How Bill Clinton says we should fix things

downtownrobbrowndowntownrobbrown 446 Posts
edited June 2011 in Strut Central
14 WAYS TO PUT AMERICA BACK TO WORK
http://www.newsweek.com/2011/06/19/it-s-still-the-economy-stupid.html

1. SPEED THE APPROVALS
Harry Hopkins had nowhere near the rules and regulations we have now. (In 1933, Hopkins???s Civil Works Administration put 4 million to work in a month.) I don???t blame the people in the White House for problems in getting shovel-ready projects off the ground; sometimes it takes three years or more for the approval process. We should try to change this: keep the full review process when there are real environmental concerns, but when there aren???t, the federal government should be able to give a waiver to the states to speed up start times on construction projects. We gave states waivers to do welfare reform, so by the time I signed the bill, 43 of the 50 states had already implemented their own approaches. We need to look at that.

2. CASH FOR STARTUPS
If you start a business tomorrow, I can give you all the tax credits in the world, but since you haven???t made a nickel yet, they???re of no use to you. President Obama came in with a really good energy policy, including an idea to provide both a tax credit for new green jobs and for startup companies, to allow the conversion of the tax credit into its cash equivalent for every employee hired. Then last December, in the tax-cut compromise, the Republicans in Congress wouldn???t agree to extend this benefit because they said, ???This is a spending program, not a tax cut. We???re only for tax cuts.??? It was a mistake. The cash incentive worked. On the day President Obama took office, the U.S. had less than 2 percent of the world market in manufacturing the high-powered batteries for hybrid or all-electric cars. On the day of the congressional elections in 2010, thanks in large part to the cash???incentive policy, we had 20 percent of global capacity, with 30 new battery plants built or under construction, 16 of them in Michigan, which had America???s second???highest unemployment rate. We have to convince the Republican Congress that this is a good thing. If this incentive structure can be maintained, it???s estimated that by 2015 we???ll have 40 percent of the world???s capacity for these batteries. We could get lots of manufacturing jobs in the same way. I could write about this until the cows come home.

3. JOBS GALORE IN ENERGY
When I was president, the economy benefited because information technology penetrated every aspect of American life. More than one quarter of our job growth and one third of our income growth came from that. Now the obvious candidate for that role today is changing the way we produce and use energy. The U.S. didn???t ratify the Kyoto accords, of course, because Al Gore and I left office, and the next government wasn???t for it. They were all wrong. Before the financial meltdown, the four countries that will meet their Kyoto greenhouse-gas emission targets were outperforming America with lower unemployment, more new business formation, and less income inequality.

4. COPY THE EMPIRE STATE BUILDING
Just look at the Empire State Building???I can see it from my office window. Our climate-change people worked on their retrofit project. They cleared off a whole floor for a small factory to change the heating and air conditioning, put in new lighting and insulation, and cut energy-efficient glass for the windows. Johnson Controls, the energy-service company overseeing the project, guaranteed the building owners their electricity usage would go down 38 percent???a massive saving, which will enable the costs of the retrofits to be recovered through lower utility bills in less than five years. Meanwhile, the project created hundreds of jobs and cut greenhouse-gas emissions substantially. We could put a million people to work retrofitting buildings all over America.

5. GET THE UTILITIES IN ON THE ACTION
Let???s suppose you and I go to a blue-collar neighborhood in Rockland County, N.Y., about an hour north of midtown Manhattan. On each house we could do a simple job???in and out in a day???that would almost certainly save 20 percent in energy costs. You wouldn???t even need banks if states required the electric companies to let consumers finance this work through utility savings. At least 11 states allow the electric companies to collect the money saved and use it to pay the contractors. So why shouldn???t the utilities finance this? To give another example, our climate-change initiative worked with the state of Arkansas, with the support of the governor, to develop a program called HEAL (Home Energy Assistance Loan), in which a company first creates jobs by making its own building more energy-efficient. Then, with the savings from the utility bill, they establish a fund to offer interest-free loans to their employees to finance the same work on their homes. This could be done with a little government support by companies all over the country. You get 7,000 jobs for every billion dollars in retrofitting. Let???s start with the schools and colleges and hospitals, and state, county, and local government buildings. That would keep the construction industry busy for a couple of years, creating a million jobs that would ripple through the whole economy, spurring even more growth.

6. STATE-BY-STATE SOLUTIONS
There may be some things that the states can do to loosen this up. One of the reasons Harry Reid won in Nevada is that, right before the election, two big Chinese companies announced they were moving factories there to make LED lightbulbs and turbines for the big wind farms down in Texas. Nevada is a little state, and it gained more than 4,000 jobs.

The thing I really liked about it was that the Chinese guys played it straight. They said the decision was pure economics. They didn???t say, ???We???re coming here because Harry Reid is the leader of the Senate.??? They said, ???We???re coming here because Nevada has the best state incentives to go with the federal incentives.??? They were very clinical. They said labor costs in China are still cheaper, but these turbines are big and heavy, and higher transportation costs to the U.S. market would offset the labor gains???and there was a tax credit from the federal government for green-energy manufacturing, and extra credits in Nevada.

7. GUARANTEE LOANS
Before the last presidential election, I tried for a year to get both Congress and the administration to deal with the fact that the banks weren???t lending because they were still jittery about the economy, and worried about the regulators coming down on them for bad loans still on the books. It???s not much better now. Banks still have more than $2 trillion in cash uncommitted to loans.

So I suggested that the federal government set aside???not spend???$15 billion of the TARP money and create a loan-guarantee program that would work exactly the way the Small Business Administration does. Basically, the bank lends money to a business after the federal government guarantees 75 percent of it. Let???s say that the SBA fund has about a 20-to-1 loan-to-capital ratio, and it???s never come anywhere near bankruptcy. If we capitalized this more conservatively at 10-to-1, we could guarantee $150 billion in loans and create more than a million jobs. We should start with buildings we know will stay in use: most state and local government buildings, schools, university structures, hospitals, theaters, and concert halls. We could include private commercial buildings with no debt. Even if many are strapped for cash, allowing the costs of the retrofits to be paid only from utility savings means the building owners won???t be out any cash. It???s a ???just say yes??? system.

8. PAINT ???EM WHITE
Look at the tar roofs covering millions of American buildings. They absorb huge amounts of heat when it???s hot. And they require more air conditioning to cool the rooms. Mayor Bloomberg started a program to hire and train young people to paint New York???s roofs white. A big percentage of the kids have been able to parlay this simple work into higher-skilled training programs or energy-related retrofit jobs. (And, believe it or not, painting the roof white can lower the electricity use by 20 percent on a hot day!)

Every black roof in New York should be white; every roof in Chicago should be white; every roof in Little Rock should be white. Every flat tar-surface roof anywhere! In most of these places you could recover the cost of the paint and the labor in a week. It???s the quickest, cheapest thing you can do. In the current environment it???s been difficult for the mayors to get what is otherwise a piddling amount of money to do it everywhere. Yet lowering the utility bill in every apartment house 10 to 20 percent frees cash that can be spent to increase economic growth.

9. DEALS TO MAKE THINGS
Every analysis shows that TARP and the stimulus saved us from a second Great Depression. After the GM and Chrysler bailouts, we have something like 75,000 more jobs in the industry. Closure of the factories and the suppliers with them would have cost a million jobs. The stimulus should have been more vigorously defended in the last election. It did work, but it didn???t ???fix the economy??? because it was an $800 billion stimulus trying to fix a $3 trillion hole. Nobody can fill a $3 trillion hole with $800 billion, so it didn???t make ordinary people feel a lot better, but without it, the unemployment rate would have been 1.5 to 2 percent higher than it is.

I???m sympathetic with the objectives of the Bowles-Simpson commission; we do need to do something about long-term debt. It???s a question of timing, really. If we cut a lot of government spending while our economy still has so little private investment, we risk weakening the economy even more and increasing the deficit because tax revenues can fall more than spending is cut. That???s why the Bowles-Simpson report recommends we delay big spending cuts until next year. So what should we do? More infrastructure initiatives now would put a lot of people back to work. But President Obama doesn???t have the votes in the Congress to get another stimulus package. When asked why he robbed banks, Willie Sutton said, ???Because that???s where the money is.??? We have to unlock that money and take steps to get U.S. corporations to invest some of the $2 trillion they have accumulated.

Without regard to their party or their philosophy, Americans have always been great at the art of the deal. The real thing that has killed us in the last 10 years is that too much of our dealmaking creativity has been devoted to expanding the financial sector in ways that don???t create new businesses and more jobs and to persuading people to take on excessive debt loads to make up for the fact that their incomes are stagnant. That???s one reason why we???ve been suffering from anemic employment for years. In the seven years and eight months that preceded the meltdown, our economy produced a meager 4 million new jobs, far too few to cope with millions coming into the workforce, and virtually all those jobs were created in housing, finance, and consumer spending.

10. TRAIN ON THE JOB
Andrew Liveris???s book on how we can bring manufacturing back to America cites a company that interviewed 3,600 people for 100 jobs and hired 47; the others didn???t have the necessary skills. One answer to the skills roadblock comes from the former labor commissioner in Georgia, Michael Thurmond. After job vacancies go unfilled for a certain period of time, the state offers businesses the money to train potential employees themselves. During the training period, the companies don???t become employers, so they don???t have to start paying Social Security taxes or employer benefits. They train people their way, then hire those who succeed as regular employees, reducing the time lag between when a job is advertised and when it is filled. With unemployment at 9 percent and the real rate of those without full-time work higher, there are 3 million posted job vacancies. Filling them faster could make a big difference.

11. TEACH SKILLS WE NEED
I???m trying to figure out why job seekers don???t have the skills companies need; why the community colleges and vocational programs, which have done such a great job for America, are not providing more people with the skills to fill these vacancies. Do people just not enroll in the right programs or do they drop out because of the economy? I hope we can find out.

12. CUT CORPORATE TAXES
It???s true that our corporate rates are the second-highest in the world. But it???s also true that what our corporations actually pay is nowhere near the second-highest percentage of their real income in the world. So I???d be perfectly fine with lowering the corporate tax rates, simplifying the tax code, and saving some money on accountants, but broadening the tax base so that all of them pay a reasonable amount of tax on their profits. That???s what the Bowles-Simpson commission recommended, and it???s the right policy. Lower the rates to be competitive, but reduce the loopholes that cause unfair disparities. We all need to contribute something to help meet our shared challenges and responsibilities, including solving the debt problem.

13. ENFORCE TRADE LAWS
We lost manufacturing jobs in every one of the eight years after I left office. One of the reasons is that enforcement of our trade laws dropped sharply. Contrary to popular belief, the World Trade Organization and our trade agreements do not require unilateral disarmament. They???re designed to increase the volume of two-way trade on terms that are mutually beneficial. My administration negotiated 300 trade agreements, but we enforced them, too. Enforcement dropped so much in the last decade because we borrowed more and more money from the countries that had big trade surpluses with us, especially China and Japan, to pay for government spending. Since they are now our bankers, it???s hard to be tough on their unfair trading practices. This happened because we abandoned the path of balanced budgets 10 years ago, choosing instead large tax cuts especially for higher-income people like me, along with two wars and the senior citizens??? drug benefit. In the history of our republic, it???s the first time we ever cut taxes while going to war.

14. ANALYZE THE OPPORTUNITIES
I???m hosting this month???s CGI America meeting on the assumption that there will be no federal stimulus and no further tax incentives targeted directly toward creating new jobs. Going on these assumptions, we want to analyze America???s economy: What are our assets? What are our liabilities? What are our options? There must be opportunities to be tapped, given all the cash in banks and corporate treasuries. If we have some success, we might be able to influence the debate in Washington in a nonpartisan way because we???ll have economic evidence to show them. I don???t have any problem at all if Congress wants to give tax credits to companies that actually hire people. But I think we have to pay for them, so I???d be happy to go back to the tax rates people at my income level paid when I was president in order to pay for the tax incentives to put more people to work.

The whole purpose of CGI America is to highlight good ideas because not everyone is aware of what???s out there. I???m going to try to get enough commitments that are representative enough of the circumstances facing diverse industries and different cities and states to persuade people across America to try their own version of them in a discussion of our economic stagnation. There???s been a remarkable lack of attention to ???microeconomics,??? the untapped growth potential of American corporations, entrepreneurs, and workers.

Let???s be realistic here. This is a massive economy. No matter how many impressive commitments we get, we won???t move the numbers. They???ll move the numbers only if enough people say, ???Wow, I wish I???d thought of that.???

Some interesting thoughts.
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  Comments


  • best. president. ever.



    and im canadian!

  • PATXPATX 2,820 Posts
    His ideas on trade and finance are terrible. NAFTA created the Juarez we have today.

    But seems like he didn't totally tune out Gore at White House brunches.

  • PunditPundit 438 Posts
    default on sovereign debt, wipe the slate clean, start over with a currency backed by gold.

  • PATXPATX 2,820 Posts
    Pundit said:
    default on sovereign debt, wipe the slate clean, start over with a currency backed by gold.

    AKA, let blood run in the streets!

  • PunditPundit 438 Posts
    it's the only way. shit's past redemption. hyper inflate or default.

  • HarveyCanalHarveyCanal "a distraction from my main thesis." 13,234 Posts
    Pundit said:
    it's the only way. shit's past redemption. hyper inflate or default.

    Thank you.

  • PATXPATX 2,820 Posts
    I guess you guys either have a small private security force, or will be waiting on a peaceful takeover of our country by the military?

  • HarveyCanalHarveyCanal "a distraction from my main thesis." 13,234 Posts
    SportCasual said:
    I guess you guys either have a small private security force, or will be waiting on a peaceful takeover of our country by the military?

    Americans that would lose their shit in such a change are too pussy to make any blood actually run in the streets. If they even tried, the people who currently don't have shit and are the ones who are already making blood run in the streets would snuff them right quick.

    In other words, if you want to kick up dust because you now have to eat plain rice instead of filet mignon, then we'll be glad to take your rice from you as well.

    THIS WHOLE AMERICAN LIFESTYLE IS A BUBBLE...NOW WATCH IT POP.

  • PATXPATX 2,820 Posts
    Google "Bread Riots" and shit.

  • PATXPATX 2,820 Posts
    HarveyCanal said:

    Americans that would lose their shit in such a change are too pussy to make any blood actually run in the streets.

    This is Chem trails related right?

  • HarveyCanalHarveyCanal "a distraction from my main thesis." 13,234 Posts
    SportCasual said:
    Google "Bread Riots" and shit.

    Instead of confining yourself to a foodless city aka not adapting to the changes at hand. Head out to the country and go fishing for your food.

  • GrandfatherGrandfather 2,303 Posts
    Gold is just a commodity dudes. Might as well back our currency in rap 12"s

  • PunditPundit 438 Posts
    there is no way out that isn't going to be really ugly, and the path that things are on atm is going to be even uglier.

  • HarveyCanalHarveyCanal "a distraction from my main thesis." 13,234 Posts
    SportCasual said:
    HarveyCanal said:

    Americans that would lose their shit in such a change are too pussy to make any blood actually run in the streets.

    This is Chem trails related right?

    Not sure how you figue that. I know that soy makes men turn into pussies. Chemtrails are a different animal.

  • PunditPundit 438 Posts
    Grandfather said:
    Gold is just a commodity dudes. Might as well back our currency in rap 12"s

    gold is real money, shit like pork bellies and oil are commodities. gold may be traded as an etf, treated as a finanacial instrument like a commodity, but it's been an effective store of value for most of human history and always been the thing that societies have reverted to when fiat currencies have collapsed numerous times throughout history.

  • HarveyCanalHarveyCanal "a distraction from my main thesis." 13,234 Posts
    Grandfather said:
    Gold is just a commodity dudes. Might as well back our currency in rap 12"s

    But the Annunaki don't need rap 12"s to fix their atmosphere on Planet X.

    That was a joke, folks.

    I actually don't know what gives gold its intrinsic value, but it is proven through history.

  • PATXPATX 2,820 Posts
    HarveyCanal said:
    SportCasual said:
    Google "Bread Riots" and shit.

    Instead of confining yourself to a foodless city aka not adapting to the changes at hand. Head out to the country and go fishing for your food.

    I grow lots of shit in my garden. I can make a salad entirely sourced from 20ft radius from my kitchen.

    But you know what? Working to produce all your own food is FUCKING BACKBREAKING and you have to get up at 4am every single day! That basically explains the last 250 years of demographic migration: Working on a farm SUCKS!

    Yes, it's going to get a bit desperate at some point. This is not a reason to be on some blank slate steez. That has gone badly in the past.

  • BurnsBurns 2,227 Posts
    Americans are lazy.

  • PunditPundit 438 Posts
    industrialisation and societal dependence on cheap crude oil has a lot to do with it also. 95% of what we eat is transported from the other side of the world. Peak oil and Peak population is gonna hit a hard limit at some point. Shit is gonna get real interesting. Monsanto has us all fucked in the game anyway when it's going to be impossible to grow anything with out crude oil based fertilizer and everything is made from corn syrup.

  • HarveyCanalHarveyCanal "a distraction from my main thesis." 13,234 Posts
    SportCasual said:
    HarveyCanal said:
    SportCasual said:
    Google "Bread Riots" and shit.

    Instead of confining yourself to a foodless city aka not adapting to the changes at hand. Head out to the country and go fishing for your food.

    I grow lots of shit in my garden. I can make a salad entirely sourced from 20ft radius from my kitchen.

    But you know what? Working to produce all your own food is FUCKING BACKBREAKING and you have to get up at 4am every single day! That basically explains the last 250 years of demographic migration: Working on a farm SUCKS!

    Yes, it's going to get a bit desperate at some point. This is not a reason to be on some blank slate steez. That has gone badly in the past.

    But we're already billions of dollars in the red past a blank slate. Borrowing on our future so that we can gorge ourselves on McNuggets has gotten us into this position. So it's either learn to like to eat your lawn and grubs and shit, or perish. I think that the people willing to do such things instead of standing around downtown waiting for Big Brother to save them are the ones most likely to see the other end of this collapse. WANT NOT NEED NOT.

  • PATXPATX 2,820 Posts
    Pundit said:
    industrialisation and societal dependence on cheap crude oil has a lot to do with it also.

    Well, cheap crude came much later. Industrialization started with horse power, then steam (from coal). In the middle of it there was also some hydro power. And this all enabled centralization and the growth of cities. But fundamentally, people moved from the farms to the cities because farming sucks. That's all I am getting at when people romanticize the idea of being self-sufficient. It's not feasible unless you want to cut 20 years off avg life expectancy, and are cool with wooden teeth.

  • PunditPundit 438 Posts
    i don't think that it's a case of choosing which lifestyle you want. Things are going to turn sour for a lot of people within our lifetimes, it's inevitable. the rubber band can only be stretched so far before it snaps.

  • HarveyCanalHarveyCanal "a distraction from my main thesis." 13,234 Posts
    I don't think anyone is fantasizing, just considering and trying to come to terms with what could very well happen...in a heartbeat. Plus to me, you come across as over-alarmist. Sure, there will be plenty who refuse to let go of their current lifestyle, even if just a little, and those people will suffer greatly for it....while those at work on the new ish will be actively grooming themselves to become adept and successful at the new ish. We are currently way too piled into cities when there is tons and tons of countryside for us to reclaim. That may happen slowly with people buying propery in the sticks before the complete crash, or it can happen in an eyeblink with people literally fleeing urban riots to save their lives. Either way, we're going to have to spread out at some point. This current shit is obviously unsustainable.

  • white_teawhite_tea 3,262 Posts
    Going to the gold standard, how exactly would that work? If you think there is a disparity between the haves and the have-nots, the gulf would only widen because there is a lot less gold than people in the world and most of us would have none of it.

  • HarveyCanalHarveyCanal "a distraction from my main thesis." 13,234 Posts
    The price of gold is harder to manipulate than the price of nothing.

  • PunditPundit 438 Posts
    Looks like we'll get a little test run of things over in Europe first. It's pretty precarious though. Most of the greek debt which is on the verge of undoing the EU is insured by the big American banks. No economies are insulated in 2011. And there's no way there's gonna be another bailout coming from the US Fed this time. We live in interesting times.

  • RockadelicRockadelic Out Digging 13,993 Posts
    I know we're screwed because the Doc Gibbs LP that I used to get $100 for only sold for $46.00 yesterday......I'm gonna stock up on guns and Polka records.

  • PunditPundit 438 Posts
    white_tea said:
    Going to the gold standard, how exactly would that work? If you think there is a disparity between the haves and the have-nots, the gulf would only widen because there is a lot less gold than people in the world and most of us would have none of it.

    a gold standard is more about the central bank of a country having gold and issuing a currency that is directly related to the amount of gold it has, not just printing up money out of thin air which has been happening for the last 40 years since NIxon and gotten us into this mess.

    The US govt made private ownership of gold illegal and confiscated all supplies back in 1933 at the bottom of the great depression. It's not impossible that that could happen again. This time round though there's a massive middle class of wealthy Chinese who have been buying up heaps of gold, actively encouraged to do so by the Chinese govt.

  • PATXPATX 2,820 Posts
    HarveyCanal said:
    Plus to me, you come across as over-alarmist.

    white_tea said:
    Going to the gold standard, how exactly would that work? If you think there is a disparity between the haves and the have-nots, the gulf would only widen because there is a lot less gold than people in the world and most of us would have none of it.

    = Blood in the streets. Most revolutions come in groups. The first one wipes the slate clean, the next ones just piss you right off.

  • HarveyCanalHarveyCanal "a distraction from my main thesis." 13,234 Posts
    Again, there is already too much blood in the streets, both here and by our hands abroad. Shit, if the collapse merely causes the US military to stop its overseas activities...that would constitute a larger deflation in violence than any unorganized bread riot could ever cover.

    Which takes me back to Americans being pussies. We're fine and dandy when we are tearing up neighborhoods in Libya, but if we don't get to have our Starbucks tomorrow, that's what's going to make all hell break lose???
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