mame
Well-Known Member
How do you guys feel about this? From Time:
This is nothing really new, I've been arguing that government cuts will cost jobs - not create them - the entire time on these boards (see the numerous anti-Austerity threads). But the magnitude - 2 million jobs... This is truly a fucking joke... So much for Republicans running on creating jobs...
Meanwhile, the NYTimes reports that deficit hawk Republicans who ran on cutting spending and of whom supported a ban on earmarks during this congress - are actively, and discretely, advocating for spending projects normally considered as "pork":
Another thing about these projects that Republicans are after... Normal people call these projects "Stimulus" - which Republicans swear doesn't work - but for some reason these projects are worth it? Mental gymnastics! It's appalling, really.
The estimate is only for $2 trillion, the deal is likely to be $4 trillion... So 2 million jobs can quite easily be lost/not created in the next few years as a direct result of a budget deal.Douglas Elmendorf, director of the nonpartisan Congressional Budget Office, ran the numbers on what a deal that either cuts spending or raises taxes in order to reduce the deficit by $2 trillion would mean to the economy. Elmendorf estimates that the deal would likely slow the economy by as much as 0.6% in each of the next three years. Again, there is no science for translating GDP growth into jobs. But 0.1% of GDP growth usually means the economy will add about 5,000 jobs, and vice versa. So that means a debt-ceiling deal of the size Elmendorf is talking about could cost the economy as much as over a million jobs during the next three years.
This is nothing really new, I've been arguing that government cuts will cost jobs - not create them - the entire time on these boards (see the numerous anti-Austerity threads). But the magnitude - 2 million jobs... This is truly a fucking joke... So much for Republicans running on creating jobs...
Meanwhile, the NYTimes reports that deficit hawk Republicans who ran on cutting spending and of whom supported a ban on earmarks during this congress - are actively, and discretely, advocating for spending projects normally considered as "pork":
I just quoted a couple passages that stuck out to me, there are more than two dozen examples - many of which found in the NYTimes article... So much for cutting spending...An examination of spending bills, news releases and communications with federal agencies obtained under the Freedom of Information Act shows that nearly two dozen freshmen have sought money for projects that could ultimately cost billions of dollars, while calling for less spending and banning pork projects.
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Lawmakers like Representative Tim Scott, Republican of South Carolina, who advocated for the harbor dredging project with other members of the South Carolina delegation, insist their requests are neither earmarks nor wasteful. “This was a merit-based project that was open and transparent,” said Mr. Scott, who helped secure $150,000 for the first phase of a harbor-deepening project in Charleston, his hometown. The project is expected eventually to cost as much as $300 million. Mr. Scott, a favorite of the Tea Party movement, said he is opposed to earmarks and that dredging the port was in the national interest because it would accommodate bigger cargo ships and help create trade opportunities and jobs.
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On the Minnesota-Wisconsin border, local officials and members of Congress have pushed for a new four-lane bridge over the St. Croix River that was co-sponsored by Representative Sean P. Duffy, a Wisconsin freshman Republican, and Representative Michele Bachmann, the three-term Minnesota Republican who is running for president.
Opponents labeled the bridge an earmark, but Mr. Duffy and Mrs. Bachmann said the bridge was critical to handle increased traffic that an 80-year-old bridge nearby can no longer handle alone. They defend the spending by arguing that it was not an earmark since there were no specific costs listed in the bill itself, nor is it a financing bill. The legislation calls only for a bridge to be built.
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Last March, while the House was drafting the military authorization bill, 22 freshman Republicans wrote a letter to the House leadership requesting more military spending than President Obama had requested.
Another thing about these projects that Republicans are after... Normal people call these projects "Stimulus" - which Republicans swear doesn't work - but for some reason these projects are worth it? Mental gymnastics! It's appalling, really.