One of the many
reasons that the so-called Conservative positions are just not correct is
that the policy and positions are based on ideology and superstition, not on
facts and analysis. When you do that it often turns out that facts and the analysis jump up and make you look stupid. For example, Conservatives argued that the
huge deficits of the U. S.
would make interest rates skyrocket. The
fact is, they went down and they stayed down. Not very convenient for Conservatives, is it?
Now a normal and
rational person when faced with facts and data that contradicted their
positions would re-examine those positions.
If the evidence were overwhelming, which it almost always is with
respect to Conservative dogma, the rational person would adjust his or her
views to fit the data. Not so
Conservatives. Their response is to
attack the data, and in the extreme, de-fund the government agencies that are
responsible for generating the data.
Most U.S. economic
data come from three federal agencies: the Census Bureau, the BEA, and the
Bureau of Labor Statistics. They have a combined budget of $1.6 billion,
less than 0.05 percent of President Barack Obama’s $3.7 trillion
proposed budget. These agencies have always had to fight for more funding. Now
they may have to fight just to keep their budgets intact. As part of
$19 billion in nondefense discretionary cuts in Paul Ryan’s (R-Wis.)
budget—recently passed by the House of Representatives—the agencies are likely
to get less funding.
What might be the
impact of these cuts? Well with less
information government will have less ability to make policy.
in
early 2009, after the real estate-fueled financial crisis, Congress gave Census
what it had been asking for—an extra $8.1 million. In the view of many, it
was too late. “That’s a grand example of how nickel-and-diming statistics
agencies can screw up the economy,” says Andrew Reamer, a research professor at
the George Washington University Institute of Public Policy and a member of the
BEA’s advisory committee. “The government saved $8 million, but how many
trillions were lost as a result of not being able to see the crisis coming?”
That
extra data, says Reamer, would’ve revealed just how quickly certain parts of
the economy were slowing down. For example, in April 2008 the BEA, with no
quarterly data to work with, estimated that finance and insurance sector
activity fell 0.3 percent in 2007. In July 2011, the BEA recrunched
those numbers using quarterly data and showed declines of 2.2 percent,
5.3 percent, and 9.9 percent for those sectors in the last three
quarters of 2007.
And even the highly conservative U. S. Chamber of
Commerce is aghast at the proposed cuts.
One
of the most vocal critics of the proposed cuts is the U.S. Chamber of
Commerce, a deficit hawk. “The chamber is in favor of getting the deficit under
control, but you’re not going to get there by gutting the statistics agencies,”
says the chamber’s chief economist, Martin Regalia, who last July signed a
letter in favor of fully funding the BEA. “The total amount of money saved is
relatively small compared to the massive loss of information it would lead to.
It’s like trying to balance your checkbook by buying cheaper checks.”
But Conservatives are on a mission. If they can eliminate economic data they can
eliminate the one thing that stands between their policies and enactment. The truth.
At least conservatives are consistent. Jindal made the claim that money spent on volcano monitoring was wasteful.
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