Why the Obama Plan Is WorkingPolls say the economy is heading in the
wrong direction.
Markets say it's back on track.
This time, the markets are right

By Mike Dorning <http://www.businessweek.com/bios/Mike_Dorning.htm>

        It's never easy to separate politics from policy, and
the past 18 months have only increased the degree of difficulty.

The U.S. has been through a historic financial crisis followed by a
historic election and a series of historic federal gambles—from
bailing
out AIG and GM to passing a $787 billion stimulus and a $940 billion
health-care reform bill. All that risk has made policy more complicated
and politics more fraught ("You lie," "Babykiller").

A Bloomberg national poll in March found that Americans, by an almost
2-to-1 margin, believe the economy has gotten worse rather than better
during the past year.

The Market begs to differ.

While President Obama's overall job approval rating has fallen to a new
low of 44%, according to a CBS News Poll, down five points from late
March, the judgment of the financial indexes has turned resoundingly
positive.

The Standard & Poor's 500-stock index is up more than 74% from its
recessionary low in March 2009.

Corporate bonds have been rallying for a year.

Commodity prices have surged.

International currency markets have been bullish on the dollar for
months, raising it by almost 10% since Nov. 25 against a basket of six
major currencies.

Housing prices have stabilized. Mortgage rates are low.

"We've had a phenomenal run in asset classes across the board," says Dan
Greenhaus, chief economic strategist for Miller Tabak + Co., an
institutional trading firm in New York. "If Obama was a Republican, we
would hear a never-ending drumbeat of news stories about markets voting
in favor of the President."

Little more than a year ago, financial markets were in turmoil, major
auto companies were on the verge of collapse and economists such as Paul
Krugman were worried about the U.S. slumbering through a Japan-like Lost
Decade.

While no one would claim that all the pain is past or the danger gone,
the economy is growing again, jumping to a 5.6% annualized growth rate
in the fourth quarter of 2009 as businesses finally restocked their
inventories. The consensus view now calls for 3% growth this year,
significantly higher than the 2.1 % estimate for 2010 that economists
surveyed by Bloomberg News saw coming when Obama first moved into the
Oval Office.

The U.S. manufacturing sector has expanded for eight straight months,
the Business Roundtable's measure of CEO optimism reached its highest
level since early 2006, and in March the economy added 162,000
jobs—more
than it had during any month in the past three years.

"There is more business confidence out there," says Boeing (BA) CEO Jim
McNerney. "This Administration deserves significant credit."

It is worth stepping back to consider, in cool-headed policy terms, how
all of this came to be—and whether the Obama team's approach amounts
to
a set of successful emergency measures or a new economic philosophy:
Obamanomics.

For most of the past two decades, the reigning economic approach in
Democratic circles has been Rubinomics, a set of priorities fashioned in
the 1990s by Bill Clinton's Treasury Secretary, Robert E. Rubin, the
former co-chairman of Goldman Sachs (GS).

Broadly, Rubinomics was a three-legged stool consisting of restrained
government spending, lower budget deficits, and open trade, which were
meant in combination to reassure financial markets, keep capital
flowing, and thus put the country on a path to prosperity.

On the surface, Obamanomics couldn't be more different. The
Administration racked up record deficits as it pursued a $787 billion
fiscal stimulus on top of the $700 billion bailout fund for banks and
carmakers. Obama has done close to nothing to expand free trade. And
while Clinton pleased the markets with a moderate, pro-business image,
Obama has riled Wall Street with occasional bursts of populist rhetoric,
such as his slamming of "fat cat bankers" on 60 Minutes last December.

The rallying markets haven't been bothered by these differences, largely
because of their context. Martin Baily, who was a chairman of the
Council of Economic Advisers during the Clinton Administration, says he
suspects Rubin and the rest of the Clinton economic team would have made
similar decisions—on bailouts, fiscal stimulus, and deficit
spending—had
they faced a crisis of similar magnitude.

"I think we would have gone the same way," he says. The Obama team, he
continues, navigated the financial crisis while never losing sight of
the importance of private enterprise and private markets (a point Obama
stressed in his Feb. 9 interview with Bloomberg BusinessWeek).

"A lot of people on the left were urging them to nationalize banks.
Instead they injected capital, and now they're pulling capital out. That
looks more like Rubinomics than a set of socialist or left-wing economic
policies."

The Obama economic team looks a lot like Rubin's, too; three of its most
prominent members—Treasury Secretary Tim Geithner, National Economic
Council Chairman Larry Summers, and White House budget director Peter
Orszag—are Rubin protégés.

While the Administration's call for a consumer financial protection
agency has aroused opposition from banks, Obama's regulatory reform plan
largely leaves the financial industry's structure intact and ignores
proposals to break up large financial institutions, unlike the reforms
pursued after the Crash of 1929.

Amid an uproar over bonuses at government-assisted banks, Obama for the
most part chose to respect private employment contracts.

In short, Obama's instincts during the crisis were exceedingly
Rubin-esque. Even the $787 billion stimulus package, while large by
historical standards, didn't reach the scale called for by many liberal
economists, including the chairman of his own Council of Economic
Advisers, Christina Romer, who initially advocated spending more than $1
trillion.

Today, Romer doesn't shy away from comparisons to the last Democratic
Administration, but she also makes no grand claims about a new economic
philosophy. What unites Rubinomics and Obamanomics, she says, "is the
focus on results, the pragmatism of what's right for the economy. We
each took the policy that was appropriate at the time."

The similarities go deeper. Like Clinton, Obama has tried to reduce
income inequality.

Clinton's 1993 deficit-reduction plan raised income tax rates for
high-income families to 39.6%; Obama plans to return the top rate to the
Clinton-era level. He also raised Medicare taxes for individuals earning
over $200,000 to finance his health plan.

Clinton aided the working poor with the Earned Income Tax Credit; Obama
is doing the same with insurance subsidies in his health plan. A
national health plan was an aspiration of both Presidents. Baily argues
that the Obama approach is "at least in principle closer to Rubinomics
than was the Clinton plan. [Obama's team] is trying to use market
incentives to raise the quality and lower the cost, and that looks like
Rubinomics."

Any comparison must take into account the vastly different circumstances
each Administration confronted.

Clinton entered office as the end of the Cold War generated a peace
dividend, then rode the tech boom—and the tax-revenue-generating
stock
options that came with the run-up in tech stock prices— to a
balanced
budget.

Obama inherited two wars and the scariest financial crisis since the
Great Depression.

Clinton's deference to the bond market was necessary because long-term
interest rates were high—above 7% on 30-year Treasury bonds—when
he took
office. Interest rates have been the least of Obama's concerns, with
yields below 3% when he took office and the Fed effectively keeping
short-term rates at zero.

Despite a budget deficit that is projected at $1.5 trillion this year,
Obama wants to move the country toward the kind of fiscal balance it
enjoyed fleetingly in the Clinton era, though his budget plans falls
short of that. He recognizes that the federal debt load is
unsupportable.

Alan Greenspan—the tacit ally of Clinton and Rubin in the
1990s—warned
last month that a recent uptick in yields on 10-year Treasury notes
might signal a surge in long-term interest rates driven by investor
anxiety over the budget shortfall.

Economic stabilization has not been Obama's handiwork alone. In the
months before he took office, President George W. Bush and Treasury
Secretary Hank Paulson halted a market free fall with the bank bailout.

Obama's stimulus complemented the Federal Reserve's aggressive monetary
easing. To build a floor for housing prices, the Fed intervened to
support mortgage markets and the White House pledged unlimited financial
backing for mortgage giants Fannie Mae (FNM) and Freddie Mac (FRE), and
rolled out tax credits for home buyers and mortgage modification
programs to stave off foreclosures.

It's the entire package that has made the difference.

"When you take it all together, the response was massive, unprecedented,
and ultimately successful," says Mark Zandi, chief economist at Moody's
Economy.com (MCO).

Even Obama critics like Phil Swagel, assistant Treasury secretary for
economic policy under George W. Bush, acknowledge that White House
policies have been successful.

"They could have done a better job" by spending more of the stimulus on
corporate tax cuts to boost hiring and investment, says Swagel, now an
economics professor at Georgetown University's McDonough School of
Business. "But their economic policies, including the stimulus, have
helped move the economy in the right direction."

While jobs have been slow to return, the country has experienced "an
incredible productivity boom" that strengthens the economy for an
expansion, says Greenhaus of Miller Tabak.

Labor productivity, or worker output per hour, grew at a 6.9% annual
pace in the fourth quarter, capping the biggest one-year gain since
2002. Over the long run, productivity growth is what raises living
standards. Corporate profits also have been rising, up 8% in the fourth
quarter, putting businesses on a sounder financial foundation to invest
and hire as customers return.

The public, alas, does not see the signs of life that economists do, as
the downbeat views in the Bloomberg poll demonstrate. And as long as job
security remains a concern, it's easy to understand why psychology may
trump data. Among those who own stocks, bonds, or mutual funds, only 3
out of 10 say the value of their portfolio has risen since a year ago,
according to the poll—a near-impossibility given the size and
breadth of
the market gains.

The early stages of an economic rebound do not bring political safe
haven for Presidents. (Just ask George H.W. Bush, who won a war against
Iraq only to lose reelection a year after the 1990-91 recession ended.)

Obama, however, may now have reached a pivot point with the economy
finally beginning to add jobs. "He can make great strides in short
order," says Steven Jarding, a former Democratic campaign strategist who
is now a lecturer at Harvard's Kennedy School of Government. "Any
indicator he can build on is a good thing. He'll be able to focus all
his energy and attention to say, 'Here's what happened this year in the
economy.'"

With seven months to go before midterm elections, and more than two
years before Obama reaches his own reelection day, there's still time
for the President's policies to swing to his political advantage.

Again, follow the money: Consumer spending has been rising for five
straight months. That may not last, but it suggests Obama is already on
the right track with voters' wallets. If the Clinton Administration is a
trustworthy precedent—and job growth continues—their hearts and
minds
could follow.

http://www.businessweek.com/print/magazine/content/10_16/b4174028669540.\
htm
<http://www.businessweek.com/print/magazine/content/10_16/b4174028669540\
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