Townhall
Finance...
CBO: Cost Per
Job Between $196,750 and
$562,000
By Jeff Reeves
One
of the first moves of the Obama
administration was a $787 billion government stimulus in early 2009 to
prop up
an ailing economy. Many conservatives these days are focused on reining
in
government spending -- and this undoubtedly will be a talking point in
the days
to come as GOP candidates and the president hunker down for Election
Day 2012.
Was
the stimulus just one more
Washington boondoggle -- a handout to special interests that wasted
taxpayer
money when we already are up to our eyeballs in debt? Or was it a
crucial
intervention in a time of great need that helped prevent a recession
from
turning into a depression or worse?
The
nonpartisan Congressional Budget
Office has just come out with its report on the American Reinvestment
and
Recovery Act (referred to in the document as ARRA in typical beltway
affection
for acronyms and jargon). And its findings on the real impact of the
stimulus
package are worth noting:
Real
Deficit Impact Is 5% Higher: The
CBO estimates the total deficit impact of the spending actually will be
$825
billion. That’s a roughly 5% increase over that headline $787 billion
price tag
initially reported.
The
Money Already Is Spent: But more
importantly, “close to half of that (deficit) impact occurred in fiscal
year
2010, and about 85 percent of ARRA’s budgetary impact was realized by
the end
of June 2011.” In short, lest politicians tell you otherwise, the horse
has
left the barn.
Related
Article: Who’s who on Obama’s
$37 million White House payroll
Number
of Jobs “Created” Is Slippery:
The CBO gives the GOP fodder for criticism of the stimulus, admitting
some jobs
“might have existed even without the stimulus package, with employees
working
on the same activities or other activities.” Then again, the office
also gives
Obama wiggle room by saying jobs estimates “do not attempt to measure
the
number of jobs that were created or retained indirectly as a result of
recipients’ increased income, and the increased income of their
employees.”
That means pinning down a hard figure for jobs created on this is less
about
facts and more about finding the right statistics to make your argument.
Cost
Per Job Between $196,750 and
$562,000: Like I said, the jobs numbers are slippery. But if you take
the $787
billion price tag and divide by CBO estimates of 1.4 million to 4
million
“full-time equivalent” jobs created as a result of the stimulus
measure,
per-job costs range between these two six-figure sums.
Stimulus
Had Substantive GDP Impact:
Perhaps the rosiest news is that the impact of the stimulus package
“raised
real (inflation-adjusted) gross domestic product (GDP) by between 0.8%
and
2.5%.” That’s no mean feat for a nearly $15 trillion economy. Then
again, the
fact is the U.S. is slogging it out. Unfortunately, a report last week
indicated the U.S. economy currently is growing at a 1% annualized
rate, so we
are far from in the middle of an economic recovery, let alone an
economic boom.
Still, it makes you wonder how bad things would have been without that
crutch
over the past two years. Also makes you wonder if we still are in a
recession
even if we haven’t met the textbook definition of declining GDP for two
consecutive quarters.
Tax
Cuts for the Rich, Homebuyer
Credit and Corporate Tax Breaks Were a Waste: The CBO did some complex
calculations on the “multiplier effect” of the money spent. That is, if
a city
gets a $1 stimulus grant but spends $2.50 on a project like a new
bridge, the multiplier
is 2.5. If, on the other hand, a citizen gets a $1 tax credit and only
spends
80 cents, the multiplier is 0.8.
Estimates
in the report show that
direct purchasing of goods and services by the federal government -- or
similar
efforts undertaken by local governments thanks to federal funding --
had a
multiplier of 1.0 to 2.5 on every dollar spent -- showing a big return
on Uncle
Sam’s investment. The tax cuts for the wealthiest 1% of Americans? A
measly 0.2
to 0.6 multiplier. Similarly, the multiplier for the $8,000 tax credit
for
first-time homebuyers was a paltry 0.3 to 0.8 multiplier. Worst of all,
the
multiplier on corporate tax provisions was as little as zero and only
as high
as 0.4. This is not to say that there was no impact from these efforts
(unless
you believe that low-ball zero multiplier for corporate tax cuts). But
in the
context of the other figures, the economy would have seen more bang for
Uncle
Sam’s bucks if the cash was spent via direct investment. Sorry,
supply-side
supporters …
Short-Sighted
and Irrational Americans
Will Provide the Biggest Impact: In its methodology, the CBO reveals
why it is
likely these tax credits to well-off Americans had less of an impact
(at least
by its calculations). In explaining how it reached some of these
numbers, the
CBO says other economic models that offer a smaller per-dollar impact
of
stimulus funds “are generally predicated on the assumption that people
are
fully rational and forward-looking, basing their current decisions on a
full
lifetime plan.” Under such a model there are “more modest” impacts on
the real
economy because “people are assumed to make decisions about how much to
work,
buy, and save on the basis of current and expected future values of the
wage
rate, interest rates, taxes, and government purchases, among other
things.”
Related
Article: Could a GOP president
fix the economy?
In
short, rational-thinking citizens
and businesses who are worried about the future can’t be incited to run
out and
spend willy nilly, even if the government gives them a handout.
Is
it more disappointing that the
federal government will depend on such behavior to spur economic
growth, or
more disappointing that most Americans and American businesses might
not
actually know any better?
I’ll
leave it up to you to decide.
Read
it with links at Townhall Finance
|