Feb10

A better stimulus bill

Posted: Feb 10 at 9:38 pm. Comments Off
Categories: Barack Obama & Democrats & Economy & Politics

Leave it up to a Blue Dog Democrat to come up with a better stimulus bill than the Porkulus bill Barack Obama, Nancy Pelosi, and Harry Reid have created. Will it get the attention it deserves? With the partisan media, of course not, but it should. The Examiner has the details:

Rep. Walt Minnick, a freshman Democrat from Idaho, is pushing a better idea: The Strategic Targeted American Recovery and Transition Act (START).

Minnick is a member of the Blue Dog caucus of occasionally conservative Democcrats. His START plan is a $170 billion “bare bones” pure stimulus approach that would put $100 billion immediately into the pockets of low- and middle-income Americans, then use the other $70 billion for basic infrastructure projects that create jobs. START requires that all funds not spent by 2010 be returned to the Treasury. START also stops stimulus spending when the nation’s Gross Domestic Product increases in two of three previous quarters, and all START payments are required to be posted on a public website.

Minnick introduced START as an alternative – just in case the legislative process stalls out, says press secretary John Foster. As one of the brave 11 Democrats who voted against Pelosi’s stimulus bill, Minnick explained to folks back home that he opposed the speaker’s version because it was so “Christmas-treed up” with wasteful spending, like $300 million for golf carts. Foster told The Examiner that the House leadership encourages members to do what’s best for their districts, so there has been no backlash. We’ll see how long that lasts.

Ed Morrissey remarks that this bill should change the debate. Unfortunately it won’t because the narrative has been written and disseminated: Obama’s bill is the only bill that can save us, even though it’s a monstrosity. Robert Barro, a Harvard economist, doesn’t mince words:

This is probably the worst bill that has been put forward since the 1930s. I don’t know what to say. I mean it’s wasting a tremendous amount of money. It has some simplistic theory that I don’t think will work, so I don’t think the expenditure stuff is going to have the intended effect. I don’t think it will expand the economy. And the tax cutting isn’t really geared toward incentives. It’s not really geared to lowering tax rates; it’s more along the lines of throwing money at people. On both sides I think it’s garbage. So in terms of balance between the two it doesn’t really matter that much.

No kidding.

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