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Stories tagged with “Douglas Holtz-Eakin

Politics

Senate Democratic Policy Committee turns to Holtz-Eakin for job creation ideas.

dhe90aThe Senate Democratic Policy Committee (DPC) has announced that, on Wednesday, it “will hold an important hearing on jobs creation.” “This is a terrific opportunity to learn more about the job creation legislation as it is developed,” said the DPC in an email. Earlier this month, House Republicans held a similar job creation roundtable with a lineup full of former Bush administration and McCain staffers, which House Democrats agreed was worth disparaging. So then why are Senate Democrats calling on two of the same people: Larry Lindsey and Douglas Holtz-Eakin? The inclusion of Holtz-Eakin is especially disheartening because, at the GOP event, he said that the single best jobs policy would be ending “crippling regulation” and “intrusive government expansion”:

The single best jobs action that President Obama could take would be to reverse course on a dangerous agenda of debt-financed spending, crippling regulation, expensive mandates, and intrusive government expansion.

This sounds exactly like the economic principles of RNC Chairman Michael Steele. After spending the McCain campaign incorrectly asserting that McCain’s economic plans would balance the budget, Holtz-Eakin has of late been championing the idea that repealing the estate tax will spur job creation, despite the fact that exceedingly few businesses are affected by it. The Wonk Room has more.

Economy

Why Is The Senate Democratic Policy Committee Soliciting Job Creation Ideas From Holtz-Eakin?

dhe90Over the weekend, an email popped up in my inbox announcing that “the Senate Democratic Policy Committee (DPC) will hold an important hearing on jobs creation” on Wednesday. “This is a terrific opportunity to learn more about the job creation legislation as it is developed, and to hear competing policy recommendations from top experts from both Democratic and Republican administrations,” the email said.

Earlier this month, House Republicans held a similar economic roundtable, and I pointed out that the GOP was counting on a slew of former Bush administration and McCain staffers for advice on job creation. House Democrats evidently agreed that such a lineup was worth disparaging.

So then why are Senate Democrats calling on two of the same people: Bush tax cut architect Larry Lindsey and deficit double-talker Douglas Holtz-Eakin? These two will be balanced, supposedly, by Gene Sperling, a counselor to Treasury Secretary Tim Geithner, and Martin Baily of the Brookings Institution.

The inclusion of Holtz-Eakin is especially disheartening, as at the GOP event, he said that the single best jobs policy would be ending “crippling regulation” and “intrusive government expansion”:

The single best jobs action that President Obama could take would be to reverse course on a dangerous agenda of debt-financed spending, crippling regulation, expensive mandates, and intrusive government expansion.

Is that a call for repealing the stimulus? After spending the McCain campaign ludicrously asserting that McCain’s economic plans would lead to a balanced budget and mischaracterizing McCain’s tax plan, Holtz-Eakin has of late been championing the idea that repealing the estate tax will somehow spur job creation, despite the fact that exceedingly few small businesses are affected by it.

So on one hand, it’s great to see the Senate acknowledging that a new jobs bill needs to be looked at, and holding a hearing to flesh out ideas of what should make its way into the legislation. But why the reliance on the same old crew of tired economists pushing solutions that aren’t viable? There are some conservative minded economists out there (Bruce Bartlett jumps to mind) who, though I disagree with their policy prescriptions regarding job creation, are at least approaching the problem without sounding like RNC Chairman Michael Steele.

Health

McCain Adviser Holtz-Eakin Anxious About Moving Into Individual Market He Once Touted

Holtz-Eakin_2627fDouglas Holtz-Eakin, a senior policy adviser to Sen. John McCain’s (R-AZ) presidential campaign, “remains unemployed — and his COBRA health coverage is running out,” the Washington Post reports. “Irony of ironies, it gets worse. Holtz-Eakin, who is about to start shopping for insurance on the individual market, is 51. And he has one of those pesky ‘preexisting conditions’ that insurance companies often cite in denying coverage”:

Holtz-Eakin said he’s been paying about $1,000 a month to extend the private health insurance he received on McCain’s campaign through the government’s COBRA program, but that will expire in a few months. This is the first time in his life he has not had employer-provided health coverage. “I worry about where I go next in the way many Americans do,” he said.

During the campaign, Holtiz-Eakin fervently defended McCain’s proposal to shift more Americans out of their employer-sponsored coverage and into the individual health insurance market, where approximately “73 percent of the adults who tried to buy insurance” “never bought a plan — because they could not afford it, could not find a plan that met their needs, or were turned down.”

“The key to real reform is to restore control over our health-care system to the patients themselves,” Holtz-Eakin insisted in August. “Instead of only getting it in the employer market, you would get it regardless of your source of insurance. And you get the same amount whether you’re rich or poor, $5,000 for every working family.”

As the campaign came to a close, however, Holtz-Eakin did acknowledge that “what they are getting from their employer is way better than what they could get with the credit” that McCain would have offered to encourage individuals to leave employer-sponsored plans. Holtz-Eakin conceded that McCain’s health care tax credit wouldn’t cover the entire cost of a comprehensive health plan and would only allow some Americans to buy insurance in the individual market.

If Holtz-Eakin is able to enroll in an individual health insurance policy, he is likely to spend more on health insurance coverage. While Holtz-Eakin’s monthly premium may be lower than what he’s paying now, he will probably spend far more on out of pocket health expenses.

Politics

Former McCain adviser nervous about moving into the individual health insurance market he once touted.

Holtz-Eakin_2627fDouglas Holtz-Eakin, a senior policy adviser to Sen. John McCain’s (R-AZ) presidential campaign, “remains unemployed — and his COBRA health coverage is running out,” the Washington Post reports. “Irony of ironies, it gets worse. Holtz-Eakin, who is about to start shopping for insurance on the individual market, is 51. And he has one of those pesky ‘preexisting conditions’ that insurance companies often cite in denying coverage”:

Holtz-Eakin said he’s been paying about $1,000 a month to extend the private health insurance he received on McCain’s campaign through the government’s COBRA program, but that will expire in a few months. This is the first time in his life he has not had employer-provided health coverage. “I worry about where I go next in the way many Americans do,” he said.

During the campaign, Holtiz-Eakin fervently defended McCain’s proposal to shift more Americans out of their employer-sponsored coverage and into the individual health insurance market. “The key to real reform is to restore control over our health-care system to the patients themselves,” Holtz-Eakin said in August. “Instead of only getting it in the employer market, you would get it regardless of your source of insurance. And you get the same amount whether you’re rich or poor, $5,000 for every working family.”

Politics

On RNC call, Holtz-Eakin says ‘no one’ thinks ‘stimulus has done nothing’ — but Steele does.

Yesterday, the Republican National Committee featured former McCain adviser Douglas Holtz-Eakin on a conference call pushing back against positive takes on the new unemployment numbers. Though Holtz-Eakin said that the new data “cannot be considered good news,” he claimed that “no one would argue that the stimulus has done nothing.” But earlier this week, RNC Chairman Michael Steele said just that, before catching himself and saying that he meant it had done “very little”:

Republican National Chairman Michael Steele, in a conference call with reporters after Obama’s event, suggested that so far, it’s mostly talk.

“We’re still losing jobs,” he said. “In fact, I find it interesting and ironic that the president was today in Indiana, again repeating some of the same old broken promises about the stimulus and the jobs it’s saved. I don’t know how we measure that. Certainly, what we’ve seen put on the table so far has done nothing, very little, to create jobs.

In a separate interview with CNN, Steele was asked whether he believed that “the raise in home sales or the Dow — the level of the Dow — or even the GDP raising as any part of this” was a “result of the stimulus package or anything.” “No, I don’t,” responded Steele. Private economic analysts believe the stimulus “added at least 1 percentage point to economic growth in the second quarter.”

Yglesias

A “‘Heritage of the Left’ of the Right”

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The political system enters a period of infinite regress:

In the wake of another chastening set of GOP defeats at the polls, Holtz-Eakin is now setting out to address those problems head-on. He’s developing a proposal for a new think tank that he describes as a “Center for American Progress for the right” — a reference to the liberal think tank that has supplied staff and policy proposals to the Obama administration and developed new ways to market its ideas. [...]

The irony, of course, is that the Center for American Progress itself was developed as a liberal answer to the Heritage Foundation, the conservative think tank that has been a source of Republican policy ideas for decades. But Holtz-Eakin says established think tanks of the right, like Heritage and the American Enterprise Institute, were “not helpful” during the McCain campaign because they weren’t politically engaged or innovative in their media strategies.

That’s why Holtz-Eakin says he now looks to the Center for American Progress as a model. The center, headed by former Clinton White House Chief of Staff John D. Podesta, combined a battery of domestic and foreign policy proposals with outreach innovations, such as hosting film screenings around the country and collecting e-mail addresses of people who sign up for the screenings.

This seems pretty misguided to me. In particular, DHE needs to think harder about the fact that there are already well-resourced conservative think tanks with plenty of capabilities. Before CAP came on the scene, there really wasn’t a “Heritage of the left.” On the right, Heritage and AEI already exist. The problem they face is that the conservative movement, as presently constituted, is not prepared to accept anything other than “tax cuts” as a solution to anything. Consequently, they’re not really even prepared to accept the premise that other problems exist. Tax cuts can’t solve climate change, so there must be no such thing! Tax cuts can’t curb inequality, so there must not be a problem with growing inequality.

If you’re a white guy looking to vent about how Puerto Rican women growing up poor in the Bronx get unfair advantages in life, the conservative movement has a lot to offer you. But otherwise there’s nothing there policywise. That’s not, however, because there are no organizations out there capable of developing or marketing policy. It’s because the movement has become unremittingly hostile to constructive policymaking. Everybody’s too busy cowering in fear from Rush Limbaugh to come up with anything.

Politics

McCain’s former economic adviser flips on Bush tax cuts.

eakinwatch.jpgThroughout the presidential campaign, Sen. John McCain’s (R-AZ) top economic adviser and former CBO director, Douglas Holtz Eakin, argued passionately for McCain’s proposal to extend the Bush tax cuts (and cut some more taxes for the wealthy on top of it). Holtz-Eakin, however, has now come out against making the tax cuts permanent, acknowledging that it would explode the deficit:

Though economist Douglas Holtz-Eakin spent the 2008 presidential campaign advising Sen. John McCain to defend the Bush-era tax cuts, he now thinks they should be allowed to expire on Dec. 31, 2010 due to “the prospect of an Argentina-style fiscal meltdown.” Said Holtz-Eakin: “If you ask: ‘Who pays the taxes?’, it’s the first step toward not having the answer be: ‘Our kids.’”

Recall, McCain also flip-flopped on the Bush tax cuts, but he opposed the cuts in 2001 and argued for them in 2008.

Yglesias

The IndyMac Example: Nationalization Works

indymac.jpg

Branches of the bank formerly known as IndyMac, the largest bank nationalized by the FDIC during the current crisis, reopened today under new management and new ownership. As Pat Garofalo observes, “Even though it cost more than originally estimated, the successful nationalization and re-privatization of IndyMac — the fourth largest bank ever seized by federal regulators — shows that taking over troubled financial institutions, clearing them of their troubled assets, and selling them back to the private sector can be done.”

Nobody should kid themselves about the costs involved. Nationalizing larger institutions wouldn’t be an alternative to the federal government spending a ton of money. But at the same time, avoiding nationalization while keeping zombie institutions afloat isn’t a low-cost alternative to nationalization. And as we’re seeing with the furor over the AIG bonuses, keeping public officials at arm’s length from managing an institution that depends on government support to stay in business hardly succeeds in keeping the institution out of political controversy. All it does is muddy the lines of authority and responsibility, making it difficult to maintain consistent and politically sustainable policies.

Working with very large institutions would not be the same as working with IndyMac. In all likelihood looking at new legislation is a good idea as some kind of new process would need to be set up. Still, this solution remains the best approach. If the administration’s in need of political cover, they can bring nationalization support Doug Holtz-Eakin on board.

Yglesias

Doug Holtz-Eakin Calls for Bank Nationalization

holtz_eakin_medium.jpg

I wonder if Doug Holtz-Eakin has talked to John McCain about this idea. I bet he could do more good for the world talking it up than wasting his time with inane Twitters. At any rate, I think DHE is making sense:

The right thing to do is to apply the principles of responsibility and competition, and the lessons of history to get this right. The most important lesson is that failed, insolvent banks cannot be permitted to continue to operate using taxpayers’ subsidies. Letting these “zombies” walk the financial system was at the heart of the savings and loan crisis and the slow Japanese recovery from its financial crisis. These institutions should be taken over, their management and shareholders suffer the consequences of their failure, and the assets re-sold to private sector entities as fast as is feasible. That’s good policy: discipline failure, promote real competition, and use assets effectively in the private sector.

This, of course, is the nationalization option promoted by Paul Krugman, Simon Johnson, and unwashed bloggers like yours truly.

Health

Holtz-Eakin Implosion Watch: Admits Inferiority Of Individual Health Care Plans…Again

eakinwatch.jpgEarlier this month — after previously maintaining that Sen. John McCain’s health care proposal would lower costs by allowing healthier Americans to find cheaper coverage in the individual market — McCain senior policy adviser Douglas Holtz-Eakin argued that “younger and healthier employees with the McCain health care tax credit will have a bigger incentive to stay with the employers“ because employers offer better coverage than individual health care plans.

At the time, the Wonk Room considered Holtz-Eakin’s remark an unfortunate, if somewhat desperate argument, which betrayed a disorganized campaign frantic to convince voters that they won’t lose their employer-sponsored coverage.

But as the days passed and the campaign moved into its home stretch, Holtz-Eakin’s comments ranged from the bizarre to the truthful:

- On CNBC, Holtz-Eakin asserted that “you can’t cut taxes for 95 percent of the American people, if just under 50 percent aren’t paying taxes” and then claimed that McCain would cut taxes for “everybody.”

- Last week, during a segment on Bloomberg television, Holtz-Eakin finally admitted that temporarily cutting the capital gains tax would overwhelmingly benefit millionaires

- On Bloomberg, Holtz-Eakin conceded that McCain’s health care tax credit wouldn’t cover the entire cost of a comprehensive health plan and would only allow some Americans to buy insurance in the individual market.

- On Face the Nation this Sunday, Holtz-Eakin seemed to argue that carbon dioxide is not a pollutant.

And so it is with great fanfare and anticipation that the Wonk Room unveils The Holtz-Eakin Implosion Watch, a semi-regular series chronicling Holtz-Eakin’s truthiest moments in the waning days of the campaign.

Today, Holtz-Eakin again strays off message, telling CNN, “younger, healthier workers likely wouldn’t abandon their company-sponsored plans“:

“Why would they leave?” said Holtz-Eakin. “What they are getting from their employer is way better than what they could get with the credit.”

Hotlz-Eakin argues that “under McCain’s plan, employer-funded care will generally be preferable to the tax credit alone — since it’s the tax credit plus the employer contribution — but that the tax credit alone will be a huge step up for people who have nothing at all.” In other words, in the individual market, without the employer contribution, Americans would have to pay more for less…and less as McCain’s tax credit does not keep up with medical inflation.

In fact, high deductible plans typically lead to higher out-of-pocket expenses, resulting in “a one-time shift in spending from premiums to patient out-of-pocket outlays.” As Holtz-Eakin himself points out:

McCain’s would leave them better off than they are now, but still with something less than complete coverage, unless they reach into their pockets to supplement the tax credit.

Oddly enough, Holtz-Eakin is now arguing that under McCain’s health care plan (which pushes about 20 million Americans out of the employer market and into the unregulated individual market), Americans would receive sub-prime health care coverage.

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