Wall Street Weekly | 07/10/2009 9:45 am
Stimulus Not Working? Let's Have More! by Liz Peek
If the stimulus spending isn’t working, does it make sense to make it bigger?

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Bears, Bulls, Chickens and Pigs: wOw’s Wall Street Weekly with Liz Peek (Week of 7/6)
Editor’s Note: Liz Peek is a financial columnist and the author of wOw’s SHEconomics.
Holy smoke! Now even the Pope is weighing in on financial regulation. In a rare encyclical, the Pontiff added his voice this week to those clamoring for economic overhaul. Come to think of it, maybe we could use some divine guidance.The Big Debate underway is whether the United States needs a new stimulus program. This is idiotic. Whether you are a fan or foe of the monstrous $787 billion package pushed through Congress earlier this year, it is preposterous to assume that such an ungainly mishmash of programs could be implemented to any real effect in just a few months. Some $100 to $150 billion of the total has been committed to various projects, but only a portion of that has found its way into bank accounts. Moreover, if the stimulus spending isn’t working – does it make sense to make it bigger? No!
Anxiety about the stimulus package, and about the course of the economy, stems mainly from rising unemployment. The administration’s rosy outlook for stemming job losses proved unrealistic. (This should give some pause to those who buy into Obama’s projected "cost savings" from health-care reform or "green job creation" from cap-and-trade. These numbers, truly, are complete fiction. There is nothing I have found in either bill that would support such projections.)
While the labor situation does look gruesome, there are some encouraging signs. The four-week moving average of unemployment claims dropped in May by 53,000; normally a decline of 40,000 would signal the end of a recession. Continuing claims, though still high, appear to be peaking. The truth is that the numbers are so messed up by the auto industry bankruptcies that they are inconclusive. Data from the next two or three months will be much more telling.
While the signals are still mixed, there continue to be more positive than negative readings on the economy. Business confidence is improving, earnings estimates are moving slightly higher, the drop in consumer credit has slowed, house prices are stabilizing and manufacturing inventories are dropping. Moreover, two serious developing headwinds – rising oil prices and higher interest rates – have slumped from their recent highs.
The latter is good news and bad news, and points to just how delicate the current outlook remains. Oil prices and interest rates have backed down because growth prospects suddenly dimmed – dimmed precisely because oil prices and interest rates had increased. Investors, and policymakers, are in effect chasing their own tails. As oil prices zoomed higher in recent months, and as investors become concerned about projected budget deficits from our free-spending administration, consumers were hit with higher fuel costs and a drop in the opportunity to refinance their mortgages. This latter activity, as I’ve written before, has been far more stimulative than any program out of the Beltway.
The respite on interest rates may prove short-lived. The Federal Reserve has signaled that it is becoming less aggressive in its purchases of certain assets, including Treasuries, as it begins to unwind the buildup of its balance sheet. Some fear the Fed may be moving too quickly to rein in its largesse, but others correctly point out that moves to stimulate or restrict the economy almost always are overdone.
The Fed has to get this sort of push-pull just right, or it is possible that we could indeed fall back into recession. Joe Biden was blasted recently for admitting that the administration had "misread" the economy. Newsflash: this is tricky business, which is why many people, including myself, are aghast at the Obama team’s growing incursions into all sectors of commerce.
Read more about: Barack Obama, Business, Ecnomic Stimulus, Government, Liz Peek, Money, News, Obama Administration, Wall Street Weekly























163 Reader Comments (so far…) Sign In or Register to comment
+Maggie:
Listen, you may see housing going up, but they will sit vacant. Let me know by next year ok?
I ive outside Manhattan. There is a bridge here called the Tappan Zee bridge, this bridge is literally falling down. it was built in the 50’s & it was built to last 50 years (where are those A$$hole politicians now?).
But, I digress: Some of that stimulis money should have gone to rebuild that bridge, there would be plenty of jobs filled for that bridge alone. So many people need that bridge & if it goes down it will be a major tragedy.
I’ll tell ya where the money has gone: It has gone to pay for COBRA plans for people who have lost their jobs and their paid medical plans. ……………..Now how does that create jobs?
BBO has created a larger deficit in just 5 months then in the past 200 years combined.
Well one reason your bridge is not being built is they take months if not up to a year to engineer a project like that. They they have to prepare bid packets, solicit bids and the award contracts. Permits have to be obtained and sub contractors lined up, sometimes property aquisitions for the diesign…..yad yada yada.
That is why the Republicans groaned when it was proposed..they know how long it takes. Few projects are "shovel ready" since it would be a waste to spend public dollars to bring a project like that along without actually complete it since by the time they might have a windfall of money ( like a stimulus) to do it all the prices of materials and often building codes have changed.
Although a cash stimulus may have propped up the economy till they could get them up to speed! So far on 6% of the money released has gone to infrastructure. Most of it to administrave costs of implimenting the money. That is how SLOW government works…private industry would have had it done in a fraction of the time as time is money to them.
AP had a report on government red tape today. I saw this in full force in Texas when they were trying to build that border fence that Congress had mandated. Congress set a deadline, but the ranchers whose families had been on that land since the 1850’s were not budging. I mean literally; they would not allow fed inspectors/surveyors on their land. Then, the real obstacle… and what we are seeing now… were environmental hurdles, not just on the American side but the Mexican watchdogs were weighing in, too. Senator Hutchison made 36 trips to town hall meetings, fighting for the ranchers. Senator Cornyn was also down in the Rio Grande Valley when he wasn’t in DC.
When that bridge collapsed in Minnesota, it was rebuilt quickly. There was no need for clearance because a previous bridge had been there. Also, the company building the new bridge got a 25 milllion dollar bonus for finishing on time.
Money talks, as usual.
SJ morgan:
I understand about bids, contracts etc. But this bridge repair/rebuild project has been in the works for 4 years. All of the bids were sent out, architects consulted etc. etc. The only thing they are waiting for is the money to begin. But they still have not gotten any go-ahead from Washington to begin. I think it will have to fall down, B4 anything is done. I just hope I and my family are not on the bridge when it happens.
Thanks Deber
"Florida, North Carolina and Oregon are among the other states with relatively low per-capita payouts, despite battling double-digit unemployment"
…I am in OREGON.
Thanks deber and all for your support!!….
"When Democrats passed the trillion-dollar "stimulus," they promised unemployment would not rise above eight percent and that it would create jobs immediately. Five months later, unemployment has spiked to 9.5 percent, with President Obama admitting that he expects it to reach 10 percent later this year. Making it all the more puzzling that the President told ABC News that when it comes to the economy, "there’s nothing that we would have done differently." But with the economy still struggling, they’ve changed their tune, with Vice President Biden now saying, "It’s supposed to take 18 months." So which is it? "
We here feel that we are to Obama worth the sacrifice for hsi personal gain!
S J, you are consistently one of the best posters here. You are thorough in providing links to your articles and opinions.
President Obama simply doesn’t know what he is doing. I sound like a broken record but it all started when he reinvented himself with his book. He meant to win the hearts of the Bush haters and, by golly, win those hearts he did in the guise of Hope and Change! He campaigned as a community organizer, a job that left him ample time to agitate and ignite, plan and exploit the angry, the radicals, the lefties and the disgrunted republicans. Boy was he good at that! On his campaign, he presented as a community organizer with a Harvard Law Degree pouring his heart and his life’s story out to the world. He smiled, he said and promised all the things his voters wanted to hear. They believed in him. This will be our first African American president and he will change the United States and eventually change the world. He was able to raise more campaign money than any president before him using the bundling method so that certain donations couldn’t be traced. He had an association with ACORN as a community organizer and that sealed the deal. Finally, when the feel good votes and the Hope and Change votes started pouring in he could finally realize his dream. Only once he got into office….he changed. He went far to the left and he had an urgency to change things methodically but quickly. He must’ve rearranged our country a million times in his mind before he won. He promised transparency and he hasn’t delivered. One by one all of his campaign promises have quickly disappeared and we are now face to face with an ego much different than the one we saw on the campaign trail. This ego is the real Barack Hussein Obama and it’s scary. We are now faced with a President who has the determination of a pit bull and it doesn’t seem to matter to him if his policies are good for all Americans. How could he possibly want to do what is right for all Americans when he has apologized for our country on more than several occasions? No President before him ever did that. He missed no opportunities to blame our previous administration once he got into office. I believe he knew then that he was in way over his head as a community organizer and blaming Bush would buy him big time to get his vision in place.
So, here we are. As we are now able to "follow the money" we find out that he is playing favorites with the stimulus money honoring if you will those who gave him the most support. No change there.
Our votes will be more important in 2012 than it has ever been before. We need to rid the White House of a socialist who is not proud of his country and doesn’t seem to care that many Americans are hurting financially because they don’t have one of those jobs he promised. This is where our HOPE comes in. I hope America never makes this mistake again.
He is a charlatan. And, he is dangerous to America.
deber: I hope America never makes this mistake again.
Me, too because I don’t think we’d survive it. This administration has to be a one-time aberration.
deber: Mr. Paul Ryan
I’m almost afraid for him. Just think what the Dems will do and say to discourage him. Should he expose his family to that much trash talk? I’m not a fan of Newt, but he could mop the floor with Obama, intellectually, politically, and physically. This election is going to take a thick-skinned Republican street fighter. Civility is out the door.
Paul Ryan is a clear thinker who would do a wonderful job, but that’s not what this round of Dems are about. With them it’s struttin’ your stuff before the unemployed and dispossessed.
But, I’ve strayed off topic. This string is about a jittery stock market, who for the past two weeks has lost confidence in the recovery. Discouraging.
Interesting, Marjorie, over lunch this afternoon with my husband, we got into the topic of Newt Gingrich. He feels Newt is strong but probably won’t run. Paul Ryan may not be seasoned enough to face the "spend the country into the ground" democrats but, gosh, is he ever what the moderate democrats seem to be looking for. He is young, he can relate to the younger voters and the older voters as well. Well, we have to wait to assess that.
The unused stimulus should be used for the second stimulus. The second stimulus is designed to address the small businesses, however, hear this, they intend to free up capital to give them loans and then go right back in and raise their taxes later. The present administration’s knowledge is theoretical because they’ve never run a business themselves. They are out of touch with the small businesses. And based on what hasn’t happened so far, they are out of touch pretty much across the board.
Imagine, Marjorie, giving small businesses an attractive tax break and then taxing it on them later. When WILL 2012 get here?