Re: [Salon] Team Biden wants a revolution



I do not understand why Bob is writing in this way. It is true that Clinton under Rubin’s tutelage and with help from Greenspan had produced a budget surplus and created the best fiscal situation for the U.S. by the end of his presidency that we had seen in a long time. But W (Bob’s champion) threw all that away with Bob watching not to mention what Trump did with nary a peep from Bob.

 

From: Salon <salon-bounces@listserve.com> On Behalf Of Chas Freeman via Salon
Sent: Thursday, August 17, 2023 2:17 AM
To: salon@listserve.com
Subject: [Salon] Team Biden wants a revolution

 

Team Biden wants a revolution

By Robert B. Zoellick

15 August 2023

The Washington Post

      

The economic thinkers who generate the intellectual energy for the Biden administration are on a mission: to slay their elders, figuratively speaking, from the Clinton and Obama eras. The revolutionaries do not just want to devise new policies; they are demanding an ideological transformation to rewire the political mind of the Democratic Party.

 

Some elders try to compromise with the upstarts, yielding some principles and hoping the radicals will moderate with time. Others appear to have given up on ideas, and coldly calculate how the new plans might buy votes. They should be forewarned: Republican leaders waffled in a similar way and lost their contest for ideas.

 

Advocates of a new Democratic economics rally around a four-part manifesto: ignoring fiscal discipline; dismissing the importance of prices and costs; celebrating state direction; and slighting international economic leadership.

 

First, they want to replace budget restraint with huge spending financed through a wizardry known as modern monetary theory. In doing so, they are tearing down the legacy of former treasury secretary Robert Rubin, who convinced President Bill Clinton in the 1990s that balanced budgets would reassure bond markets and investors, leading to lower interest rates and sustained growth. The Republican Congress of 1995 joined in and together they produced something unimaginable today: budget surpluses. President Barack Obama, confronting a costly Great Recession, also accommodated constraints on spending.

 

Biden's advisers spurn budgetary rigor. Disdaining Obama's sluggish recovery, they instead prescribed a stimulus of about 10 percent of gross domestic product, the first of a series of enormous spending bills and debt forgiveness. The new theorists imagine that perpetually low interest rates and relaxed monetary policy can consign fiscal discipline to the past.

 

Second, the Clinton-Obama generations paid close attention to price signals, even when they were exasperated by the vagaries of markets. In contrast, Biden's team pursues trade and antitrust policies while questioning the importance of prices, costs and efficiencies. Increased prices for consumers matter little to the administration compared with such goals as challenging big companies, blocking foreign competition, helping unions, doing away with fossil fuels and experimenting with new regulations.

 

Third, earlier Democratic economic architects understood that the private sector powers the economy. Those administrations also wanted to redistribute the gains in the economy — but they did not fall into the trap of thinking that government creates the gains. Clinton's welfare reform encouraged people to rejoin the workforce, and his policies combined taxes on higher income with credits for the poor. Though Obama was more skeptical of the private sector, he designed his signature initiative — Obamacare — to work with private companies and enhance markets. The new progressives wish that he had nationalized health care.

 

National security adviser Jake Sullivan has argued that reliance on private businesses and markets has resulted in major economic and social failures. The Biden administration instead relies on state direction in areas of the economy far beyond infrastructure, R&D and education. Washington now chooses the vital sectors of the future economy, offering subsidies in exchange for favored policies — including preferred technologies, limitations on imports and exports, unionization and child care.

 

Pipelines are out. Solar and wind energy are in, but not with foreign components. Education cannot rely on private firms. Companies must report on the carbon usage of their suppliers as well as their own — and trial lawyers are empowered to police the paperwork.

 

Finally, the Clinton and Obama administrations embraced America's global economic leadership. Biden's planners do not. Clinton bucked protectionists to pass NAFTA and completed the global trade negotiations that contributed to a decade of global growth. Obama, though initially skeptical, eventually recognized the strategic and economic importance of trans-Pacific trade.

 

In contrast, Biden's trade representative, Katherine Tai, embraces Trumpian isolationism. She denies the power of deals to open markets to develop international standards for the digital economy and other cutting-edge sectors; to add resilience to nations and supply chains; and to encourage developing countries to improve environmental and labor standards.

 

The Biden theorists imagine a national economy that Washington designs without foreign involvement. Their industrial policy uses tariffs, rules of origin and "Buy American" requirements to block foreign competition. They send a destructive message to our partners: Join the race to subsidize. If you are a poorer developing country, too bad.

 

Inflation and higher interest rates have hampered the new ideologues, but they have plunged ahead. Only trouble awaits them. Their massive spending bills will soon be tainted by tales of waste and corrupt crony capitalism. Their international policies are adrift. Narrow economic nationalism might be the one thing that Donald Trump and Biden agree on.

 

The danger is that the new ideology — with its subsidies and protection — does not have to work well to win adherents in the short term. Democrats who have decried Republicans' suspension of traditional beliefs should reflect on the comparison: They, too, could lose out to the faction with dangerous ideas.

 

Robert B. Zoellick served in four Republican administrations at the White House, State and Treasury departments, and as the U.S. trade representative.



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