Dean Baker's Blog, page 563
July 11, 2011
Robert Samuelson Covers Up for the Health Care Industry
Robert Samuelson did one of the great pox on both your houses pieces at which the Post excels. He criticized the right, as personified by Grover Norquist, for being unwilling to raise taxes. Then he trashed my friends at the Center on Budget and Policy Priorities for refusing to produce a balanced budget, which he argues would have to show large cuts in Social Security and Medicare.
Those of us who don't work for the Post, and therefore are free to speak honestly about the deficit, know that ...
WAPO Talks About Social Security "Changes"
Usually it is the politicians who use euphemisms to try to conceal the impact of their policies. However, the Washington Post decided to help them along in a front page article when it twice referred to Social Security "changes" that could be part of the budget agreement.
Of course "changes" don't reduce the deficit unless they are cuts. President Obama and the congressional leadership were discussing plans to cut Social Security. These cuts are likely to be very unpopular, so it is likely...
July 10, 2011
There Was No Deficit Commission Report, Why Do Post Columnists Feel the Need to Lie About This?
I know we are not supposed to say "lie" in Washington, but this is really get tiresome. There was no report from President Obama's deficit commission. The rules under which the commission could issue a report were very clear. It had to have the support of 14 of the 18 members in a vote that took place by December 1, 2010. There was no vote taken by that date, although 12 of the 18 members did indicate their support for a report produced by the commission co-chairs, Erskine Bowles and Alan...
The Post's Jihad Against Social Security
The Post continued its Jihad against Social Security by trying to take the poor hostage. The subhead of its lead editorial told readers:
"The never-cut liberals insist that Social Security grow forever — and thereby would hurt the poor."
There is nothing in this piece that connects the opposition to Social Security cuts to hurting the poor. In the event that nothing is ever done to change the program and it begins to face a shortfall in a quarter century, the amount of additional revenue...
Robert Samuelson Gets One Right
Washington Post columnist Robert Samuelson got one right today when he criticized Mark Zandi for his "good news" in the June jobs report. Zandi apparently highlighted the fact that the rise in joblessness reported for June was entirely attributable to an increase in the number of people who reported quitting their jobs voluntarily.
Samuelson correctly pointed out that this number is erratic, although his concern about the fact that this increase only appeared in the seasonally adjusted data i...
Investment Banker Peter Peterson Appears Incognito In the Washington Post
The Washington Post allowed Wall Street investment banker Peter Peterson to push his decades long crusade to gut Social Security and Medicare in his disguise as president of the Peter G. Peterson Foundation. Given the Post's often felt need to identify individuals and organizations who get funding from labor (sometimes wrongly), it should have identified Mr. Peterson by his past affiliation with the Blackstone Group, one of Wall Street's biggest private equity firms. Mr. Peterson is also...
July 9, 2011
We Need 90,000 Jobs Per Month to Keep Pace With the Growth of the Population
In an article on the June employment report the NYT told readers that the economy needs 150,000 jobs per month to keep pace with the growth in the population. Actually, the Congressional Budget Office projects that the underlying rate of labor force growth is now just 0.7 percent annually. This comes to roughly 1,050,000 a year or just under 90,000 a month.
This is fortunate since the economy has created less than 1.8 million jobs in the 16 months since it first began adding jobs again in...
July 8, 2011
Charles Krauthhammer Doesn't Know That There Was No Deficit Commission Report
This one should be simple enough even for a Washington Post columnist, but apparently not. Krauthammer is apparently referring to the report of the deficit commission's co-chairs, Erskine Bowles and Alan Simpson. The report did not get the necessary majority to be approved by the commission and there was not even a vote taken by the deadline.
Of course Krauthammer also apparently missed the collapse of the housing bubble and resulting economic collapse, since he blames President Obama for...
Contrary to What the NYT Asserts, Not All Economists Believe that Pension Funds Assume Too High a Rate of Return
The NYT, which has repeatedly printed news stories implying that public pensions are hugely underfunded, wrongly implied that economists all agree that public pensions have overly optimistic return assumptions for their pension funds. This is not true. In fact, most pensions are now making assumptions that are completely consistent with the expected return on their assets based on widely accepted projections for the growth of the economy and the growth of profits.
In fact, it is almost...
How Does the NYT Know What Senator Coburn "Believes" About Measures of Inflation?
That's what millions of NYT readers are asking after they saw the assertion:
"Republicans are concerned about the growth of entitlement programs, including Social Security and Medicare. Some, like Senator Tom Coburn of Oklahoma, support the idea of an alternative measure of inflation, known as the chain-weighted version of the Consumer Price Index, because they believe it is more accurate."
It is certainly possible that Senator Coburn and others supporting a lower cost of living...
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