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January 28, 2003 | EPI Policy Memorandum
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POLICY MEMORANDUM
SUBJECT: EPI comparison of the Daschle and
Bush economic stimulus plans
FROM: Larry Mishel, EPI president
DATE: January 28, 2003
In a December 2002 Briefing Paper, Generating
Jobs and Growth: An Economic Stimulus Plan for 2003, EPI identified
five criteria for an effective stimulus plan. A comparison shows that
the stimulus plan released by Senator Tom Daschle last week meets all
five of these criteria, while President Bush’s plan fails on every count.
Criteria #1: A stimulus package should
generate jobs and growth.
The Daschle plan would create more than a million jobs in the next
year, three times as many as President Bush’s plan. It will also help
the states protect jobs in education, police and fire protection, and
other vital services. Unlike the Bush plan, which according to top econometric
forecaster Economy.com will cost an estimated 750,000 jobs over
10 years, the Daschle plan will have no negative long-term effects.
Criteria #2: A stimulus package should
be fiscally responsible.
The Daschle plan does not rob from future generations to provide
large tax cuts for those who need them the least. It puts money into the
economy now, when it’s needed most. In addition, the plan will take action
against corporations that avoid paying their due in taxes by setting up
special tax havens. By contrast, the Bush plan will cost $670 billion
over 10 years.
Criteria #3: A stimulus plan should
take effect quickly.
The Daschle plan puts $141 billion into the economy in 2003, compared
to $50 billion in the Bush plan.
Criteria #4: A stimulus plan should
be fair.
The Daschle plan puts money into the hands of middle-income working
families who need it most and are most likely to spend it. Through $300
rebates for each adult in a family and $300 for each of the first two
children, the plan would return $71 billion to families in 2003. In addition,
the plan would extend federal unemployment insurance benefits for the
one million individuals who exhausted their benefits in 2002. Given the
increasingly unequal distribution of income in the United States, a stimulus
plan that exacerbates this inequality is not acceptable. The Bush plan’s
benefits disproportionately go to wealthy Americans who do not need extra
cash and are more likely to save the money than to put it back into the
economy.
Criteria #5: A stimulus package should
target unmet needs.
The Daschle plan provides $40 billion to preserve vital state services,
including $6 billion to ensure that every classroom has a qualified teacher
and that vital services like after-school care and summer enrichment programs
are available for the nation’s children. It also provides $4 billion for
mass transit, highway, and airport infrastructure. The Bush plan adds
no new funding for these purposes.
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