The Crisis and Obama's Decline

by: Rick Wolff  |  MR Zine | Op-Ed

The economic crisis that Obama rode to victory in 2008 also rode him down in the 2010 elections. Obama and his economic advisors badly "mismanaged the crisis." While the Obama team seems to have learned little from its failure, we need to draw its lessons if we are to reduce the costly social consequences of that defeat.

Obama's administration decided to handle the severe crisis inherited from Bush by following standard Keynesian economics. It undertook massive new spending. First it bailed out banks and other large corporations (AIG in insurance, GM in automobiles, etc.). Then it "stimulated" the economy by boosting spending on goods and services by all levels of government. Standard Keynesian practice also includes not taxing corporations and the richest 10% of US taxpayers to raise the money for all that new spending. Instead, the government borrows that money to cover the difference -- the deficit -- between tax receipts and increased spending. (Super Keynesians like Paul Krugman want more spending and thus bigger deficits.)

No doubt Obama's team worried that large US corporations and the 10% richest individuals would react badly if they were taxed more to enable Washington to spend more. However much they contributed to the crisis and however much they benefit from government spending, corporations and the rich want others to pay for that spending. When have those two groups ever willingly behaved otherwise? They prefer lending to Washington over being taxed by Washington. So the Obama team spent more by borrowing more (much of it from the same corporations and rich people that it had not taxed).

Whenever governments run deficits by borrowing, corporations and the rich become concerned about a resulting problem: who will be taxed to pay the interest on the government's borrowings and to pay back the lenders? To make sure it would not be them, corporations and the rich shifted a significant amount of their political and financial support to Republicans for the mid-term elections. That shift aimed to ensure that no future taxation of business and the rich would force them to pay for deficits. In a capitalist crisis, that's how economic policy works when no organized opposition exists to prevent it.

As 2009 passed into 2010 and government deficits ballooned, the worries of corporate America and the rich deepened. They saw unemployment rise and stay around 10% and a flood of foreclosures eject millions from their homes. They saw Obama losing support from his electoral base as economic conditions kept deteriorating. They feared that he might be tempted (politically compelled) to regain his base's support by taxing corporations and the rich rather than middle and poorer citizens. Then some Obama remarks blamed Wall Street for helping to cause the crisis and criticized the high executive salaries in corporations receiving government aid. In response, a significant portion of corporations and the rich decided to block Obama from moving any further in such directions.

The way to do that was clear: help Republicans. They reliably oppose taxes on corporations and the rich by blocking all tax increases. Corporations especially interested in preventing Obama from other efforts to recoup his base -- such as regulating energy companies after the Gulf of Mexico disaster -- helped the Tea Party's total demonization of Obama and Washington. Media exposure for the Tea Party -- its activities and candidates -- became extraordinary and often quite favorable. Media attitudes toward Obama became much less sympathetic. Funds shifted to Republicans and lobbying against Obama's legislative efforts ramped up.

Obama's team ignored the classic flaw in Keynesian deficit spending policy: underestimating the political struggles over taxes. Middle and lower income individuals were desperate to ease the burdens of the recession on them, while corporations and the rich had no intention of accepting such burdens. As the crisis persisted (no drops in unemployment, foreclosures, job deterioration, etc.) and deficits soared, Obama's base felt increasingly betrayed as very little improved for them. Meanwhile, corporations and the rich shifted support toward Republicans in significant numbers. By mid-2010, it was already too late for Obama. The six months before the November elections were, for many Democrats, like watching an approaching car wreck from inside the car yet powerless to stop it.

Had Obama pursued a different set of policies from the beginning, he might at least have had a chance to avoid the November 2010, electoral results. At the peak of his popularity and support early in 2009, he might have used them to blunt the resistance of corporations and the rich to pay for the increased spending needed to overcome the crisis (and thereby reduce or eliminate the deficits). Only a massive, popular mobilization could frighten (persuade) them that paying all sorts of taxes and other costs of government programs was preferable to risking a mass anger and opposition that might demand far more basic social change at the expense of corporations and the rich. After all, it was massive popular mobilization that enabled FDR to do some of that in the Great Depression of the 1930s. Nowadays, when no trade union upsurge nor sizeable socialist and communist parties exist to mobilize a left opposition, Obama himself would have had to help build one to avoid the defeat he suffered this November.

Obama missed his chance. His advisors, said to include "experts on the Great Depression," misunderstand its political economy, consequently misadvised Obama, and thereby produced a political defeat. A new political formation able and willing to mobilize a majority around its interests is required. It could win a possible exit from the economic crisis by taxing corporations and the rich to enable increased government spending. That modest program would reduce or avoid deficits. Middle and lower income people would then face fewer or no cuts in public employment and services and no need for tax increases. With that program and with government spending focused on jobs and affordable housing, Obama might also have developed into a popular hero along the lines of FDR rather than become a shaky first-term President.

Rick Wolff is a Professor Emeritus at the University of Massachusetts in Amherst and also a Visiting Professor at the Graduate Program in International Affairs of the New School University in New York. He is the author of New Departures in Marxian Theory (Routledge, 2006) among many other publications. Check out Rick Wolff’s documentary film on the current economic crisis, Capitalism Hits the Fan, at www.capitalismhitsthefan.com. Visit Wolff's Web site at www.rdwolff.com, and order a copy of his new book Capitalism Hits the Fan: The Global Economic Meltdown and What to Do about It. 

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Obama's mistake was twofold.

Obama's mistake was twofold. First. the stim was too meager to address the problem, and secondly, the rescue plan took creditors off the hook while leaving excessive debt in place. We need more deficit spending and big cram downs on the creditors that extended credit imprudently. We also need to prosecute widespread fraud. See the work of William K. Black on control fraud.

Macro 101:

GDP = C + I + G + (X – M) [sources]

GDP = C + S + T [uses]

C + S + T = C + I + G + (X – M) [equating]

(I – S) + (G – T) + (X – M) = 0 [simplifying]

If the private domestic sector is saving and deleveraging, and the country is ruining a trade deficit, then either government runs a deficit or GDP contracts, resulting in an output gap and rising unemployment.



Now all DEM has to "do" Is

Now all DEM has to "do" Is NOTHING and taxing the rich Automatically RESUMES! Why do we, the People have to employ tautological massive, popular mobilization to engender mass anger and opposition for Obameh? For Big BUCK$, we hired him to do the job For US! And when did we get lipstuck inside his DEM, careening Getaway CAR?



What? Freeze worker pay,

What? Freeze worker pay, but give a fat tax break to fat cats?
That seems to be a complete reversal of the professed Obama credo.
O. is acting more of the time on behalf of the Republican agenda
than the Democratic agenda. Oh, I see, he wants to make sure
that the Republicans have enough money to buy the elections
again.



What? Freeze worker pay,

What? Freeze worker pay, but give a fat tax break to fat cats?
That seems to be a complete reversal of the professed Obama credo.
O. is acting more of the time on behalf of the Republican agenda
than the Democratic agenda. Oh, I see, he wants to make sure
that the Republicans have enough money to buy the elections
again.



To give David North and his

To give David North and his Trotskyites due credit, there is no melioristic fix to the current deepening crisis. It's a crisis of capitalism, full stop.

No liberal, Obama or anyone else, could have "managed" it.

Read the WSWS at www.wsws.com. Every so often they have a piece of devastating clarity. This is not to say that you will become a Northite, but it's an excellent web site. Whatever you think of the Socialist Equality Party (and they make a very strong case these days), you will learn something from their writings.



I am so very grateful I did

I am so very grateful I did not matriculate The New School. This guy is a crackpot, economic schizophrenic. Which is it? Deficit hawkishness or civil uprising? Marxian revolutionary or Libertarian status quo? As if tax revenues from the wealthy and corporations would have been the end-all-be-all. What happened to investments in infrastructure, funding R&D for green market development, strategies, and the consequential creation of its contingent as part of the workforce? What happened to renegotiating trade agreements such that manufacturing and jobs were brought back to the United States? No - let's just call all in our revenue from the wealthy and stop spending. Period.

I tried listening to this guy conduct a two-hour speech at The New School, and wanted to pull my hair out. His glittering generalities, and disclaimers for doing so in the interest of time - two-hour speech notwithstanding - drove me up a wall. I was screaming at the video for him present something of substance: the prime motivation for banks to lend to those who had no ability to repay; the reason those loans were sold to investors on the world market; the reason they were insured by AIG; the reason they were reimbursed by the Treasury; and how the Fed, in circular fashion, bought up government debt and started the process all over. No, we didn't get any of that. All we got was blather. I've had enough of Wollf's rambling, I tell ya.



To Wollf : The deficits are

To Wollf : The deficits are driven by the cost of US health care. Read anything Dean Baker has written about deficits. Deficits are also driven by the massive unemployment. How can you not cite any of this? Getting a more balanced tax system is essential, obviously, but reducing the cost of health care would turn deficits into surpluses in the long term.



I agree, but we on the left

I agree, but we on the left share the blame. Why weren't we demonstrating to demand single payer, to at least get a public option? Why didn't I? Why is no one demonstrating against the wars,even though the American people are opposed to them? I know a farmer in Appalachian N.C. who is for Medicare for everyone and ending the ever spreading wars. He votes Republican. I asked if his taxes were reduced by Bush. He replied "They never do." I.e. the pols. There is wide leftist populism but it never shows up in the media. Bill Moyers, Now, and World Focus were disappeared on one night from PBS, which is now FoxLite. Where's our Progressive Palin with a brain? WHY DON'T WE DO SOMETHING instead of emailing each other? Obama quoted FDR in saying "you have to make me do it". I'm disappointed in him in many ways, but he was right about that, and we share the blame for his failures. By the way, I'm practically blind. Any way to increase the size of the letters?