end-of-term report on Obama administration

So.

Elections bring out the best and the worst in truths, half truths, selective truth telling and how all of those things just listed are communicated.

That said. Bill Clinton was the keynote speaker at the democratic convention last night. And I am glad to report that while certainly biased he delivered truths. Even better? He shared true choices. Beyond that he reminded me, and made me think, of several things as he spoke (and, yes, I will make an american election prediction after I hear president Obama’s speech).

1. Bill Clinton is this generation’s greatest orator.

Like him or dislike him he has the ability to summarize complex issues simply enough that there is clarity. The speech he gave was a non traditional Clinton speech in that he had an inordinate amount of detail and numbers and yet he still maintained the charm to captivate and maintain listener interest so that even after 44+ minutes you were still there so he could do what Clinton does best – close.

Spectacular speaker. Spectacular.

2. I am no Bill Clinton.

And luckily I have found myself among masses of like people (many democrats and many within the administration).  And no … it has nothing to do with his hair.

For several months I have found myself defending the current administration (despite not being a democrat nor even sure I want to vote for Obama). I have defended the administration because I felt like he was being blamed for an inordinate amount of unrealistic results as well as not being given credit for some things. I have failed in my efforts. Interestingly many of the paid democrat administration people also failed.

But Clinton did not.

Now. Do I buy all he was selling? Nope. Do I buy the “we are better off”?  Well. Maybe it is semantics but … no. I would buy if he had sold me “we are on the right path to being better off.”. But. Maybe semantics.  What I did buy was how he explained the pros & cons and choices. No one has more clearly outlined the choice people need to make. He provided a biased opinion but at least we can now build a scorecard evaluation to discuss some clear differences.

3. Running a country is not running a business.

At least in terms of how you get things done. Bill reminded me of something one of the best business owners I have ever worked for told me after I had had a rather heated passionate discussion on what should be done. He looked at me (after taking a long pull off his cigarette) and said “bruce, this isn’t a democracy, you will run a business someday and you will see.”

I was next reminded of when I was chairman of a president’s advisory committee (for a business president). He said “please know I will always consider your advice” <note: consider>.

And, lastly, when I did manage a business I recognized the really difficult, hard, often unpopular, but business shifting/game changing decisions were made best unfettered – unfettered by ‘agreement’ or ongoing debate.  Business, for the most part, is not a democracy. Maybe call it a ‘benevolent dictatorship.’ As that first boss said “I hate to break the news to you but really the only vote that matters is mine.”

Government is democracy. All votes matter. And gathering those votes is imperative to getting anything done. I love running a business. I would hate <or just end up in a mental institution> running a country.

4. Because a country is not a business and policy shifts, and decisions, seem to take eons … if they even ever get done at all. Why? It’s that silly vote thing that democracy demands.

That means evaluating success cannot be judged as a business is … well … okay … I guess it can if you put the right ‘perspective goggles’ on.

So I put myself as a business guy, with business perspective goggles <which are kind of cool looking if you like no lens glasses> into the president spot and evaluate myself.

First. I shoot myself. Hopefully only maybe in the foot or the fleshy part of the leg.

Second. Then I take a step back and say if I was running say a multinational company and when I took over the company was a 2 mile long train that was not only going downhill but at an increasing speed … and was even going in the wrong direction … obviously I would be looking to do things immediately … slow the fucking train down and try and get it, at least, on the right tracks going somewhere. Now. That takes a lot of energy and work and you usually have to fire a shitload of people and start slamming trusted smart ‘competent on that particular challenge’ type people … oops … I can’t fire those people <they were voted in> … and I can’t hire those people <they have to be voted in> and I also would probably jettison <eliminate> some products & services and focus on some new innovations … oops … I couldn’t do that either … we need to vote to make that happen <months from now>. Note: this is also probably the point I would revisit #1 with the intent on aiming better.

Okay. You get the point … therefore I end up listening to Billy-boy Clinton and nodding my head and saying … well … yeah … as a business guy I think I would judge Obama administration as it least slowing the train down … possibly even stopping it from going downhill <let’s say its somewhere in the flatlands> and put the train on another set of tracks <possibly not the right tracks yet but at least got it off the one leaving for the station to hell>.

Bill said it. And I agree. No president, not even Bill, could have dug us out of that mess in only 4 years.

Now. If it were a business I would say fire his ass. But it isn’t. And comparing it as a business is not only slightly ignorant <or maybe slightly naïve is a better way of saying it> but it isn’t fair. Yeah. I typed fair. The cold hearted business me did type that. America has always been, and will always be, a place where everyone gets a fair shake <or that is the intent> and a fair assessment.

We have a right to be angry. We do not have a right to not be fair.

Fair, Crisis and Transformation

Ok. A minute on ‘fair.’ I fear if I don’t share some thoughts on it … it will come across as flippant, maybe naive or even silly. My sense of fair in terms of judgement is based on a couple of really really big assumptions which I believe <many may not> and of which I am slightly surprised is not discussed more often:

I assume the depth of the crisis was not driven solely by policies but rather by a myriad of issues which had built up over  period of time.

Many of the debates & conversations center on policies & business & all that smart stuff. So maybe I am just not that smart. It seems to silly me that policies may have contributed to the hole america fell into but self interest and greed and ‘profit centric’ and ‘not doing the right thing’ are character issues. It is a complex issue but suffice it to say I tend to believe the economic crisis America faced was also a societal crisis. Let’s call it a “mojo” crisis of which economics made everyone sit up and say “whoa … something is really rotten in denmark <sorry … something wrong in america>” – translation … america has lost it’s mojo. I believe the democrats are doing a pretty nice job of at least trying to bring this discussion to bear. Maybe the Obama administration has been reading my blog <they haven’t> but the crisis seemed to be intertwined with self interest versus selves interest. In addition they seem to be addressing the fact you cannot run a country solely seeking profit but rather some intangible things on the balance sheet … pride, integrity, what Obama called ‘citizenship’ and things like that.  So, getting back to fair, if you buy what I just wrote then you need to be fair with regard to judging decisions. Some decisions are simply not just dollars & cents decisions. Sorry. They are not. They are people decisions … and what is right to do for people.

– I assume we are <and should be> transforming America infra-structurally <economically & program/initiative & policy-wise> to maintain status in a new global world.

Now. Some people may not want transformation. And if you do not it will drive your perspective on this whole thing. Me? I believe transforming America now is smart. The same ole America wasn’t working. But transformation is tough. And what makes it tougher to discuss is that there are a variety of ways of doing it <I will generalize here>. The Romney plan is to allow America to transform itself through a trickle-through process by the invisible hand of business. The Obama plan is selectively taking pieces and changing them now <unnaturally>. Well. The second sounds painful doesn’t it? Yup. And the first one sounds less painful doesn’t it? Yup. Well. I am a broken record on this … big changes take remarkable effort and resilience and are … well .. hard. And while no one likes a crisis, a crisis provides an opportunity for big change. The bigger the crisis the bigger change opportunity you have <that is a business management thing>. Me? I believe we have an opportunity to transform and I believe we should take advantage of the opportunity. There is a wacky movie called 2016 that suggests the Obama administration wants to downsize the American dream. That is crazy. The Obama administration wants to transform america infrastructure so we can offer, and attain, the american dream in the long term. Same size dream. So, getting back to fair, transformation in a democracy is even more complex then in a business. If you believe in transformation, then be fair in judgement based on realism of the challenge.

Anyway.

Rather than address Bill’s myriad of factoids strewn throughout his speech I went to The Economist and pulled out their report card for the Obama administration <note: I have done this without their permission but I do it with the intent of meeting my site’s main objective ‘ enlightening and fighting ignorance … dear economist … please forgive me and, more importantly, please do not sue my ass>.

I think it is a fair assessment of the Obama administration. I agree with some and I could debate with some other things but I figure these guys are not only more knowledgeable than I am but they are also smarter so let’s go with what they say:

Economist Headline: obama’s record is better than the woes of America’s economy suggests

Sep 1st 2012 | The Economist <a reprint without their permission>

NOT since 1933 had an American president taken the oath of office in an economic climate as grim as it was when Barack Obama put his left hand on the Bible in January 2009. The banking system was near collapse, two big car manufacturers were sliding towards bankruptcy; and employment, the housing market and output were spiralling down.

Hemmed in by political constraints, presidents typically have only the slightest influence over the American economy. Mr Obama, like Franklin Roosevelt in 1933 and Ronald Reagan in 1981, would be an exception. Not only would his decisions be crucial to the recovery, but he also had a chance to shape the economy that emerged. As one adviser said, the crisis should not be allowed to go to waste.

Did Mr Obama blow it?

Nearly four years later, voters seem to think so: approval of his economic management is near rock-bottom, the single-biggest obstacle to his re-election. This, however, is not a fair judgment on Mr Obama’s record, which must consider not just the results but the decisions he took, the alternatives on offer and the obstacles in his way. Seen in that light, the report card is better. His handling of the crisis and recession were impressive. Unfortunately, his efforts to reshape the economy have often misfired.

And America’s public finances are in a dire state.

Seven weeks before Mr Obama defeated John McCain in November 2008, Lehman Brothers collapsed. AIG was bailed out shortly afterwards. The rescues of Bank of America and Citigroup lay ahead. In the final quarter of 2008, GDP shrank at an annualised rate of 9%, the worst in nearly 50 years.

Even before Mr Obama took office, therefore, there was a risk that investor confidence would vanish in the face of a messy transition to an untested president. The political vacuum between FDR’s victory in 1932 and his inauguration the next year made those months among the worst of the Depression.

Mr Obama did what he could to ease those fears. As candidate and senator, he had backed the unpopular Troubled Asset Relief Program (TARP) cobbled together by Henry Paulson, George Bush’s treasury secretary. After the election he selected Tim Geithner, who had been instrumental to the Bush administration’s response to the crisis, as his own treasury secretary. The rest of his economic team—Larry Summers, who had been Bill Clinton’s treasury secretary; Peter Orszag, a fiscally conservative director of the Congressional Budget Office (CBO); and Christina Romer, a highly regarded macroeconomist—were similarly reassuring.

Resolving a systemic financial crisis requires recapitalising weak financial institutions and moving their bad loans from the private to the public sector. Under Mr Bush, the government injected cash into the banks. But doubts about lenders’ ability to survive a worsening recession persisted. Mr Obama faced calls to nationalise the weakened banks and force them to lend, or to let them fail. Mr Summers and Mr Geithner reckoned either step would shatter confidence in the financial system, and instead hit upon a series of “stress tests” to determine which banks had enough capital. Those that failed could either raise more capital privately or get it from TARP.

The first reaction was one of dismay—stocks tanked. Pundits predicted Mr Geithner would soon be gone. But the tests proved tough and transparent enough to persuade investors that the banking system had nothing nasty left to hide. Banks were forced to raise hundreds of billions of dollars of equity. Bank-capital ratios now exceed pre-crisis levels and most of their TARP money has been repaid at a profit to the government. Europe’s stress tests were laxer, and some banks that passed have subsequently had to be bailed out.

General Motors and Chrysler presented a different challenge. Ordinarily a failing manufacturer would shed debts and slim down under court-supervised bankruptcy. But in 2009 no lender would provide the huge “debtor-in-possession” financing that a reorganisation of the two would require. Bankruptcy meant liquidation. That would have wiped out local economies and suppliers just as the banks were being rescued. On the other hand, simply bailing-out badly run companies would have been too generous.

Mr Obama’s solution was to force both carmakers into bankruptcy protection, then provide the financing necessary to reorganise, on condition that both eliminated unneeded capacity and workers. Both companies emerged from bankruptcy within a few months. Chrysler, now part of Italy’s Fiat, is again profitable, as is GM, which returned to the stockmarket in 2010. Nonetheless, the government will probably lose money on these two rescues.

The audacity of hope

Mr Obama’s attempts to fix the housing market were less successful. By early 2009 9% of residential mortgages, worth nearly $900 billion, were delinquent. The traditional playbook called for the government to buy and then write down the bad loans, cleansing the banking system and enabling it to lend again. But when the Treasury studied such proposals, it found there was no ready mechanism to extract dud loans from securitised pools. An alternative was to pay banks to write down the loans to levels homeowners could handle. But the risk then was “you either overpaid the banks…doing a backdoor bail-out without enough protection for taxpayers, or paid too little and banks would not be willing to do it,” recalls Michael Barr, who worked on those efforts and now teaches at the University of Michigan.

Instead, lenders were prodded to reduce payments on mortgages with subsidies and loan guarantees. Even Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, though now explicitly owned by the government, resisted taking part. As of April, only 2.3m mortgages had been modified or refinanced under the administration’s programmes, compared with a target of 7m-9m. Had Mr Obama ploughed more money into writing down principal at the start, the results might have been worth the political risk. “They were prudent,” says Phillip Swagel, an economist who tackled similar questions under Mr Paulson. “In retrospect, I bet they wish they had been imprudent, spent a lot of money, and actually solved the problem.”

Textbook economics dictates that when conventional monetary policy is impotent, only fiscal policy can pull the economy out of a slump. For the first time since the 1930s, America was facing just those circumstances in December 2008. The Federal Reserve cut short-term interest rates to zero that month and experimented with the unconventional, buying bonds with newly printed money. The case for fiscal stimulus was therefore good.

Sluggish growth since 2009 has fed opposing assessments of the $800 billion American Recovery and Reinvestment Act. Conservatives say stimulus does not work, or that Mr Obama’s was badly designed. Most impartial work suggests they are wrong. Daniel Wilson of the Federal Reserve Bank of San Francisco inferred the stimulus’s effect through an analysis of state-level employment data. He concluded that stimulus spending created or saved 3.4m jobs, close to the CBO’s estimate.

Charges that the plan was made up of ineffective pork are also unfair.

Roughly a third of the money went on tax cuts or credits. Most of the spending took the form of direct transfers to individuals, such as for food stamps and unemployment insurance, or to states and local governments, for things like Medicaid.

Liberals make the opposite case: the stimulus was too small. Ms Romer originally proposed a package of $1.8 trillion, according to an account by Noam Scheiber in his book, “The Escape Artists”. Told that was impractical, she revised it down to $1.2 trillion. Mr Obama eventually asked for, and got, around $800 billion. Some critics note that this was too small relative to a projected $2 trillion shortfall in economic activity in 2009 and 2010. But it was far more than Congress had ever approved before. Despite the Republican takeover of the House of Representatives in 2010, Mr Obama eventually got nearly $600 billion of further stimulus, including a two-year payroll-tax cut.

If stimulus worked, why has the recovery remained so sluggish? GDP has grown by just 2.2%, on average, since the recession ended in mid-2009, one of the slowest recoveries on record.

For one thing, the economy hit air-pockets in the form of higher oil prices, caused partly by the Arab spring, and the European debt crisis.

Moreover, from the fourth quarter of 2009, state and local belt-tightening more than neutralised the federal stimulus, according to Goldman Sachs (see chart 2).

Perhaps the simplest explanation is that recoveries from financial crises are normally weak. Mr Obama was guilty of hubris in thinking this one would be different. He also created expectations that, once his team gave up radical intervention in the mortgage market, he could not meet.

An economy in his own image

From his earliest days on the campaign trail, Mr. Obama made it clear he wanted to do more than just restore growth: he dreamed of remaking the American economy. Its best and brightest would devote themselves to clean energy, not financial speculation. Reinvigorated public investment in education and infrastructure would revitalise manufacturing, boost middle-class incomes and meet the competitive challenge from China.

Once in office, Mr. Obama devoted himself to that agenda, in the process displaying a fondness for industrial policy. “When we first started talking about the Recovery Act in December of 2008, the earliest discussions were about clean energy: smart grid, wind, solar, advanced batteries,” says Jared Bernstein, then an economic adviser to Joe Biden, the vice-president-elect. Some advisers, like Mr Summers, were uneasy with industrial policy. Others, like Mr. Bernstein, argued that orthodox economics allowed for government intervention in early-stage technology.

Mr. Obama’s personal priorities carried the day.

The stimulus allocated some $90 billion to green projects, including $8 billion for high-speed rail.

Some of this has clearly been wasted, but perhaps not as much as critics think.

Less than 2% of the Department of Energy’s controversial green-energy loans, such as those to Solyndra, a now-bankrupt solar-panel maker, have gone bad.

The bigger problem with this spending is that it went against the economic tides. Last year Mr. Obama boasted that America would soon have 40% of the world’s manufacturing capacity in advanced electric-car batteries. But with electric cars still a rounding error in total car sales, that capacity is unneeded. Many battery makers are struggling to survive. Makers of solar panels face cheap competition from China, while natural gas from shale rock has undermined the case for electricity from solar and wind. As for high-speed rail, extensive highways, cheap air fares and stroppy state and local governments make its viability dubious. A $3.5 billion federal grant to California may come to nothing as the estimated cost of that state’s high-speed rail project runs out of control.

Mr Obama has always portrayed himself as a pragmatist, not an ideologue. “The question we ask today is not whether our government is too big or too small, but whether it works,” he said in his inaugural address. In practice, though, he usually chooses bigger government over small.

Sometimes this is a matter of necessity. The complexity of Mr Obama’s health-care law was a result of delivering the Democratic dream of universal health care within the existing private market.

The financial crisis made it necessary to deal with failing financial firms that are not banks, to rationalise supervisory structures and to regulate derivatives, all of which the Dodd-Frank Act does.

Unfortunately Dodd-Frank does much more than that. In other areas, too, Mr Obama’s appointees have proposed or implemented more costly and intrusive rules than their predecessors on everything from fuel-economy standards for cars to power plants’ mercury emissions. The administration says the benefits of these rules far outweigh the costs, but that case often rests on doubtful assumptions.

If the sheer volume of new rules has alienated business, Mr. Obama’s rhetoric has also given the impression that he comes from a hostile tribe. This has been self-defeating, more so because his actions in the past year have suggested a change in direction. The White House has forced the Environmental Protection Agency to delay a costly and controversial new ozone standard. Mr. Obama is now a cheerleader for shale gas. His administration has written new rules in favour of the industry, for example giving well-drillers an extra two years to meet emissions guidelines.

After initial indifference, Mr. Obama has also warmed to trade. He struck a deal with Republicans to ratify three bilateral trade agreements, and is pushing the Trans-Pacific Partnership. An early round of tariffs on tyres proved an isolated provocation in an otherwise well-managed economic relationship with China.

This pragmatic turn may have come too late for Mr. Obama to woo corporate America. Instead, free-market types worry that without the restraining influence of officials such as Mr. Summers, Cass Sunstein and Mr. Geithner (who is likely to depart at the end of this term), Mr. Obama’s more interventionist disciples will have the run of a second-term government.

The elephant in the second term

In fact, Mr Obama is likely to move closer to the centre if he wins a second term. His principal legislative goals—health care and financial reform—are achieved. The Republicans are almost certain to control at least one chamber of Congress, precluding big new spending plans, regardless of the state of the recovery.

That leaves the public finances.

There is little to commend in Mr. Obama on that front. True, he inherited the largest budget deficit in peacetime history, at 10% of GDP. But in 2009 he thought it would fall to 3% by the coming fiscal year. Instead, it will be 6%, if he gets his way. Back in 2009, he thought debt would peak at 70% of GDP in 2011. Now it is projected to reach 79% in 2014, assuming his optimistic growth forecast is correct.

This is not quite the indictment it seems: normal standards of fiscal rectitude have not applied in the past four years. When households, firms and state and local governments are cutting their debts, the federal government would have made the recession worse by doing the same.

Less defensible are the plans for reducing the deficit in the future. Chained to a silly vow not to raise taxes on 95% of families, Mr. Obama’s plans have relied almost exclusively on taxing rich people and companies. Efforts to cut spending have fallen mostly on defence and other discretionary items (meaning those re-authorised each year). He has yet formally to propose credible plans for reducing growth in entitlements. His health-care reform did not worsen the deficit. But it did little about the growth in Medicare, the single-biggest source of long-run spending.

Mr. Obama assumed entitlement reform would be part of a grand bargain in which Republicans also agreed to raise taxes.

He miscalculated: Republicans have not yielded on taxes. But there is a deal to be done if Mr. Obama wins a second term. Given the canyon dividing the two parties, it might seem more likely that they will both relapse into their usual mode of mutual recriminations. But both the president and the Republicans want an alternative to the alarming year-end combination of expiring tax cuts and sweeping discretionary and defence-spending cuts known as the “fiscal cliff”.

Last summer Mr. Obama and John Boehner, the Speaker of the House of Representatives, briefly had a deal to raise taxes and cut entitlements. The bargain failed largely because of political miscalculations by both men. Mr. Obama’s re-election might allow the two to pick up near where they left off.

He still has a chance to improve the worst score on his report card.  Mr. Obama should go out and make that case between now and November 6th.

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Written by Bruce