Media Unwittingly Plays Republicans' Deficit Game ... Again
Thursday 20 January 2011
by: Paul Krugman, Krugman & Co. | Op-Ed

John A. Boehner, the Republican leader, presented the party's new agenda last year in Virginia. (Photo: Drew Angerer/The New York Times)
Who could have seen this coming?
The Washington Post editorial board was shocked (shocked!) to discover in early January that incoming congressional Republicans aren’t serious about deficit reduction.
“You could listen to their rhetoric — or you could read the rules they are poised to adopt at the start of the new Congress,” they wrote in a Jan. 2 editorial. “The former promises a new fiscal sobriety. The latter suggests that the new G.O.P. majority is determined to continue the spree of unaffordable tax-cutting.”
By “fiscal sobriety,” I imagine The Post was referring to a Republican policy that basically requires lawmakers to offset any new spending by cutting other programs or by raising revenue, not by raising taxes. Of course, The Post was supportive of the deal President Obama struck with Republicans at the end of 2010 to extend the Bush-era tax cuts to all Americans (which means a revenue loss of $3.9 trillion over 10 years, according to the United States Treasury Department), calling it an achievement “to be celebrated” in an editorial on Dec. 23. This achievement to be celebrated is now called unaffordable tax-cutting less than a month later.
I was going to be snarky, but this requires seriousness: the gullibility of much of the media establishment in the United States regarding this issue is ridiculous. Their inability to spot the hollowness of Republican claims to fiscal responsibility amounts to journalistic malpractice.
Republicans have been the party of fiscal irresponsibility since the 1980s. As if to confirm that unfunded tax cuts had become part of the party’s D.N.A., President George W. Bush’s administration convinced Congress to pass the first round of cuts in 2001.
Then along came a Democratic president who presided over two years of deficits in the immediate aftermath of a severe financial crisis — which is the time when governments are supposed to run deficits. Republicans began to warn against the evils of red ink (repent or you’ll turn into Greece!), and, incredibly, the media took those warnings at face value. Top Republicans even started declaring that while deficits were terrible, there was still no need to offset the cost of the tax cuts. Yet these people were portrayed as deficit hawks. It is is simply stunning.
Why were journalists and commentators so blind? I suspect it had to do with their desire to seem neutral. In order to show how even-handed and open-minded they were, journalists felt that they had to find Republican fiscal heroes. Reporting that the whole deficit debate was a political ploy, lacking any substance, would have sounded shrill.
But the truth often does.
Backstory: Governing Agenda
When Republicans took control of the U.S. House of Representatives earlier this month, they promised to cut the $1.3 trillion federal deficit by reducing spending. But according to the Congressional Budget Office and the Joint Committee on Taxation, Republican lawmakers have proposed a series of policies that will, in fact, strain public coffers further.
The most expensive item on the Republican agenda is a two-year extension of the Bush-era tax cuts. The tax cuts — which are set to expire in 2012 — favor the wealthiest Americans, who benefit the most from reduced taxes on capital gains, dividends and estates.
One of Republicans’ first moves this month was to change House anti-deficit rules so that existing tax cuts could remain in place: to account for new spending, legislators cannot increase taxes.
This makes the tax cuts effectively indefinite, which could add about $3.9 trillion to the national debt over the next decade, according to the Treasury Department.
House Republicans also plan to repeal the Obama administration’s new health law — a move that the nonpartisan C.B.O. predicts will eliminate $230 billion in cost savings and add a similar amount to the deficit through 2021. But House Republicans have flatly rejected the C.B.O.’s numbers, claiming that they exclude $115 billion in implementation costs and count some tax increases twice.
With regard to the C.B.O.’s evaluation, Republican Representative Tom Price of Georgia told The Hill newspaper on Jan. 7, “we’ve got to get a new system, a new way to be able to determine how much programs are actually going to cost.”
© 2010 The New York Times Company
Truthout has licensed this content. It may not be reproduced by any other source and is not covered by our Creative Commons license.
Paul Krugman joined The New York Times in 1999 as a columnist on the Op-Ed page and continues as a professor of economics and international affairs at Princeton University. He was awarded the Nobel in economic science in 2008.
Mr Krugman is the author or editor of 20 books and more than 200 papers in professional journals and edited volumes, including "The Return of Depression Economics" (2008) and "The Conscience of a Liberal" (2007).
Copyright 2010 The New York Times.
All republished content that appears on Truthout has been obtained by permission or license.
All republished content that appears on Truthout has been obtained by permission or license.



Comments
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There are a lot of things I
Thu, 01/20/2011 - 15:48 — GT66 (not verified)There are a lot of things I disagree with the Republican part about. This is not one of them. Personally, I like the idea that perhaps if the government is financial hamstrung enough it'll come to its senses and realize there's no open checkbook anymore. With debt at the levels they are, that window of opportunity for easy money is quickly slamming shut as well. The government couldn't be persuaded nor cajoled into fiscal responsibility. Well, now it's time for some tough love. The intervention is one its way. And I say, "bring it on."
GT66 - The Republicans have
Thu, 01/20/2011 - 16:20 — Bruce (not verified)GT66 - The Republicans have been bankrupting the country since 1980, and our debts have only gone up as our public services have gone down. The Republicans are always willing to throw money away on stupid and unnecessary wars, and tax breaks for the rich. In the meantime our public schools and our infrastructure crumbles. Austerity only applies to the poor and the middle class. If these policies continue, it will only apply to the poor. The middle class will be like the middle ages. Gone from memory and relegated to the dustbin of history. Whether they are willing to admit it or not, that's the Republican dream.
GT66 "time for tough love"
Thu, 01/20/2011 - 16:29 — RS (not verified)GT66 "time for tough love" Yes....after huge subsidies for all banks, insurance companies, other corporations, Oil companies, farm conglomerates.....it is time to cut social security, education, social services, unemployment benefits....
Easy on the wealthiest....tough on those in need.
Wonderful...
"Unwittingly"???? My ass!!
Thu, 01/20/2011 - 16:40 — Anonymous (not verified)"Unwittingly"???? My ass!!
All 'is'sue positions'
Thu, 01/20/2011 - 16:49 — Anonymous (not verified)All 'is'sue positions' aside, we have not had a 'reliable media...since Cronkite!
Whether 'Infomercial', Entertainment or sheer Propaganda. The news is no longer the news.
At best an 'Editorial'; at worst, straight up propaganda brought to you ...by The Corporations that bought the Media outlets, fair and square.
As they own them, they get to edit as they please.
So....stop listening to them altogether!
What Anonymous at 21:40 just
Thu, 01/20/2011 - 17:01 — Texas Aggie (not verified)What Anonymous at 21:40 just said.
Dr. Krugman, you don't have to be so gentle and polite. You are very aware that the MSM is doing it on purpose.
GT66--If the deficits are so
Thu, 01/20/2011 - 17:16 — Anonymous (not verified)GT66--If the deficits are so bad, why is it that, when the RepuBigLiecans are in power and they drive the deficits through the roof, the mantra becomes "Deficits don't matter" (according to Jack Kemp, Dick Cheney, and John McCain).
And why is that? 1.) Because "supply-side" (a/k/a/ "trickle-down" or "laissez-faire" ) economics as practiced by the GOP has been shown time and time again to put the economy into terrible boom and bust cycles, so they have to cover their lying asses; 2.) The National Debt is income re-distribution in reverse. The poor and the shrinking middle class, who pay the bulk of the taxes, are paying the interest on the debt that is being collected by the creditors of the federal government, who are either other governments (chiefly China) and the wealthy.
"Witlessly" rather than
Thu, 01/20/2011 - 20:11 — Just Wandering (not verified)"Witlessly" rather than "unwittingly" is a much more appropriate term after such a longtime display of shallow, inaccurate reporting.
"Unwittingly Plays" is
Fri, 01/21/2011 - 00:17 — David (not verified)"Unwittingly Plays" is definitely incorrect. May we replace those two words in the title with something more factually accurate, like "Openly and Shamelessly Bends Over For"?
Krugman: The truth sounds
Fri, 01/21/2011 - 04:00 — dennis (not verified)Krugman: The truth sounds shrill because it's always so far out of sync with the view of things constantly purveyed by a malpracticing “media establishment”, which is no way unable to “spot the hollowness” of Republican Party lies about (anything, everything). Rather, led by your employers as well as their heedlessly schizy war- and class war-mongering counterparts at the Post, it functions quite deliberately— regardless of what “simply stunning” lies and idiocies it is charged to spread to obscure the truth (and avoid shrillness, at all costs) about the deficit, the economy, the wars, the torture, the secrecy, the climate, you name it—as the bought-and-paid-for, unerringly servile propaganda arm of the vicious, lunatic, morally degenerate capitalist establishment that is taking the world down to the Devil while you watch. Proposing that they are blind, gullible, trying to seem neutral, etc, instead of plainly malevolent, is helping them continue to get over. Of course if you really saw that, you'd hafta quit yer job...
It used to be that
Fri, 01/21/2011 - 08:16 — Anonymous (not verified)It used to be that journalists scorned that word to describe their job. They were "newspapermen" plain and simple. They didn't have university degrees. The best often started out as copy boys in the newsroom. If they were able to write and ambitious they were given assignments to cover the news of the town. They were out on the streets and talking to the citizens and getting the stories from those involved. In the political field they started covering the lowly nuts and bolts of city hall and council meetings. They learned from the ground up. No make-up, no wardrobe, no hairdressers standing by. The majority of so-called journalist today are nothing more than pretty faces. They haven't the wit or day to day experience with real life as it is lived by working people to report accurately, nor do they want to do so. That is not what they were hired for by their corporate masters. They like being part of the ruling class and will not want to risk rocking the boat.
The fact that the Republican
Fri, 01/21/2011 - 09:33 — Anonymous (not verified)The fact that the Republican Party exists at all tells you everything you need to know about what's wrong with America.
"The fact that the
Fri, 01/21/2011 - 13:52 — Anonymous (not verified)"The fact that the Republican Party exists at all tells you everything you need to know about what's wrong with America."
Amen to that, brother.
STOP saying the repubs or
Fri, 01/21/2011 - 16:48 — Michael Heit (not verified)STOP saying the repubs or rethugs
ITS BOTH PARTIESpeople
and it has been for at lease the last 25 maybe 30 years!!
wake up people we live in a oligarcy and plutocracy and the MSM is their lap dogs and enablers.
What else could you expect; they all live in the Court at Versailles
The witless media again???
Fri, 01/21/2011 - 22:55 — Jan Boudart (not verified)The witless media again??? Who cares whether they are witless or witfull? How come they don't know any better yet? It's not like they haven't had about 400 years to learn.
The media is what you take
Sat, 01/22/2011 - 13:00 — Anonymous (not verified)The media is what you take from it. If you believe in Democracy then you listen on one channel and one paper.
Please tune into Free Speech TV. Found on both dish networks and some cable. This show is run by PEOPLE Not corps. or anyone else. Only contributions once a year. Trust me you will HEAR THE TRUTH.
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