"Congressional leaders and both presidential candidates are proposing billions of dollars in tax breaks and other measures to stoke economic growth, a surge in spending that could send the federal deficit soaring toward $1 trillion this year, creating the deepest well of red ink since the end of World War II."
Read on.
I've already discussed this in a couple of previous posts, but here's a quote about a stimulus:
"Vincent Reinhart, the former chief monetary economist at the Fed and a resident scholar at the American Enterprise Institute, said that, in principle, "a targeted, timely stimulus package that could be put in place quickly" would make sense for the economy right now. The danger, he said, is a political environment that has both raised the desire for government action and expectations about what it can accomplish.
With the financial bailout plan, "we have a new high watermark as to how much the government should do. And that's a very high watermark," Reinhart said. "The chances we overdo [stimulus] are pretty high."
I tend to agree that we need a stimulus and it might overshoot, but after TARP, a credit stimulus package which might not even stimulate credit, a stimulus for the economy in general is hard to argue against.
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