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Monday, November 21, 2011

UK: The Failing US Congress

PJ: Sometimes watching US politics is entertaining, like watching Tina Fey repeat Sarah Palin's words verbatim, or cringing as Herman Cain can't answer simple questions about international affairs. But the joke that is today's American politics has turned into a serious discord that could affect the country's delicate economic recovery. Wouldn't sanity prevail while the country struggles to climb out of the deepest recession since the Great Depression? Wouldn't members of Congress want to pull together instead of worrying about who will or won't win the Presidency in 2012, or who might control the House and the Senate? I'm afraid not.

The world watched as the Republicans played chicken with the debt ceiling... then watched as the President's bill to promote job creation was crushed by the same party (even though many items in that bill had at one time been proposed by the GOP). And now we watch the total failure of the deficit super committee with conservatives chanting their favourite "no new taxes" meme while Democrats refuse to cave to cuts that are not balanced with new revenue the way that they did during the debt ceiling crisis. What lengths will conservative members of the US Congress go to defeat a president? Are they willing take down the country?


The Economist

Do-nothing Congress may find a way to raise taxes

Nov 21st 2011, 16:39 by R.A. | WASHINGTON

THE supercommittee has failed. When Congress finally struck its deal to raise the debt ceiling during the summer, it agreed to find just over a trillion in budget savings through a bipartisan committee (said supercommittee), which would be empowered to develop recommendations that would then be subject to a Congressional vote in a process mercifully stripped of most of the procedural bottlenecks that now choke so much legislation. Should Congress fail in this endeavour, a number of automatic cuts would instead kick in in 2013. The nastiness of the proposed cuts was supposed to encourage lawmakers to strike a deal. Instead, it seems that they'll strike out. It now appears that Congressional leaders have been unable to reach a consensus.

This failure is leading some to wonder whether debt worries might hamstring a struggling American economy. Eventually, perhaps, but not yet; for now, crisis is sending international investors rushing into the arms of the Treasury, and the yield on 10-year American debt is back below 2%. A bigger concern is the rising possibility that Congress will be unable to prevent a big fiscal tightening from occurring at the end of the year.

Last year, as part of the deal to extend the expiring Bush tax cuts, Congress approved a stimulative payroll tax cut and an extension of federal emergency unemployment benefits. Both are scheduled to expire at the end of the year. Should they do so, the economy may face a fiscal hit next year equivalent to about 2 percentage points of growth. America's economy has looked surprisingly buoyant in recent months, but few expect growth to continue to accelerate. A tightening of that magnitude would push America uncomfortably close to the threshold of recession, and that's assuming no new headwinds, as from a euro-zone collapse.

Until recently, it had been assumed that whatever their differences, Republicans and Democrats could come together to protect a tax cut for working people amid an extremely fragile recovery. The failure to reach any supercommittee deal may have poisoned the water sufficiently to cast even that into doubt.

How long might an impasse persist? With an election looming in November of 2012, it is difficult to imagine matters getting any easier. Republicans have drawn a line in the sand on the raising of new revenue to help close the deficit, and Democrats are unwilling to support big spending cuts without at least some contribution on the revenue side. Neither group will want to face voters having stepped away from that principle.

It's impossible to say what the composition of Congress might look like post-election, but the fiscal cuts scheduled for the end of next year are bigger still; they include the expiration of the Bush tax cuts (again) as well as the automatic cuts that kick in as a result of the supercommittee's superfailure. If this Congress can't agree on anything before the election, and the new Congress is no better, then the drag on the economy from government will grow from small but manageable to debilitating.

http://www.economist.com/blogs/freeexchange/2011/11/supercommittee-flops

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