corporate rates and personal individual income tax rates, which will put more money in people’s pockets and we’re going to do that with the reduction in tax expenditures. Every time we’ve done that in years past whether it was under President Reagan or president Bush we have seen revenues increase. And we’ve got to have an increase in revenues if we are going to retire this debt… revenues have to be on the table if we’re serious about attacking that debt.

Yellin:Senator Warner, that’s a big concession by Republicans.

As I noted yesterday that’s flim flam. “Tax expenditures” means closing corporate loopholes (which will send their armies of lobbyists, lawyers and accountants on the prowl for new ones) and deductions (Like the one for mortgage interest.) Lowering rates for corporations and individuals means — lowering tax rates. Chambliss evokes Reagan and Bush because he’s parroting stale supply side nonsense about lowering rates automatically raising revenue.

Gang member Kent Conrad was a bit more explicit on This Week a while back:

“Fundamentally, if we’re going to raise revenue, I don’t think the way to do it is to raise rates. I think the way to do it is to eliminate some of the loopholes that exist in the system,” the senator said.

So yes, they all agree that they need to raise “revenue”just not “taxes.” And CNN believes that’s a big GOP concession that requires the Democrats to “meet halfway” and cut entitlements. (I think we should call this the “corporate tax lawyers full employment act.”)

In fact, CNN is so enamored of their hard hitting interview with Chambliss yesterday that they just replayed it. Only it was a little bit shorter. Here’s what they quoted Chambliss saying:

Chambliss: Well, the fact of the matter is that you can’t solve this debt problem just with reductions in discretionary spending. You can’t solve it just by attacking and reforming entitlements. You’ve got to look at the revenue side also.

Now it’s possible that cutting these “tax expenditures” really will bring in some money. But let’s just say that the idea that this means they can lower tax rates while insisting on harsh cuts in “entitlements” makes no sense at all. Either we are raising revenue or we are not raising revenue. But I’m fairly sure that old Saxby reaching back to Reagan and Bush (Jr or Sr, it doesn’t matter) gives away the game. They left huge deficits behind which subsequent Democratic presidents had tied around their necks like a flaming tire. Indeed, for the past 30 years the defining feature of our economics has been Republicans insisting on huge tax cuts which they insist will pay for themselves, running up massive deficits and then demagogueing the hell out of them when a Democrat takes over. And so, here we are.

I do not believe that any “deficit reduction plan” agreed upon under these circumstances will ever do anything but fill the coffers of the wealthy by stealing from the poor. That’s how this con is played. In this case it’s especially cunning — the people will blame the Democrats for their lousy financial prospects and attribute it to an unwillingness to cut even more. That’s the Republican version of winning the future.

Oh, and for an added bonus, unless the Dems absolutely shut the door on any cuts to Medicare, I think we can be sure to see more ads like this next year:

At the very least putting Medicare on the menu after the Ryan Plan nearly decimates it destroys any chance the Dems had to turn that back on them.

Update: And honestly, what’s the point of this? Wouldn’t it have been better to have the House release a plan to the left of Simpson-Bowles, if only to have a tiny bit of leverage with the GOP? Suzy Khimm reports for Mojo

President Barack Obama’s recent moves to counter Republicans on the thorny issue of debt and deficit reduction have forced his Democratic allies to rapidly reposition themselves. The first surprise came over the weekend, when many congressional Democrats first learned of the president’s plans to wade into the deficit debate with a major speech this Wednesday. Then, on Tuesday morning, the Washington Post reported that Obama plans to endorse the controversial recommendations of Alan Simpson and Erskine Bowles, the co-chairs of his deficit reduction commission. Many Democrats had criticized those same recommendations when they were released late last year. So now Obama’s allies on and off the Hill are scrambling to pull off a tricky balancing act: supporting their president while holding the less appealing aspects of Bowles-Simpson at arm’s length.The need for Dems to alter their rhetoric in response to Obama’s moves was on full display Tuesday morning at the Center for American Progress, where Democratic activists and members of Congress gathered for a speech by Rep. Chris Van Hollen (D-Md.). Van Hollen made it clear that Bowles-Simpson would become the new standard-bearer for the Democratic Party, saying that it launched “a really important dialogue” and took “an overall balanced approach” to deficit reduction.John Podesta, the head of the Center for American Progress and the chair of Obama’s transition team, also had kind words for the plan. “I agree with Congressman Van Hollen that Bowles-Simpson is a good starting place for the discussion,” he told Mother Jones in an interview. But Podesta hasn’t always been so eager to embrace the Bowles-Simpson proposals. Last December, Podesta called the plan “substantively flawed” as well as “fundamentally unbalanced and unrealistic.” The proposal’s discretionary spending cuts would “harm our nation’s long-term economic competitiveness and violate an array of social compacts that underpin the common good of our country,” he wrote.

I guess they just feel the need to support the President, but it can be very useful to have an angry faction out there when you are negotiating. Just ask John Boehner.

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Treading water

Treading water

by digby

If anyone’s interested in the details of last Friday’s budget deal, Think Progress has a rundown. This is the upshot:

These proposed cuts, alongside rising gas prices and draconian budget cuts at the state and local level, have already led some economists to knock up to a point off of their estimate for U.S. economic growth. For instance, Diane Swonk, chief economist at Mesirow Financial, “said she had cut her forecast for 2011 to 3.3 percent, from 4.2 percent.” Anything below 3 percent and “you’re just running on a treadmill. You’re not getting anywhere,” she said. Here are just some of the cuts included in the deal, which should be voted on by the end of the week:

Special Supplemental Nutrition Program for Women, Infants and Children (WIC): $504 million – State and local law enforcement: $415 million – Community oriented policing services (COPS): $296 million – Green jobs innovation fund: $40 million – Community health centers: $600 million – Dislocated worker assistance: $125 million – Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration (SAMSHA): $45 million – Occupational Safety and Health Administration (OSHA): $49 million – IDEA (special education): $16 million – Infectious disease prevention: $277 million – National Institutes of Health: $260 million

They did secure funding for the SEC and the FTC and Obama’s Race to the Top initiative, so it’s not all bad.

Update: Kevin Drum cites a different analysis which says that the tea partiers were taken to the cleaners by Obama who really only agreed to an additional 11 billion dollars in real cuts for FY 2011. If true, that’s certainly better than 38 billion. But considering that most liberal economists believe that anything but more stimulus at 8.8% unemployment is a wrong turn, it really only means that the people got screwed a little bit more gently than originally thought. (And as others have pointed out, the new budget baselines — chimera or not — establish the new starting point for increases going forward and will add up to much bigger cuts over time.)

The essential problem with this is that once you buy into cuts of any kind, the proper argument — and policy — is lost. Recall that Obama started off with a 40 billion dollar stimulus, which most sane economists thought was rather tepid. There was a reason for that. Conditions have not improved so drastically since he first proposed that that anyone can believe it’s time to contract government spending — particularly when the states are now bleeding red ink like crazy.

Still, let’s hope that two thirds of these cuts really are accounting gimmicks and that the Republicans are willing to let that be their big win. Actual human lives underlie all these numbers so the fewer real cuts the better.

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Bipartisan outreach — has the president won over the Weekly Standard?

Successful Bipartisan Outreach

by digby

Good news for the president — the Weekly Standard is defending him against the hippies, specifically me:

The reason why Obama won’t buy into your crazy leftist fantasies is that it’s a center-right country. Now get over yourselves.

(The writer totally missed the point of the post, but that’s to be expected.) Still, the White House must be pleased as punch to have the Weekly Standard admit that he isn’t a socialist after all. If he plays his cards right, they might even endorse him.

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Simpson Bowles it is

Simpson Bowles FTW

by digby

So this is it:

Obama turns to his bipartisan deficit commission’s blueprint for reducing debt

Keep in mind that there was no deficit commission report. They couldn’t reach the required consensus. I’m guessing Obama figures he can get this one through the way Clinton got NAFTA. I guess we’ll see.

Meanwhile, perhaps it’s time to take a look back at the Simpson-Bowles plan. I am going to simply reprint this article by Dean Baker so that you will read it:

The country in which most people live is experiencing an economic disaster. More than 25 million people are unemployed, underemployed, or have given up looking for work altogether. Tens of millions are now underwater on their mortgages, with millions facing the imminent loss of their homes. Furthermore, there is little prospect that the situation will improve anytime soon.

Many fewer live in the other America, the world of Wall Street and Washington lobbyists. This is where you’ll find former Wyoming Republican Senator Alan Simpson and investment banker-turned-Clinton Chief of Staff Erskine Bowles, the co-chairs of President Obama’s deficit commission, which on Wednesday outlined its plans for what it calls “fiscal responsibility.” In their world the key fact is that, today, corporate profits are back to their pre-recession peaks. As long as the bonuses on Wall Street are again hitting record highs, the economy must be just fine, so what else is there to do but worry about deficits?

It would be hard to understand how ostensibly serious people could be concerned about the deficit right now, unless we realize that they stand apart from the economic calamity that has engulfed most of the country. The suffering caused by this recession simply does not register on their radar screens.

This is not just a moral complaint, although it is troubling that the people most responsible for the economic wreckage are doing just fine. More important is that there is no evidence that Simpson, Bowles, and the rest of the deficit cutters have the slightest understanding of the economy. If they did they would be looking at the deficit in a completely different way.

First, the current deficit should not even be viewed as a problem. Yes, a deficit of $1.4 trillion is big, but this is a direct result of the loss of demand stemming from the collapse of an $8 trillion housing bubble. This bubble was driving the economy until its collapse. There were two channels through which the bubble generated demand in the economy: bubble-inflated house prices led to a boom in construction, bubble-inflated wealth led consumers to increase their spending, pushing saving rates to almost zero.

This demand has disappeared now that the bubble has deflated. The economy has lost more than $600 billion in annual construction demand as builders cut back in response to an enormous over-supply of both residential and non-residential property. Similarly, consumption has plummeted. This left an enormous gap in demand that, at least in the near-term, can only be filled by the government. If the government were to spend less—say it instantly balanced its budget—the primary result would be a further decline in demand and more job loss.

We are in a peculiar situation where the main problem for the economy is a lack of demand. More demand will mean more growth and more jobs. Government must supply demand because there is no other entity that can step forward to do it—unless someone gets very good at counterfeiting hundred dollar bills.

The failure to understand current deficits also leads to a misunderstanding of the debt burden. Simpson and Bowles raise fears of an exploding debt reaching 90 percent of GDP by the end of the decade. They have raised the prospect of a crushing interest burden facing future generations of taxpayers.

Simpson and Bowles decided to include cuts to Social Security in the mix, even though Social Security has not contributed to the deficit.

But there is no real basis for this concern. There is no reason that the Fed can’t just buy this debt (as it is largely doing) and hold it indefinitely. If the Fed holds the debt, there is no interest burden for future taxpayers. The Fed refunds its interest earnings to the Treasury every year. Last year the Fed refunded almost $80 billion in interest to the Treasury, nearly 40 percent of the country’s net interest burden. And the Fed has other tools to ensure that the expansion of the monetary base required to purchase the debt does not lead to inflation.

This means that the country really has no near-term or even mid-term deficit problem. The current deficit is a positive. In fact, if it were larger we would have more jobs and growth. Furthermore, there is no reason that the debt being accumulated at present should pose any interest burden on future generations. In this vein, it is worth noting that Japan’s central bank holds debt amounting to almost 100 percent of that country’s GDP. As a result, Japan’s interest burden is considerably smaller than the United States’s, even though Japan’s debt is almost four times as large relative to the size of its economy.

Over the longer term the United States is projected to face a deficit problem, but this is almost entirely attributable to the explosive rate at which private-sector health-care costs are likely to grow. More than half of health-care costs are paid by the government, hence the public budgetary impact of our private system.

Of course, those increasing costs will lead to enormous problems for the private sector, too. Rapidly rising health-care costs were a big part of the GM and Chrysler bankruptcies. If per-person health-care costs in the United States were the same as in Canada, then General Motors’ profits would have been $20 billion higher over the last decade. If, on the other hand, health-care costs follow the projected path, we will have many more General Motors and Chryslers.

Simpson and Bowles’s report seeks saving in public-sector health programs, primarily by making patients pay more for care. But there is no discussion of the private health-care system that is the root of the problem.

To no one’s surprise the co-chairs decided to include cuts to Social Security in the mix, even though Social Security has not contributed to the deficit. The program has a designated payroll tax and is prohibited from spending beyond the money provided by the tax. It is structurally impossible for the program to affect the deficit.

The Simpson-Bowles approach involves raising the retirement age, cutting benefits for middle- and higher-income workers, and reducing the annual cost-of-living adjustment so that retirees would no longer see their benefits rise in step with the consumer price index (CPI). Raising the retirement age seems more than a bit unfair, since most of the gains in life expectancy have been going to workers in the top half of the income distribution. Workers in the bottom half have seen minimal gains in life expectancy over the last three decades.

The cuts in the benefit formula will hit anyone who has average wage earnings over their lifetime of more than $36,000. This is not most people’s definition of affluent.

Simpson and Bowles do not seem interested in accuracy; they want to cut benefits.

Finally, the co-chairs want to peg the cost-of-living adjustment to a new CPI that regularly shows a lower rate of inflation than the current measure. The gap is about 0.3 percent, which means that benefits will rise by about 0.3 percent less rapidly than would otherwise be the case.

This effect seems small, but it adds up over time. A retiree who collecting benefits for ten years would have a benefit in their tenth years that was 3.0 percent lower than would otherwise be the case. After 20 years the gap would be 6.0 percent and after thirty years the gap would be 9.0 percent. This policy has the effect of hitting the oldest hardest. These are precisely the people (mostly women) with the least resources.

It is often argued that the new CPI would be a better measure of inflation, but if we are concerned about actually measuring the cost of living for retirees, Simpson and Bowles could have recommended that Congress use a measure constructed by the Bureau of Labor Statistics explicitly to measure the increase in the cost of living for the elderly. This CPI for the elderly consistently shows a rate of inflation that is 0.2-0.4 above the standard CPI that is used now. But Simpson and Bowles do not seem interested in accuracy; they want to cut benefits.

There is one item worth noting for its absence. Simpson and Bowles apparently never considered a Wall Street financial-speculation tax. This is an obvious source of revenue that even the International Monetary Fund is now advocating in recognition of the enormous amount of waste and rents in the financial sector. It is possible to raise large amounts of revenue from such a tax.

University of Massachusetts economist Robert Pollin and I calculated the potential revenue at more than $100 billion a year, with little impact on productive economic activity. The main impact would be to reduce the shuffling of financial assets. The refusal to consider this source of revenue is striking since at least one member of the commission has been a vocal advocate of financial-speculation taxes. Bowles is a director of Morgan Stanley, one of the Wall Street banks that would be seriously affected by such a tax.

There are some positive items in the report. It would limit the mortgage interest-rate deduction and get rid of the deduction for “cafeteria” benefit plans. But the report is fatally flawed because its authors, principally Simpson and Bowles, never seriously reflected on their basic economic assumptions. It would be best if this is yet another one of those Washington commissions that is quickly forgotten.

Sadly, it doesn’t look like that’s going to happen.

Update: On the other hand, maybe it isn’t Simpson Bowles after all.

Isn’t Obama the guy who was just lamenting all the kabuki that takes place?