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Articles of Interest

The Republican Debates, The President’s Solutions, And The Need for A Progressive Alternative

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By Robert Reich
Nation of Change Op-ed, Tuesday 18 October 2011

Re­pub­li­cans are de­bat­ing again to­mor­row night. And once again, Amer­i­cans will hear the stan­dard re­gres­sive litany: gov­ern­ment is bad, Medicare and Med­ic­aid should be cut, “Oba­macare” is killing the econ­omy, un­doc­u­mented im­mi­grants are tak­ing our jobs, the mil­i­tary should get more money, taxes should be low­ered on cor­po­ra­tions and the rich, and reg­u­la­tions should be gut­ted.

Four years ago the most widely-watched TV de­bate among Re­pub­li­can as­pi­rants at­tracted 3.2 mil­lion view­ers. This year it’s al­most twice that num­ber. And for every viewer as­sume a mul­ti­plier ef­fect as he or she shares what’s heard with friends and fam­ily.

Amer­i­cans are lis­ten­ing more in­tently this time around be­cause they’re hurt­ing and they want an­swers. But the an­swers they’re get­ting from Re­pub­li­can can­di­dates – trip­ping over them­selves try­ing to ap­peal to hard-core re­gres­sives – are the wrong ones.

The cor­rect ones aren’t being aired.

That’s partly be­cause there’s no pri­mary con­test in the De­mo­c­ra­tic party. So Re­pub­li­cans au­to­mat­i­cally get loads of free broad­cast time to air their re­gres­sive non­sense while the De­moc­rats get none.

But even if the Pres­i­dent had equal time, the de­bate about what to do about the cri­sis would still be fright­en­ingly nar­row.

That’s be­cause the Pres­i­dent’s an­swers don’t nearly match up to the mag­ni­tude of the cri­sis.

With­out bold al­ter­na­tives, Amer­i­cans des­per­ate for big so­lu­tions are at­tracted to bold crack­pot ideas like Her­man Cain’s “9-9-9” pro­posal, which would raise taxes on the poor and cut them for the rich.

This is where the in­choate Oc­cupy Wall Street move­ment could come in. What’s needed isn’t just big ideas. It’s peo­ple ful­mi­nat­ing for them – mak­ing enough of a ruckus that the ideas can’t be ig­nored. They be­come part of the de­bate be­cause the pub­lic de­mands it.

The biggest thing the Pres­i­dent has pro­posed is a plan to cre­ate 2 mil­lion jobs. But that’s not nearly big enough. Today, 14 mil­lion Amer­i­cans are out of work, and 11 mil­lion more are work­ing part-time who’d rather be work­ing full time.

The na­tion needs a real jobs plan, one of suf­fi­cient size and scope to do the job – in­clud­ing a WPA and a Civil­ian Con­ser­va­tion Corps, to put the mil­lions of long-term un­em­ployed and young un­em­ployed to work re­build­ing Amer­ica.

I’m not crit­i­ciz­ing the Pres­i­dent. With­out en­er­gized, mo­bi­lized, and or­ga­nized pro­gres­sives, even the best peo­ple in Wash­ing­ton can’t over­come the monied in­ter­ests.

For ex­am­ple, Amer­ica’s long-term debt needs to be ad­dressed, but not the way the Pres­i­dent is doing it. He wants to lop $4 tril­lion off the bud­get over the next ten years. This al­most cer­tainly means sac­ri­fic­ing ed­u­ca­tion, job train­ing, food stamps, and every­thing else now listed in the so-called “non-de­fense dis­cre­tionary” bud­get, as well as cuts in Medicare and Med­ic­aid.

What about halv­ing the mil­i­tary bud­get in­stead? It dou­bled after 9/11, and mil­i­tary con­trac­tors are in­tent on keep­ing it in the stratos­phere. So is Sec­re­tary of De­fense Leon Panetta. Re­sult: De­fense cuts this size won’t be on the table un­less pro­gres­sives vo­cif­er­ously de­mand it.

And what about re­ally rais­ing taxes on the rich to fi­nance what the na­tion should be doing to cre­ate a world-class work­force with world-class wages?

Here again, the Pres­i­dent’s pro­posal is pal­try com­pared to what should be done. He wants to raise taxes on the rich by end­ing the Bush tax cut for in­comes over $250,000 and lim­it­ing cer­tain de­duc­tions.

Yet in­come and wealth are now more con­cen­trated than they’ve been in 70 years. The top 1 per­cent gets over 20 per­cent of total in­come and holds over 35 per­cent of na­tional wealth; the rich­est 400 Amer­i­cans have more wealth than the bot­tom 150 mil­lion Amer­i­cans put to­gether.

Mean­while, ef­fec­tive tax rates on the rich are lower than they’ve been in three decades.

We need to push for higher mar­ginal taxes on the top, and more brack­ets. In­comes of more than $5 mil­lion should be sub­ject to a 70 per­cent rate. (The top mar­ginal rate was never below 70 per­cent be­tween 1940 and 1980.) And these rates should apply to all in­come re­gard­less of source, in­clud­ing cap­i­tal gains.

This would allow for a big­ger Earned In­come Tax Credit (that is, a wage sub­sidy) for lower-in­come work­ers. And lower taxes on mid­dle-in­come work­ers.

There should be a 2 per­cent an­nual sur­tax on all for­tunes over $7 mil­lion. This would only hit the rich­est half a per­cent of Amer­i­cans at the very top of the heap. And would yield $70 bil­lion a year – enough to im­prove our schools and make col­lege af­ford­able to every­one.

And a tax on fi­nan­cial trans­ac­tions. Even a tiny one of one-half of one per­cent would gen­er­ate $200 bil­lion a year. That’s enough to make a major con­tri­bu­tion to­ward early child­hood ed­u­ca­tion for every Amer­i­can tod­dler.

The Pres­i­dent’s health­care law is a good start but it’s not the so­lu­tion, ei­ther. We need Medicare for all. Medicare has lower ad­min­is­tra­tive costs than pri­vate in­sur­ers. And it has the bar­gain­ing heft to re­duce drug and hos­pi­tal costs as well as shift the sys­tem from fee-for-ser­vices to pay­ments for healthy out­comes.

The Pres­i­dent’s fi­nan­cial re­forms are also a be­gin­ning but they’re way too weak to stop Wall Street depre­da­tions. (At this mo­ment, for ex­am­ple, no one even knows the ex­po­sure of Wall Street banks to Eu­ro­pean banks and, through them, Eu­rope’s debt cri­sis.)

We need to res­ur­rect the Glass-Stea­gall Act and break up the biggest banks.

The Pres­i­dent has talked about fix­ing So­cial Se­cu­rity by rais­ing the re­tire­ment age. But the best way to en­sure the pro­gram’s long-term sol­vency is to lift the ceil­ing on in­come sub­ject to So­cial Se­cu­rity pay­roll taxes (now $106,800.) Yet this, too, is off the table.

Work­ers also need more bar­gain­ing power. The ratio of cor&
shy;po­rate prof­its to wages is now higher than it’s been since be­fore the Great De­pres­sion. Work­ers should be able to form unions through a sim­ple up-or-down vote, with­out delay.

None of this is pos­si­ble with­out strong and con­sis­tent pres­sure from the pro­gres­sive side. Re­gres­sives are set­ting the agenda.

The Pres­i­dent isn’t even talk­ing about the en­vi­ron­ment any more. Yet cli­mate change is a re­al­ity, and our sur­vival de­pends on re­duc­ing car­bon emis­sions.

We should tax car­bon-based fuels, and di­vide the rev­enues equally among all Amer­i­cans. It’s the best way to get us to switch to non-car­bon fuels, and stim­u­late re­search and de­vel­op­ment of them. And by di­vid­ing the rev­enues, the typ­i­cal Amer­i­can would come out ahead even though some prices would in­crease.

Fi­nally, we need pub­lic fi­nanc­ing of elec­tions and strict lim­its on so-called “in­de­pen­dent” ex­pen­di­tures. Cor­po­ra­tions should have to get the ap­proval of every share­holder be­fore spend­ing cor­po­rate funds – the share­hold­ers’ money – on pol­i­tics.

I have no idea whether the Oc­cu­piers will morph into the kind of pro­gres­sive force nec­es­sary to put these ideas into play. But if Amer­i­cans stand to­gether and de­mand real re­form, we can have a real na­tional de­bate in 2012.

To­mor­row’s Re­pub­li­can de­bate may at­tract lots of view­ers. It need not cap­ture their minds.

This ar­ti­cle was orig­i­nally posted on Robert Reich’s blog.

http://www.nationofchange.org/meagerness-republican-debates-smallness-president-s-solutions-and-need-progressive-alternative-13189

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The Republican Debates, The President’s Solutions, And The Need for A Progressive Alternative

Robert Reich

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