The Sober Reality: President Obama’s Policies Have Failed

This post was written by Edward Mahee. Writing under a pen name, Mr. Mahee is a legal analyst and political commentator. This is his 12th posting for the site.

It is second nature for most people to be somewhat defensive when in a vulnerable state.  For instance, I’ve witnessed people who, staggeringly drunk after a late night out, slur with confidence, “I’m not drunk!” while failing to put one foot successfully in front of the other.  Other times, I’ve witnessed people who, in the midst of a full-blown conniption, assert, “I’m not angry!”  To any third-party observer, the statements from the drunk or angry person are facially ridiculous.  These assertions can be funny, annoying, or dangerous; and sometimes all three. 

President Obama had one such moment last Monday during a town hall sponsored by CNBC: “In every speech, every interview that I have made, I’ve constantly said what sets America apart, what has made us successful over the long-term, is we’ve got the most dynamic free-market economy in the world.  And that has to be preserved. We benefit from entrepreneurs and innovators who are going out there and creating jobs, creating business.  Government can’t create the majority of jobs. And, in fact, we want to get out of the way of folks who’ve got a good idea and want to run with it and are going to be putting people to work.”  In other words, President Obama was claiming, despite all evidence to the contrary, that he believes the free market is the most efficient vehicle for job creation and economic growth.  This assertion is somewhat funny, mildly annoying, and very dangerous.

Despite all of President Obama’s rhetoric, his policies have led to the strangling of the American economy.  But don’t take my word for it.  During the town hall meeting, one of the audience members stated the following as part of a question addressed to the president: “I am a chief financial officer for a veteran service organization here in Washington.  I’m also a mother.  I’m a wife. I’m an American veteran and I’m one of your middle class Americans.  And quite frankly, I’m exhausted.  Exhausted of defending you, defending your administration, defending the mantle of change that I voted for and deeply disappointed with where we are right now.  I’ve been told that I voted for a man who said he was going to change things in a meaningful way for the middle class.  I’m one of those people and I’m waiting, sir.  I’m waiting. I don’t feel it yet.  And I thought I would feel it in some small measure. I have two children in private school and the financial recession has taken an enormous toll on my family.  My husband and I have joked for years that we thought we were well beyond the hot dogs and beans era of our lives but quite frankly, it’s starting to knock on our door and ring true that that might be where we’re headed again.  Quite frankly, Mr. President, I need you to answer this honestly.  Is this my new reality?”

This questioner was a representation of the kind of person who bought into what Barack Obama was selling in 2008.  She was a middle class mother, evidently hard working and well educated, who, in any other time would expect to be prospering economically.  Yet, here she was, seriously discussing going back to “hot dogs and beans.”  This was not Hope and Change. Unfortunately, all the president has to show for his policies are empty rhetoric, high unemployment and a sclerotic economy. And now, the woman represents the disillusioned Obama supporter. 

The Tea Party has become such a potent force precisely because of this type of disillusionment, where the American dream has faded into despair. Mr. Obama may argue that his opponents simply want to turn back the clock and give power to the people who (using the Mr. Obama’s metaphor) drove us into the ditch.  But the American people haven’t bought it.  They know that Mr. Obama’s deficits are orders of magnitude greater than the prior administration’s, that Mr. Obama supported the bailouts, federalizing the auto manufacturing and health care industries, and expansion of the wasteland welfare state. Most troubling, the people know Mr. Obama supports raising taxes on income and capital beginning January 1, 2011.

Like the drunk who claims not to be drunk, Mr. Obama asserts that despite everything he’s done (and not done) over the last 20 months, he is a believer in the free market.  And the sober, irritated, and tired friends, beginning November 2, will take away Mr. Obama’s keys, get him home and make sure he doesn’t hurt himself or anybody else.

-Edward Mahee for TruPolitics.net

The $700 Billion Price Tag

This article was featured in The Bulletin (Philadelphia-area newspaper) on 9/19/10. You can read the newspaper version online here or catch the print column every other week.

During his recent speech in Ohio, President Obama made it clear his administration will soon raise taxes on those in the top marginal income tax bracket. While not surprising given the administration’s penchant for redistribution, the manner in which President Obama made his declaration brings cause for concern: “This isn’t to punish folks who are better off – it’s because we can’t afford the $700 billion price tag.” Not only will such tax-the-rich policy hamper U.S. economic growth, principally among small businesses, but the statement itself is a clear indictment of the president’s broader philosophical belief: Earned income is the Government’s, not the Peoples’.

Practically, the looming tax increase will hamper the already-struggling recovery. The wealthiest earners spend the most, especially on the margins. Their spending helps fuel demand, drive profits, and thus create jobs. This group also invests more, providing capital to companies seeking cash and driving long-term growth. But the debate over trickle-down economics has been well documented.

Perhaps more significant is the acute degree to which the tax hikes will damage small businesses. Small businesses comprise over 99% of all U.S. businesses, employing 70 million Americans, or half of the total private work force.  According to recent IRS data, an astonishing 48% of the net income of these businesses—sole proprietorships, partnerships and S corporations—went to those earning above $200,000. In other words, the tax hike will directly hit companies that drive a considerable portion of economic growth and job creation.

Significantly, a pair of studies published by economists at the National Bureau of Economic Research show exceptionally high responsiveness of sole proprietors’ business activity to tax rates. When applied to President Obama’s proposed hike, the study shows a projected 7% drop in total gross taxable revenue. Adding to this data is a study from R. Glenn Hubbard of Columbia University showing that as the progressivity of the tax code increases, entrepreneurs are further discouraged from starting new businesses. Finally, when the National Federation of Independent Business recently asked small business owners to list the most important problem they faced, a full 20% cited taxes, making it the second most named concern behind only weak sales. Perhaps this is why just 21% of economists recently surveyed by the Wall Street Journal favored the president’s decision to raise taxes on the wealthiest earners.

Beyond economic implications, it is odd that the administration expresses concern for a potential $700 billion revenue loss from extending tax cuts for top earners, but is seemingly unconcerned about the revenue loss of $2 trillion from extending tax cuts for the rest of the population. Moreover, such concern was conspicuously absent when passing the two largest fiscal budgets in U.S. history, the Cash for Clunkers program, mortgage and corporate bailouts, the wasted $800 billion stimulus, the $1 trillion healthcare bill, and massive increases in social welfare programs. With the deficit having grown 300% under its watch, the administration ought to have a difficult time claiming fiscal restraint as its driving motivation.

So, in absence of fiscal responsibility and with the economic data so exceptionally clear—falling small business revenue; increased job loss; discouraged entrepreneurs; less consumer spending—why would the administration champion such a policy? Because it believes income belongs to the government, not the people. To them, letting the tax cuts expire would be like turning away a lottery ticket.

The progressive movement, unveiled over the past 18 months, believes firmly that the potential success of the collective trumps the rights of the individual. A guided economy, redistributive tax policy, and a slew of federally dictated entitlement programs are the means by which progressives seek to accomplish an elusive social utopia. As Frank J. Goodnow, one of the founders of modern progressivism once noted, “Social expediency, rather than natural right, is thus to determine the sphere of individual freedom of action.” When the collective comes before the individual, when liberty is trumped by statism, government claims the product of your labor. If, in its great beneficence Government offers you the gift of 60% of your earned income, you ought to be thankful. Or so the story goes.

The Founding Fathers saw things quite differently. They established a Constitutionally-constrained government, centered on the idea that government should exist only where necessary. Property, earned income, and the product of private labor were the peoples’ right to keep. The people, after all, had worked for it. Government confiscation of earned wealth, they felt, should only take place with the utmost discretion and for limited, enumerated purposes.

With such clear economic implications and a marked departure from America’s original values, the Founders might have issued a clear retort to the president’s statement: “No, Mr. President, the People can’t afford the $700 billion price tag.”

-Matt Benchener is Supervisor of Newtown Township and Found of TruPolitics.net

TruPolitics Podcast Episode 6: Obama’s Econ. Proposals; Causes of Financial Crisis; Healthcare Costs

The sixth TruPolitics podcast. Episode 6 explores President Obama’s Recent Economic Proposals; Causes of the Financial Crisis; and Health Care’s Rising Costs. Listen to the podcast directly through iTunes for the best sound and playback quality.  Search “TruPolitics” in iTunes and hit “Subscribe.” Or, you can listen by hitting “save” on the link below.

TruPolitics Episode 6: Obama’s Econ. Proposals; Causes of the Financial Crisis; Healthcare Costs

**Subscribe through iTunes for the best sound quality**

TruPolitics Podcast Episode 5: U.S. vs. Germany; Keynes vs. Hayek; The Pension Crisis

The fifth TruPolitics podcast. Episode 5 discusses the U.S. vs. Germany on the economy and GDP growth; John Maynard Keynes vs. F.A. Hayek on economic theory; and The Pension Crisis. The best way to listen to the podcast is directly through iTunes. Search “TruPolitics” and hit “Subscribe.” Or, you can listen by hitting “save” on the link below.

TruPolitics Episode 5: U.S. vs. Germany; Keynes vs. Hayek; The Pension Crisis

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