Obama's
Dilemma – and Ours
by
Patrick
J. Buchanan
Recently
by Patrick J. Buchanan: Return
of the Anti-Interventionist Right
Seventy-one
years ago this spring, after the German army had broken through
the French lines, British Prime Minister Winston Churchill flew
to France to consult his embattled allies on how to stop the advance.
"Where is the
strategic reserve?" Churchill urgently asked the French commander
in chief, Gen. Maurice Gamelin, and then he repeated himself in
French: "Ou est la masse de manoeuvre?"
"Aucune," came
Gamelin's reply. "There is none."
The French
had no reserves to stop the Germans from overrunning their country.
The Battle of France was lost.
The Obama administration,
in its grand strategy to generate a rapid and strong recovery from
the Great Recession, is at a similar pass. It has drawn and played
all its cards: the $800 billion stimulus bill, three straight deficits
averaging $1.4 trillion, the Federal Reserve's mass purchases of
bad paper from the world's banks, and QE2, the monthly purchase
of $100 billion in Treasury bills that ends June 30.
Yet, from the
numbers that came in from May, Obama looks to be holding a losing
hand. The anemic growth of the first quarter of 2011 seems to have
stalled, and the prospect of a double-dip recession looms.
Though the
administration anticipated perhaps a quarter-million new jobs in
May, as April produced, May generated only 55,000. The unemployment
rate ticked back up to 9.1 percent.
The rise in
manufacturing employment went into reverse. Five thousand manufacturing
jobs were lost. Consumer confidence sank.
Today 2 million
homes remain vacant in the USA, putting immense downward pressure
on housing prices. A fourth of U.S. homes are not worth the mortgages
being paid upon them.
Says Federal
Reserve Vice Chairwoman Janet Yellen, "Looking forward, I unfortunately
can envision no quick or easy solutions for the problems still afflicting
the housing market." Recovery is going to be a "long, drawn-out
process."
A further decline
in housing prices of 10 to 25 percent over the next five years,
says Robert Shiller, the economist who invented the S&P/Case-Shiller
index of property values, "wouldn't surprise me at all."
The economic
malaise has now begun to affect the mood of the nation and its attitude
toward the president.
Almost 90 percent
of Americans think the U.S. economy is terrible or poor. Sixty percent
think the nation is headed in the wrong direction. Forty-eight percent
expect a second Great Depression next year. Fewer than 40 percent
approve of Obama's handling of the U.S. economy.
In one new
poll, Mitt Romney leads the president 49-46 in a matchup in 2012.
The question
Obama faces and, indeed, Congress and the nation face is: What do
we do now?
Chairman Ben
Bernanke of the Federal Reserve has signaled that there will be
no QE3, no more Fed purchases of $100 billion a month in U.S. government
paper. Buyers for that $1.2 trillion a year of U.S. debt will have
to be found elsewhere.
And with the
economy stagnant or sinking, the Democrats on Capitol Hill are starting
to back away from any deep budget cuts, even as Republicans are
now even less likely to sign on to any tax increases to reduce the
$1.5 billion deficit.
Indeed, if
the economy is stalled or sinking into recession, what economic
theory is it that argues for austerity and tax hikes?
And the perceived
economic stagnation not only diminishes the chance of a bipartisan
budget deal but also points to deadlock on the debt ceiling.
Republicans
are already holding out for $1 in spending cuts for every dollar
increase in the debt ceiling. And the country seems to be behind
the GOP position: If the Senate and White House don't agree to $2
trillion in spending cuts, we don't raise the debt ceiling by $2
trillion.
The U.S. government
does not run out of money to pay its bills until August. But markets
probably will be making judgments upon the likelihood of a U.S.
default well before then.
How did we
get here? How did the richest and strongest country in history,
triumphant in World War II and the Cold War, approach so soon the
condition of the late Spanish and British empires as they began
their precipitous declines?
Answer: We
overextended ourselves. We bankrupted ourselves.
We
undertook the defense of nations all over the world having little
to do with our vital national interests. We fought unnecessary wars.
We doled out trillions in foreign aid to ingrates, incompetents,
opportunists and thieves.
We promised
all our seniors Social Security and subsidized medical care for
the rest of their lives and failed to put the money away to pay
for it. We dropped half of U.S. wage earners off the tax rolls while
creating a mammoth welfare state to dwarf anything Norman Thomas
and his Socialists dreamed of in the 1930s.
Not only for
the United States but also for the West, the days of wine and roses
are over.
June
11, 2011
Patrick
J. Buchanan [send
him mail] is co-founder and editor of The
American Conservative. He is also the author of seven books,
including Where
the Right Went Wrong, and A
Republic Not An Empire. His latest book is Churchill,
Hitler, and the Unnecessary War. See his
website.
Copyright
© 2011 Creators Syndicate
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