The rise and fall of fantasy politics in US
What we have here— to borrow a line from the old movie Cool Hand Luke—is a failure to communicate. By all rights, we should be having a fierce debate over the role of government.
These questions would suggest a campaign that seriously engages the future, but instead, we have a bidding war between candidates to see who can promise the most appealing package of new spending programs and tax cuts. As we watch the conventions, we should recognise that we���ve entered an era of fantasy politics.
Like fantasy football and baseball, fantasy politics is an exercise in make-believe that is intended to keep its players occupied and to make the winners feel good. Barack Obama and John McCain emit pleasing slogans and programmes that, as often as not, are disconnected from the country���s actual problems they���ll encounter in office.
Last week, I viewed I.O.U.S.A. an 87-minute documentary exploring the grim budget outlook. It is unbalanced budgets that, in many ways, define the political deadlock. The persistence of deficits over so many years (42 of the past 47) can have only one basic cause: politicians of both parties prefer spending to taxing. As everyone knows, the disconnect will worsen, because aging baby boomers will bloat outlays for Social security, Medicare and Medicaid. These programs already total nearly two-fifth of the $2.9-trillion federal spending in 2008.
The documentary���s sponsors hope to arouse public opinion on budget issues just as ���An Inconvenient Truth��� did on global warming. Maybe, but I���m sceptical. It���s not merely that melting icebergs are more compelling images than charts of mounting government debt. The mismatch between the government���s existing spending commitments and the present tax base is so great that we cannot simply tinker a little with government.
By 2030, federal taxes could rise 50% if all spending programs are kept on automatic pilot, notes Andrew Yarrow in his book, Forgive Us Our Debts.That would be, I think, an unconscionable burden on workers (the main taxpayers) and a huge threat to the economy.
But I.O.U.S.A. barely mentions choices and solutions. Ideally, of course, our political leaders would assume the task of choosing. Unfortunately, they don���t. The most exhaustive examination of the McCain and Obama budget proposals I���ve found comes from the Tax Policy Centre, sponsored jointly by the Urban Institute and the Brookings Institution. It���s discouraging-reading.
Though details differ, neither plan would realistically limit spending or eliminate deficits. For example, both their health proposals would cost far more than $1 trillion over a decade, says the centre.
Obama and McCain have each embraced symbolic gestures that falsely suggest they���ve made tough choices. Democrats blame deficits on Bush���s tax cuts for the rich and the Iraq war. OK, let���s whack the rich. Obama would restore the 36% and 39.6% income-tax rates for couples with taxable incomes above $2,00,300 and $3,57,700.
McCain denounces wasteful spending, citing congressional ���earmarks.��� These are projects usually designated by individual members of Congress for their districts. OK, let���s scrub them all. In 2008, earmarks numbered 11,610 and cost $17.2 billion, estimates Citizens Against Government Waste. That���s less than 1% of federal spending. Elections serve, in civics textbooks, to reach collective decisions about the future.
All this makes sense only as fantasy politics. Proposals aren���t necessarily intended to be adopted. They���re selected to win applause and please voters���just as quarterbacks, in fantasy football, are selected for their accuracy. In November, one candidate will win this game. But the country as a whole may lose.
(c) 2008, The Washington Post Writers Group)
The Economic Times Business News App for the Latest News in Business, Sensex, Stock Market Updates & More.
The Economic Times News App for Quarterly Results, Latest News in ITR, Business, Share Market, Live Sensex News & More.