Obama promises frugality later, short on details

WASHINGTON,  (Reuters) – U.S. President Barack  Obama’s speech yesterday showed he understands the “Saint  Augustine” challenge of delivering fiscal frugality later, yet  he offered no clear path to get there.

Obama bluntly acknowledged in his State of the Union  address that trimming $400 billion off the deficit over a  decade won’t fix the country’s finances. But he was short on  specifics of how he would go about the necessary cuts in  healthcare costs and retiree benefits, the two biggest sources  of long-term fiscal strain.

More than a year-and-a-half into an economic recovery that  has failed to create enough jobs for the 14.5 million  unemployed, Obama’s toughest economic challenge is to support  growth now while convincing creditors that the political will  is there to shore up public finances later.

Economists often cite Saint Augustine — who prayed for  chastity, but not yet — to describe that goal. The theory is  that if investors believe the United States will address its  long-term fiscal problems, borrowing costs will fall, giving  the government more leeway to support the recovery now.

“To make further progress, we have to stop pretending that  cutting this kind of (domestic) spending alone will be enough,”  Obama said. “It won’t.”

Republicans will no doubt seize on the fact that Obama  proposed only minimal spending cuts and did not mention that  the country’s Treasury is only a couple of months away from  bumping up against a debt ceiling mandated by Congress that  will bar additional borrowing.

“Endless borrowing is not a strategy; spending cuts have to  come first,” U.S. House of Representatives Budget Committee  Chairman Paul Ryan said in the Republicans’ formal response to  Obama. Excerpts of his prepared remarks were released in  advance.

There is no doubt that budget cuts must come. By the White  House’s own projections, publicly held debt will exceed 70  percent of total U.S. output by 2012 and continue rising at  least through 2015 to reach levels that have caused a sovereign  debt crisis in some European countries.

The question is how quickly U.S. lawmakers will take the  tough decisions required. Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke  made the case to the Senate Budget Committee earlier this month  that adopting a credible deficit-reduction plan now would pay  immediate dividends, even if it were enacted years later.

“Nobody doubts that the United States has the economic  capacity to pay its bills,” Bernanke said. “It’s really a  question of, do we have the political will to do that.  Demonstration of political will, that’s what the markets are  watching.”
What they saw yesterday may leave some doubt.

The centrepiece of Obama’s fiscal pledge was a proposal to  freeze non-security discretionary spending for five years,  extending a previous call for a 3-year freeze, that will cut  the deficit by $400 billion over 10 years.

Ward McCarthy, chief financial economist at Jefferies & Co  in New York, called the deficit reduction pledge “somewhat  underwhelming in this era of $1.4 trillion budget deficits.”
Obama readily admitted that it was a only a modest step.

To put that $400 billion in perspective, it averages out to  $40 billion a year — less than Americans spent at grocery  stores in December 2010 alone. The $40 billion is a small  fraction of one percent of U.S. economic output, and less than  3 percent of the White House’s projected 2011 deficit.

Peter Peterson, the co-founder of private equity firm  Blackstone Group who is well known for his warnings about the  deficit, said a spending freeze was just one element of a  long-term fiscal plan.

“We must couple current efforts to stimulate the economy  with a long-term plan that reduces the ballooning interest  costs, which buy us nothing and crowd out deeply needed  investments,” Peterson said in a statement.

THIRD RAIL
Obama has been under political pressure to pay more  attention to the deficit as Republicans push for immediate  spending cuts. China, the largest foreign creditor, regularly  reminds the United States that it has a responsibility to get  its fiscal house in order.

Some lawmakers have drawn parallels to Europe’s debt crisis  and pointed to a recent rise in long-term Treasury bond rates  as evidence that investors are beginning to question the U.S.  fiscal position.

Treasury yields rose after Obama agreed in December to  extend Bush-era tax cuts for everyone, instead of just for  those earning less than $200,000 a year as he had proposed — a  move that some saw as a damaging increase to the deficit.  Still, many private economists say the higher rates are  primarily a reflection of brighter economic prospects.

The White House has tried to draw a distinction between the  short-term costs of supporting the economic recovery and the  long-term task of containing healthcare costs and strengthening  Social Security.

Obama touched upon both issues, but offered no concrete  proposals.
His most direct point was on the tax cuts for the highest  income brackets — and his comments are likely to raise  tax-cutting Republicans’ hackles.
“If we truly care about our deficit, we simply cannot  afford a permanent extension of the tax cuts for the wealthiest  2 percent of Americans,” said Obama. “Before we take money away  from our schools, or scholarships away from our students, we  should ask millionaires to give up their tax break.”