Rogoff, Kenneth. 2004. "Bush Throws a Party." Foreign Policy
(March/April): pp. 80-81.
"How does U.S. President George W. Bush's preelection spending binge
stack up against history?"
"Any alert voter can see that U.S. President George W. Bush is
engineering a remarkable election-time economic boom.  But before
high-minded economists and commentators start crying foul, just how
excessive is the Bush business cycle?  How will this president's
economic pursuit of electoral success stack up against the standard for
largesse set by U.S. President Richard Nixon back in 1971-72, or against
the free-spending ways of politicians in the rest of the world, for that
matter?"
"In late 2003, Bush pushed through a spectacular increase in old-age
benefits, offering huge subsidies for the purchase of prescription
drugs.  Of course, in 1972, Nixon really swung for the fences by hiking
Social security benefits some 20 percent.  Comparing the costs of the
two policies is difficult, since it hinges on the role of drugs in
future medical treatments, but my personal estimate is that the annual
price tags are roughly equal.  The advantage goes to Nixon, because he
began indexing Social security benefits to inflation at the same time."
"Presidents seeking a preelection boost can also run big deficits to
increase domestic demand.  Bush's high spending results from homeland
security and "Iraqistan," whereas Nixon experienced the mother of all
financial pits: Vietnam.  Both presidents slashed taxes before their
reelection campaigns (although Nixon recognized that the economy would
pay for his profligacy later).  The Nixon budget deficit in 1971 and
1972 was around 2 percent of gross domestic product (GDP); Bush's
deficit exceeded 4 percent in 2003 and will likely reach 4 percent again
in 2004. Advantage: Bush."
"Exporters in Bush's economy are also benefiting from a sharp
depreciation of the U.S. dollar, as they did under Nixon in 1972.  The
ultimate decline of the dollar will likely be far more spectacular under
Bush than under Nixon.  But whereas the movements may have been smaller
under Nixon, they were much more traumatic, because in the early 1970s,
exchange rates weren't supposed to move at all!  The dollar depreciation
only followed the complete collapse of the long-standing Bretton Woods
system of fixed exchange.  So call it a tie:  Bush for size of
exchange-rate moves, Nixon for drama and trauma."
"Next, consider monetary policy.  In theory, the U.S. Federal Reserve is
independent of the executive branch. But just listen to the 1972 White
House tapes of Nixon's blistering exchanges with then Federal Reserve
Board Chairman Arthur Burns.  Historians can debate whether Nixon
intimidated Burns or if the chairman simply succumbed to faulty
economics.  Regardless, Burns certainly delivered the goods.  In the
run-up to the 1972 election, he printed money like it was going out of
style, wreaking havoc with global price stability and exacerbating
worldwide inflation."
"Bush is the beneficiary of an extremely aggressive monetary policy,
with interest rates reaching 45-year lows in 2003.  And yes, if rates
remain too low for too long, inflation could heat up after the election.
But even in a worst-case scenario, inflation is unlikely to reach the
double-digit levels of the 1970s anytime soon.  While Burns's monetary
policy was atrocious, current Fed Chairman Alan Greenspan's hardly
threatens a reckless inflation binge.  Advantage: Nixon."
"Overall winner: Nixon-although Bush has eight months left."
"Does all this election-year economic engineering pay?  In the short
run, yes, because voters sure like a booming economy and a free-spending
government at election time.  They don't seem to question why anyone
should reward a politician for artificially boosting an economy before
elections, even if doing so produces serious long-term problems.
Perhaps, like moviegoers who expect to be emotionally manipulated,
voters just enjoy an election-year high."
"Occasionally, politicians resist temptation.  In 1979, U.S. President
Jimmy Carter replaced his spectacularly ineffectual Fed Chairman William
Miller with the tough-minded Paul Volcker, who over the next five years
reversed the inflation damage Burns and Nixon had wrought.  In
appointing Volcker, Carter did his nation a great service, yet probably
sealed his fate as a one-term chief executive.  But Carter was the
exception.  According to the diaries of former British Chancellor of the
Exchequer Nigel Lawson, even a budget hawk such as former British Prime
Minister Margaret Thatcher pushed for looser macroeconomic policy during
reelection campaigns."


--

Michael Perelman
Economics Department
California State University
michael at ecst.csuchico.edu
Chico, CA 95929
530-898-5321
fax 530-898-5901

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