A
proposed budget deal brokered by Senator Patty Murray and
Representative Paul Ryan is headed for the Senate after passing a the
House on a bipartisan vote yesterday. Not everyone is happy about it.
Conservatives would have liked to see more new deficit cutting measures.
“In the coming days, members of Congress will have to explain to their
constituents what exactly they achieved by increasing spending,
increasing fees and offering up another round of promises waiting to be
broken,” grumbled
Michael Needham
of Heritage Action. Many liberals are unhappy with the deal, too. “Here
we are still having the conversation about how to cut government
instead of how to improve the prospects of the long-term unemployed and
improve the overall economy, which would take expanding spending, not
shrinking it," economist Laura Dresser lamented to
The Progressive.
With
both the right and the left denouncing the deal, who is the real
winner? If we look at the numbers, it is hard not to conclude that the
pending deal, which would lock in the status quo, is a victory for the
deficit hawks who have pretty much had their way with fiscal policy in
recent years. True, on the downslope of the recession, first the Bush
and then the Obama administrations tried fiscal stimulus. Without their
actions, the downturn would very likely have been even deeper. However,
the stimulus has long since run its course. Since the recovery
officially began in mid-2009, fiscal policy has tightened markedly.
Some people evidently don’t believe that. The
Tea Party News Network,
for example, continues to rant about “years marked by runaway spending
and out-of-control deficits,” but those years ended some time ago. To
see what has really been going on, we need to take a closer look at the
evolution of fiscal policy over the course of the Great Recession and
the still-incomplete recovery from it.
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Follow this link to view or download a classroom-ready slideshow with charts and analysis of the budget deal