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The Invisible Achievement (Guest Voice)

The Invisible Achievement

by E.J. Dionne, Jr.
Washington Post Columnist

SYDNEY, Australia — The hardest slogan to sell in politics is: “Things could have been a whole lot worse.” No wonder President Obama is having trouble defending his stimulus plan.

If governments around the world, including our own, had not acted aggressively — and had not spent piles of money — a very bad economic situation would have become a cataclysm.

But because the cataclysm was avoided, this is an invisible achievement. Many whose bacon was saved, particularly in the banking and corporate sectors, do not want to admit how important the actions of government were. Anti-government ideologues try to pretend that no serious intervention was required.

So everyone goes back to complaining about high deficits and the shortcomings of government as if nothing had happened. This is now creating problems for Obama on health care.

One person who empathizes with our president is Australian Prime Minister Kevin Rudd. He argues that if the governments of the world’s biggest economies had not injected “$5 trillion plus into the real economy” in stimulus and had not taken other coordinated actions, we would have relived “the tawdry tale of the 1930s.”

“In March of this year, the world was staring down the barrel of a Great Depression,” Rudd said in an interview here last week. “This is a case study in bringing the world back from the brink, and it was American leadership from President Obama that was the key to that.”

Rudd is Obama’s political kinsman not only because they are philosophically in tune with each other, but also because the 51-year-old Australian’s election victory in November 2007 foreshadowed Obama’s own.

The leader of the center-left Labor Party, Rudd ousted one of George W. Bush’s best friends, conservative Prime Minister John Howard, by riding the same theme of change and the same generational tide that carried in his American friend.

Yet if Rudd praises Obama, he also praises Bush for acting swiftly when the global economy began coming apart in the fall of 2008. As Rudd put it in a speech to the Australian-American Leadership Dialogue, Bush acted in dire circumstances, at a moment when “global financial flows ground to a virtual halt.”

In fact, for all the flaws in the execution of the bank bailout program, Bush’s willingness last fall to put the urgent need for massive action over his own ideological proclivities is likely to go down as the most enduringly constructive act of his presidency.

Rudd argues that in the last months of Bush’s administration and the first months of Obama’s, every economic indicator pointed to “catastrophe.” He speaks of banks running out of money, developers whose credit was frozen and signs of panic among individual savers.

What prevented a repeat of the 1930s, he says, is that the world’s governments actually learned from that era, particularly from “the deliberations on the Great Depression by John Maynard Keynes.” The British economist stressed the imperative of government action at moments when the private economy falters.

If anything, Rudd has it easier than Obama. Australia’s unemployment rate in July was 5.8 percent, compared with 9.4 percent in the United States. Technically, at least, Australia has so far avoided recession.

And Rudd’s conservative predecessor, unlike Obama’s, was fiscally responsible. Thus, Australian Treasurer Wayne Swan points out that even after his government’s large stimulus spending, the country’s budget deficit will peak at 4.9 percent of GDP in 2009-10. In 2009, Swan noted, the U.S. budget deficit will hit 13.6 percent of GDP.

Then there is the biggest difference in the national political situations: Australia already has a national health system. This means that Rudd has been able to concentrate on the economy and cap-and-trade legislation while Obama has found himself battling in the health care trenches.

But Swan has some words of encouragement for Obama. The fight for government-led universal health coverage in Australia during the 1970s and ’80s, Swan said in an interview, was “every bit as tough as the debate in the United States.” He added: “Thirty years on, we’ve got this system which, whatever its flaws, is one of the most effective in the world.”

In other words, once it’s in place, government-guaranteed universal health coverage becomes an unassailable social gain. Obama’s chances of securing such a victory will improve if he can overcome reflexive anti-government propaganda that ignores how governments kept the world economy from falling off the cliff. In Rudd, he has a willing witness.

This column is copyrighted and licensed to run on TMV in full. (c) 2009, Washington Post Writers Group.

  • DLS
    E.J. Dionne, as usual, fails. (At least he's not as bad as Krugman, normally. [sigh])

    The stimulus has fizzled. The spending always made normal people uneasy, and the latest figures that were released only added to our concerns, as well as additionally troubling the troubled effort (at and of their own hands) the Dem health care effort. Dionne cannot successfully manage to "explain this away."

    Which leads to:

    The one thing he fails to grasp and state (with which he has all kinds of company among Democrats and liberal activists seeking federal health care expansion) is that the example of Australia should have been presented to people in addition to those of Canada and the UK (the nations most similar to us), as well as another nation, which I doubt many a lib and Dem has even thought of: New Zealand.

    http://www.moh.govt.nz/moh.nsf/indexmh/healthsy...
  • Leonidas
    The hardest slogan to sell in politics is: “Things could have been a whole lot worse.”

    It didn't work for Bush and it won't work for Obama.
  • DLS
    "It didn't work for Bush and it won't work for Obama."

    You misoverestimate the people who will believe Obama and the other Dems these days (the dwindling fraction that will no doubt retain the core).
  • elrod
    DLS,
    That was a remarkably content-free response by you. Exactly how has it "fizzled"? Dionne argues that the stimulus and bailout helped avoid a financial cataclysm that most experts across the ideological spectrum feared in the Fall of 2008. That you never liked the stimulus (or bailouts), or even that people have always been uneasy about spending a ton of money, does not mean it "fizzled" or that Dionne has "failed."
  • DLS
    "it won't work for Obama"

    We've "progressed" from "could have" to "would have" had another Great Depression, don't forget.

    I wonder how much worse it would have been ("worse than" the Great Depression) if there is increased concern about fiscal policy (and underlying competence that has always been questioned) or if the health care effort becomes even more [self-]impaired.

    We could switch at a moment's notice, I suspect, back to "we inherited disaster from Bush."

    (Pay no attention to current dwarfing of what Bush ever did wrong, or the stimulus that has fizzled.)

    (Don't even think about the results to come from the climate legislation nonsense, including cap-and-trade.)
  • elrod
    Again, DLS, how has the stimulus "fizzled?" The money takes nearly two years to go out, given the way it was structured. In many areas - like the public works building under construction right outside my window - the stimulus has directly resulted in the employment of lots of people.
  • DLS
    "That was a remarkably content-free response by you."

    More false charges? Defending your bride, still, and ignoring everything that's really happening?

    "Exactly how has it 'fizzled'?"

    Might I start with the obvious from earlier? "Create four million new jobs" (shhh) changed thereafter to "create or save three and a half million new jobs" that was revealed to have created or saved (let's say "create" only, to be generous) 150,000 jobs? No improvement for real since then, despite a massive amount of spending? (And that has to include all the porky features of the stimulus legislation, after all.)

    I am, and was last year, healthily skeptical of any such effort, but was willing to accept the desire (there was no "need" [sic]) to try and have Washington provide spending that the public was reducing, as well as spend money to relieve the states of some burdens, as this is what most people wanted to at least try, and it would be worth watching. I even listed various measures (including a list from a Democratic economist) that the federal government could do, numerous times (which you apparently failed to read). But what we've seen is lack of results and worse, a haphazard (or worse) effort by the Dems and the Obama administration on this and subsequent measures and issues this year, growing increasingly worse. The widespread public, mainstream growing concern and rejection of what Obama and the Dems have been doing began with the original stimulus and bank bailout efforts. Nothing they've done has been better since then, but increasingly worse. But it started with the stimulus details and lack of results for the money spent, and the amount (obviously) of spending and debt.

    Claiming all kinds of catastrophe that "could" or "would" have happened if this weren't done, in an attempt to "justify" the misdeeds, of course is untrue as well as revealing about current efforts to defend Obama's current state of affairs, which he chose to place himself in -- with overall fiscal policy as well as with things like health care, which is obviously and deservedly in trouble.

    At least he hasn't tried monetizing all that vast debt yet, or trying to print money and deliberately inflate the currency ("because we'd be in a Great Depression if we don't do this") to fuel more spending or buy the votes of those to whom a "properly managed" and inflated currency is the real opiate of the masses.
  • DLS
    "In many areas - like the public works building under construction right outside my window - the stimulus has directly resulted in the employment of lots of people."

    Some public works efforts might be great. The ones that count and merit the most support are those that will lead to permanent improvements. I have stated in particular that repairing deficient bridges and road repairs (which so many governments are neglecting in place of shiny all-new projects, as we've learned) would be a good thing, creating all new freeways where needed (Los Angeles metro should get two 30-plus mile new freeways in the Basin proper), the building and improvement to electrical transmission infrastructure, and so on.

    Some are preoccupied if obscessed with short-term view and short-term temporary employment spikes (which are not necessarily coherent, associated with temporary boosts in activity to fight the slump). I'm at least glad in a way that the pork-fest associated with "stimulus work" and the ineptitude we're seeing has precluded other vast wastes from happening. For example, the current crew can't be trusted to do a serious, real effort at high-speed rail, where this transport makes sense. (We'll see an inept effort, as we are already seeing hints of, at what is being sought -- this and that, all kinds of trains, anything that manages to get the "high speed" label misattached, rather than truly world-class high speed rail, i.e., electric at 180-220+ mph, where and only where it makes sense in this country.)

    There are other things that the feds could do. Zandi's "bang for the buck" list at Moody's is one obvious list and guide to follow (which I have referred to a number of times). One bold thing could be to combine "stimulus" desires (and even "stimulus" money) with health care (but this was too clever for the Dems to do) by incorporating Medicaid into Medicare or otherwise making Medicaid 100% federal.

    But overall, we're seeing an inept, piecemeal, clumsy effort that isn't yielding results as desired (not to mention as promised).
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