Government aid: the real “trickle-down economy”

Liberals react to times of conservative ascendancy in economic policy by deriding the “trickle-down economy”; even in times such as these which are far from that, you can see this derision lurking behind liberal critiques of the Wall Street rescue package.  The irony of this is that, as Thomas Sowell has pointed out, the modern liberal approach to helping the poor is actually its own form of trickle-down economics—the only difference is that the substrate through which the money trickles is government rather than the private sector.  This might seem like a minor difference, but it really isn’t.  In the private sector, the people at the bottom are in the same system as the people in the middle levels; in the government sector, they aren’t.  Thus, in the private sector, as the money trickles down to the folks in the lowest-paying jobs, it helps create new higher-paying jobs, opening up opportunities for those folks to move up the ladder and make more money.  In the government sector, as the money trickles down to be paid out to clients, it also helps create new government jobs—which benefits people in government, but does not create opportunities for those on the bottom (in most cases, at least).Thus the key is that “trickle-down economy” is really a misnomer as applied to the private sector, because what really matters isn’t the movement downward but the opportunities it creates for movement upward as it opens cracks in the substrate.  It is, however, an accurate descriptor of the government-assistance economy—and thus it’s here that we really hit the reality that expecting money to trickle down to those in need is a highly inefficient way to distribute it.  As Michael Novak writes, citing Sowell, in the latest First Things (excerpted here—it’s not even up on the site yet),

if you add up all the money that Congress has designated for the relief of the poor, the total turns out to be more than would be required simply to give every poor family some $30,000 in cash per year. Another way to look at it: Most of the American poor already have significant income, if not quite enough to lift them above the poverty level. If one calculates the gap between the financial benefits they already enjoy and the full sum that would lift them above the poverty level, it turns out to be a much smaller amount than is currently designated to be spent for their benefit. As the economist Thomas Sowell writes, to try to feed the swallows by feeding the horses is an immensely inefficient way to get help to the swallows. The middlemen in poverty programs often fare far better than the poor. Direct cash grants might be far more efficient.

I think they would, especially since (as Barack Obama has already proposed, and George McGovern before him) the disbursement could be handled through the IRS; you’d want some sort of sliding scale at the top end so as not to provide people with a powerful incentive to remain officially poor, but a grant program like this that was funded by the complete abolition of the federal welfare bureaucracy would be, I suspect, both more efficient and more effective than the programs we have now.  It would also have the advantage of transparency, and thus intellectual honesty, about what the government is really doing here:  namely, taking money from some people to give to others.  Doing both in terms of the tax code would provide much greater clarity about how much, and to whom, and on what basis.  Given these advantages, I think this would be a proposal conservatives could gladly support.

Time for damage control?

According to the Chicago Sun-Times (your source for all the sordid details about Chicago politics that the media didn’t want you to know before November 4),

President-elect Barack Obama’s chief of staff, Rahm Emanuel, is reportedly on 21 different taped conversations by the feds—dealing with his boss’ vacant Senate seat!

As Hugh Hewitt notes,

Given Emanuel’s deserved reputations for smarts and toughness, it is likely he wasn’t approached by Blago on the pay-to-play conspiracy, but the prospect of blunt talk between the congressman and the governor about many subjects and people has to be unsettling to the president-elect and his most important aide.

Unfortunately for the incoming administration, once he’s indicted, Blagojevich is entitled to copies of all those tapes as part of the government’s responsibility to disclose all the evidence against him, which means that

the prospect of slow, selective leaking of parts of the exchanges is part of the calculation about political damage now underway at the office of the president-elect. The president-elect would be best served by calling on the U.S. Attorney to release any and all tapes between any of his advisor or staff and Blagojevich and his staff. Better to get all of the shop talk, however salty, out early and completely than drip by drip over the next few months.

It will be interesting to see if Barack Obama (or Rep. Emanuel) is savvy enough to do exactly that, or if the Obama team will instead follow the example of most politicians by turtling up and hoping for the best.  In most cases, that’s a disastrous strategy which only maximizes the damage; however, given that during the campaign, the media made it work for the Obama team by sweeping everything under the rug as fast as they possibly could, they may well be tempted to try it again here.  In this case, given that there’s a federal investigation involved, it isn’t likely to work, but you never know.

The best argument I’ve seen for the auto bailout

comes from Jonathan Rauch, writing in National Journal; having spent considerable time recently around General Motors for a story on the Chevy Volt, Rauch has seen quite a lot of the company’s culture and internal processes, and his report suggests a strong possibility that a government loan might actually work—that the company (and, one hopes, also Ford and Chrysler) might be able to use the time the loan would buy them to finish making the changes they need to make to compete on an equal footing with the rest of the world’s auto manufacturers.  Rauch writes,

Today, GM’s factories are only about 6 percent less efficient than Toyota’s, according to Oliver Wyman, a consulting firm, and the remaining gap will shrink as new labor agreements kick in. The company’s cars are winning awards and critical plaudits. The 2008 Chevy Malibu, a hit with both buyers and analysts, represents a breakthrough: a midsize sedan that can go toe-to-toe with Toyota’s ubiquitous Camry without flinching. Whether GM can consistently replicate the Malibu and other recent successes remains to be seen, but the vehicles in the pipeline look promising. . . .What I found this year was a far cry from complacency. The ranks of line executives and engineers are thick with members of the Obama generation, who barely remember when GM was fat and happy. They are hungry to change the beleaguered company and prove its critics wrong. They are also piercingly critical of the old GM, candid to the point of eagerness in owning up to and analyzing the company’s mistakes and faults. The decades of denial are over.To succeed they will need a healthy balance sheet. Here, the problems are with legacy costs: uncompetitive pensions and benefits, rigid labor contracts, too many brands and dealers, and so on. The good news is that the company has succeeded at reducing its structural costs. It has shed more than 40 percent of its jobs and about 1,000 dealers since 2004; negotiated fully competitive wage scales for new hires; extinguished the Oldsmobile brand; and transferred retirement and health costs to its unions. The bad news is that those changes were sufficient only if everything went right economically.In its rescue proposal to Congress, GM practically begged for a strong federal overseer with the power to force unions, dealers, and creditors to accept further retrenchment. GM wants the stick of a bankruptcy-like arrangement without the stigma of the real thing. In principle, a federal bailout could give GM a hard push into the future by wrenching its balance sheet into alignment with reality.

I don’t know if I’m convinced, but I think we all need to think about this very carefully.  The most important consideration here is that the automakers aren’t simply asking for money to prop up business as usual.  Rather, as Paul Hinderaker puts it,

GM is asking for the stick of a bankruptcy-like arrangement without the stigma of the real thing. The bailout issue boils down to whether it makes sense to grant this. Bankruptcy provides a bigger, more effective stick, but it is not without risk. GM might not survive the loss of confidence associated with a bankruptcy, and its failure could take down much of the supplier base, with severe consequences for the larger economy.

This is not a possibility to be taken lightly; there’s a real risk in giving the automakers the loan they’re asking for, but there’s a real risk in not doing so as well.  The core question here is the potential reward for each risk, and the likelihood of that reward materializing.  There seems to me to be no doubt that the best-case scenario is of GM, Ford and Chrysler solving their competitiveness problems to the point where they can build better cars than their competition at an equivalent cost; the issue is which path is most likely to get us to that point, and what the downsides are for each if it doesn’t.  There’s no way to be sure, but for his part, it’s clear which way Rauch leans:

Whether a bailout can save GM depends, then, on which GM you think you’re bailing out, the calcified shell of the old GM or the new-economy company struggling to emerge. Given the record, counting on GM to succeed would be rash. But consigning it to fail might be even more so.

In Chicago, the birds are singing

The jailbirds, that is—starting with Barack Obama’s old neighbor and associate Antoin “Tony” Rezko. Hard to say for sure, but it looks to me like Rezko started singing for his supper (and a reduced sentence) in order to make sure he got the best deal he could before Rod Blagojevich starts talking. There is no honor among thieves, and Blagojevich appears to be a particularly dishonorable specimen. (As well as, if Michael Barone is right, a particularly stupid one.)The interesting thing about this situation is that while U.S. Attorney Patrick Fitzgerald has made it very clear that there’s no evidence that the president-elect was even aware of anything improper, he hasn’t made the same statement about Obama’s staff. The person of concern here appears to be the designated White House Chief of Staff, Rep. Rahm Emanuel (D-IL), who has suddenly ceased to be a fixture at the president-elect’s press conferences; as the Chicago Tribune’s John Kass points out, there are good reasons to think that if Blagojevich wanted to work a deal with the incoming Obama administration, he’d work through Rep. Emanuel; or rather, there’s one good reason: Rep. Emanuel’s state senator, the powerful Democratic politician James DeLeo. According to Kass,

DeLeo is also considered by some to be the real governor of Illinois. Blagojevich is the nutty guy who makes the speeches and gets the federal slap. They’re so close that if Jimmy suddenly stopped walking, Rod would chip his teeth on the back of Jimmy’s head.It’s reasonable to assume that if there’s one fellow Rod would talk to about the Senate seat, it’s Jimmy. And given their relationship, Jimmy could talk to Rahm.

(Kass further suggests, interestingly, that DeLeo’s quid pro quo for setting that up might well have been appointment to Rep. Emanuel’s House seat. Welcome to Illinois politics.) Given that we know that Rep. Emanuel talked multiple times with Blagojevich (see video below), it seems quite possible that he could be the next Illinois politician in the crosshairs. This, obviously, would not be a good start for the Obama administration, in a lot of ways.

HT: Scott Johnson

I hope there are no skeletons in the Obama closet

because Rod Blagojevitch is going down, and he’s going down hard; and unlike Tony Rezko, who kept his mouth shut after his conviction when the government tried to roll him, I don’t think Blagojevitch has the necessary selflessness or nobility of character to take whole hit himself. Indeed, as Rosslyn Smith notes,

Blagojevich may have more reasons that the obvious reduction of sentence to offer additional political scalps for Patrick Fitzgerald’s trophy wall. Hell hath no fury like a sociopath who sees himself on the losing end of a power struggle.

If he thinks Barack Obama can be one of those scalps, I have little doubt Blagojevich will wave it in Fitzgerald’s face, for whatever he can get out of it, and just for the sheer pleasure of the thing; in fact, even if he doesn’t have anything on the president-elect, I suspect Blagojevich may try to bring him down anyway. I hope he doesn’t, but this is Illinois politics, and particularly Chicago politics . . . you just never know for sure. Let’s hope Senator Obama did indeed come through the Chicago machine clean, and that his former colleague doesn’t have anything to use against him; if not, we’re all in for a really bad time.

The road to recovery begins with unsparing self-criticism

and J.R. Dunn of American Thinker has done a wonderful job of helping start that process for the Republican Party, stating bluntly, “The GOP Must Take Out the Trash.”  It’s an excellent piece (though I think his comments on the Democrats are overstated, that doesn’t invalidate his points about the party of elephants), and I commend it to your attention.  I particularly appreciate Dunn’s point that even for conservatives,

voting for the Democrats in 2008 was a rational act. Not a very smart act, and in the fullness of time definitely to prove a mistaken one. But rational because the alternative was to vote for the party of Ted Stevens, Larry Craig, Duke Cunningham, Mark Foley, and a gaggle of beggars drooling for earmarks and willing to throw small children onto train tracks to get them. In 2008, the party of Trash went up against the party of Change. That brand of Change is no doubt empty, specious, and dangerous, but you can’t argue with the fact that it smells better than trash.You pay a price for tolerating trash. Perhaps not an obvious one, perhaps not an immediate one, but you always pay a price. The GOP is now paying that price, after getting its wakeup call in 2006 and refusing to roll out of bed. As for current efforts at reform, everything else is on the table except this one factor, despite the easily comprehended fact that everything else will be totally irrelevant if this one factor is not dealt with. Corruption cannot be ignored. As has been demonstrated time and again this past decade, sane, moral, and intelligent voters will not settle for a party comprised of the reprobates that have populated the GOP in recent years.

And though Dunn doesn’t mention Sarah Palin, I want to note that this is one of the major reasons I support her:  taking out the trash is a major part of her political MO, and of her reason for being in politics.

Obama’s Senate seat up for auction—get your bids in now

Even by the standards of Illinois politics, this is a big one: this morning the FBI arrested Illinois Gov. Rod Blagojevich and his chief of staff, John Harris, on federal corruption charges. Perhaps the most staggering part of the indictment is that, as U.S. Attorney Patrick Fitzgerald put it, “Blagojevich put a ‘for sale’ sign on the naming of a United States senator.”

Blagojevich is accused of a wide-ranging criminal conspiracy, including alleged attempts by the governor to try to sell or trade the U.S. Senate seat left vacant by President-elect Barack Obama in exchange for financial benefits for the governor and his wife. Blagojevich also is accused of obtaining campaign contributions in exchange for other official actions.

It’s no secret that the president-elect wants his longtime adviser Valerie Jarrett named to his Senate seat; apparently, Blagojevich was irate that his former colleague wanted him to do so without offering him anything in return, referring to President-Elect Obama in highly profane and unflattering terms. According to the story in Politico,

Federal prosecutors allege that Blagojevich explored one possible quid-pro-quo—he’d appoint a top adviser to Obama in exchange for Obama giving Blagojevich the post as as secretary of health and human services. The indictment makes clear the Obama adviser is Valerie Jarrett, now an Obama White House aide.“Unless I get something real good . . . I’ll just send myself, you know what I’m saying,” Blagojevich was taped saying on Nov. 3, the day before Election Day.Blagojevich, a Democrat, added that the Senate seat: “is a . . . valuable thing, you just don’t give it away for nothing.”

None of this, as Fitzgerald was careful to point out, suggests that President-Elect Obama is in any way guilty of anything; the fact that Blagojevich was trying to wrestle some sort of benefit out of him doesn’t mean that he or any of his staff were guilty of anything, and there appears to be no reason to think they were. If anything, it appears that they responded to Blagojevich’s demand for some sort of bribe by ending the conversation. That sets them apart from some of the other people Blagojevich was considering appointing to the seat, since at least one of them offered money “up front” for the job. (Update and correction: that candidate has now been confirmed to be Rep. Jesse Jackson Jr. (D-IL), but the only evidence so far that he or any of his associates offered Blagojevitch money is the governor’s own statements, which have not been independently corroborated.)This whole fiasco certainly sheds light on the political milieu through which Barack Obama rose to power, but the real import here has nothing to do with him, but rather with his successor: with the indictment against Blagojevich, who’s going to appoint the next junior Senator from the state of Illinois?HT: Power LineUpdate: You know things are getting bad when the lolcats are laughing at you:
I  can  has...

Politics just keeps getting stranger

as Michelle Malkin points out; if it isn’t Sarah Palin inspiring the loonies on the Left, it’s Barack Obama inspiring the nutcases on the Right (although some of those, it seems, are actually Clintonites who just can’t let go). I particularly appreciate her conclusion:

I believe Trig was born to Sarah Palin. I believe Barack Obama was born in Hawaii. I believe fire can melt steel and that bin Laden’s jihadi crew—not Bush and Cheney—perpetrated mass murder on 9/11. What kind of kooky conspiracist does that make me?

HT: Baseball Crank

Bail out US automakers?

What would be the point? It would be like Mickey Mantle’s liver transplant; it wouldn’t give GM, Ford and Chrysler a chance at new life, it would only prolong their agony. Giving them billions of dollars now merely allows them to put off the final reckoning and avoid facing the real problem: as these companies now exist, they cannot compete and will never be able to compete. Investor’s Business Daily‘s Michael Ramirez captures their situation with his usual pointed wit (click to enlarge):

When your labor costs are 55.6% higher than the other guy, that’s the kind of disadvantage you’re facing—it’s not something you can overcome, no matter how hard you try. As far as I can see, the only thing that will change this situation is when (not if, when) the Big Three declare bankruptcy and reorganize. Yes, that’s a bad solution. Yes, a lot of people will be hurt by that. Unfortunately, there aren’t any better options, and the sooner these companies take their medicine and file, the less bad it will be; delaying the inevitable will only make it worse when it finally happens.