Skip navigation

Spending surge pushes deficit toward $1 trillion


< Prev | 1 | 2
Video
  Obama lays out economic 'rescue' plan
Oct. 13: Speaking in Ohio, Barack Obama lays out specific steps he would take to help U.S. business and consumers begin the road to economic recovery.

MSNBC

Video
  McCain: Safety net, not golden parachutes
Oct. 14: John McCain sets out his economic plan to help businesses- large and small, homeowners and the unemployed.

MSNBC

Image: Black friday shopppers
AP
Economy gets tidings of hope for holidays
Signs of a strengthening global recovery emerged Friday, with consumers boosting retail sales, companies restoring stockpiles and Chinese exports mounting a comeback.

The spending proposals come on top of promises by both candidates to dramatically cut taxes. In addition, Obama has pledged to pursue expensive new initiatives to expand health care coverage and improve education. The candidates' top economic advisers, Jason Furman of the Obama campaign and Douglas Holtz-Eakin for McCain, said they have no plans to reconsider those promises in light of the new economic realities.

In the final presidential debate on Wednesday, McCain even repeated his pledge to balance the budget by the end of his first term, though Holtz-Eakin acknowledged that "the events of the past few weeks have made that considerably more difficult."

On Capitol Hill, House Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.) had been calling for $150 billion in new spending until a summit this week with Elmendorf and other economists. On Thursday, Pelosi told interviewer Charlie Rose that her "economic recovery" package could grow to "a couple hundred billion dollars" and would include many of the same measures Obama has proposed, as well as an extension of unemployment insurance and an increase in spending on food stamps.

Story continues below ↓
advertisement | your ad here

House Minority Leader John A. Boehner (R-Ohio) jumped aboard the stimulus bandwagon this week, issuing a proposal that included many of McCain's ideas. Aides said a cost estimate for the GOP plan was not available.

'Further pressure'
The White House has reacted coolly to talk of a second stimulus package, though there are signs that its opposition is softening. White House press secretary Dana Perino this week left the door open to further stimulus, though she emphasized that the president remains leery of calls for new spending on roads and infrastructure, arguing that such projects generally take too long to have an immediate economic impact.

"To us, that doesn't sound like the stimulus we need," said Steve McMillin, deputy director of the White House budget office. "We don't rule out anything forever. But what they're talking about is not something we think is going to be helpful for the economy and is something that will create further pressure and risk for our budget situation."

Vincent Reinhart, the former chief monetary economist at the Fed and a resident scholar at the American Enterprise Institute, said that, in principle, "a targeted, timely stimulus package that could be put in place quickly" would make sense for the economy right now. The danger, he said, is a political environment that has both raised the desire for government action and expectations about what it can accomplish.

With the financial bailout plan, "we have a new high watermark as to how much the government should do. And that's a very high watermark," Reinhart said. "The chances we overdo [stimulus] are pretty high."

© 2009 The Washington Post Company


< Prev | 1 | 2

Sponsored links

Resource guide