Felix Salmon

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Ben Stein, last week, was all in favor of the government spending vast amounts of money.

A truly serious stimulus package is very much in order. It has to be big enough and last long enough that Americans do not just sock it away under the mattress. We cannot nickel-and-dime our way out of this. The inflation threat is small in an economy in full credit-collapse mode. There is virtually no dose of stimulus that is too much in an economy as shellshocked as today's.

This week, however, he's not at all sure that the government should embark on projects which will "cost some real money":

Will the new administration be prepared to require that public works employees be union members? If so, of what union?

No matter how this is handled, someone will be unhappy. It will cost some real money if they are union members, and will cause some anger if they aren't. Business won't like it if wages rise in an area where it has flourished with low-wage workers.

It's quite astonishing, what Stein can contrive to be worried about when it comes to a stimulus package. He's saying that such a package might be spent on public works. And if it's spent on public works, the employees might be unionized. And if the employees are unionized, they might get paid more. And if they're paid more, wages generally might rise. And if wages generally rise, that might hurt other businesses' profit margins. That's four "ifs" and five "mights" right there -- all for the seeming purpose of worrying about a world in which the Obama administration has magically solved the problem of rising unemployment. (Never mind, of course, the fact that most businesses actually like it when their customers earn more money, or the fact that most normal people consider a pay rise to be a good thing, or the fact that any area which competes on the basis of "low-wage workers" has much bigger things to worry about, in this age of globalization, than federal public-works projects.)

Stein's also weirdly grumpy about the choice of Tim Geithner as Treasury secretary, even though he is "the world's most ardent fan of Paul A. Volcker and Lawrence Summers". Maybe he should ask Volcker and Summers what they think of Geithner -- but no, he's already decided that Geithner is "the pre-eminent careerist of old-time finance":

In what sense is he "change you can believe in"? How is he part of the solution, not part of the problem?

It might be instructive, here, to remind ourselves of George W Bush's choices of Treasury secretary. First there was the former CEO of Alcoa (AA), then there was the former CEO of CSX, and finally there was the former CEO of Goldman Sachs (GS). All of them businessmen who had become hugely wealthy in the private sector before being charged with taking that experience and applying it to the economy as a whole.

Does Geithner represent a significant change from that pattern? Absolutely, yes: He's been in public service for essentially his entire career. We now have the regulator, not the regulated, in charge: the gamekeeper, not the poachers. He might be a careerist, but only in a Washington sense: He's never accepted any of the high-paying private-sector job offers which have undoubtedly come his way.

Stein then starts attacking the idea of public works as an intelligent way to spend a fiscal stimulus, without giving any indication of what might be a better alternative. I suspect he's thinking a policy of tax cuts -- a blunderbuss which will have no legacy of improvements to national infrastructure and which would be very difficult to target in a strategic way.

Stein ends off by implying that Ben Bernanke is being influenced by the appointments that Obama has announced to date:

Mr. Obama will have some fine economists on his staff, including Mr. Summers, the powerful Mr. Volcker and Christina D. Romer of the University of California, Berkeley. They can help figure out what works and what is fantasy. Already, their waiting in the wings is jolting the current administration's team into a giant-sized monetary stimulus.

Ah, wait a minute, I think I understand what Stein's issue with Geithner is: He's not an economist. (Well, he does have a Master's in International Economics and East Asian Studies, but never mind that.) Stein fancies himself an economist, remember, and that probably explains why he loves Summers so much yet has so little time for Geithner -- a man who worked hand-in-hand with Summers during the latter's tenure at Treasury.

In any event, Stein declares, after admiring all these fine economists, that he has "hope" for the Obama administration. Which is one endorsement I'm sure they all could do without.

This article has 19 comments:

  •  
    Ben Stein lost a lot of credibility when dismissed the housing crash as contained to subprime. I'll admit he even fooled me for a while until I started digging deeper.
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    Nov 30 07:52 PM
    Ben Stein is just another over paid shill, another over paid poster boy for zero accountability. When the crap finally hit the fan, after months and months of him telling people everything was OK, and to buy stocks, he doesnt get hurt.
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  •  
    Nov 30 08:43 PM
    Stein needs to be concerned about his portfolio, he's been pounding the table to buy financials for 18 months.
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  •  
    Nov 30 09:51 PM
    Ben Stein is a joke hell bent on pumping the market.

    Felix, please leave him over on Y!.
    Reply | Link to Comment
  •  
    Nov 30 11:16 PM
    I don't think this Ben Stein guy is worth writing a column about. To me, he's just another Kool Aid drinker with an axe to grind and as much credibility as the run of the mill bubblehead. I still remember his statements about the wonderful everlasting boom brought upon us by Wall Street ingenuity and deregulation.
    Reply | Link to Comment
  •  
    Dec 01 01:48 AM
    Finding examples of Ben's stupidity is like shooting fish in a barrel
    Reply | Link to Comment
  •  
    Dec 01 01:53 AM
    Felix, watching Ben Stein is beneath you. Don't waste your time...
    Reply | Link to Comment
  •  
    Dec 01 01:54 AM
    Stein always made me chuckle. Never took him seriously. Still don't.
    Reply | Link to Comment
  •  
    Dec 01 08:59 AM
    Ben Stein needs to go back to his roots of teaching Ferris Buler about history!
    Reply | Link to Comment
  •  
    Dec 01 09:01 AM
    Ben Stein needs to go back his original roots of teaching Ferris Buler!

    Bu-ler....Bu-ler...Bu-...
    Reply | Link to Comment
  •  
    Dec 01 09:04 AM
    Stein is a paid-for RNC shill in the same vein as Kudlow and the Goldilocks con he ran on people for so long, spouting whatever nonsense their masters tell them to spout - even after the economy had started crashing this past spring they were pumping the great job the Republikaners had done for "us".
    Reply | Link to Comment
  •  
    Dec 01 10:51 AM
    Stein is a fool and always has been. Why anybody pays him the slightest attention is beyond me.
    Reply | Link to Comment
  •  
    Dec 01 10:53 AM
    Stein is a fool and always has been. Why anybody would pay him the slightest attention is beyond me.
    Reply | Link to Comment
  •  
    Dec 01 11:02 AM
    That was a very nice riff on an old, out-of-tune guitar called Ben Stein.

    Stein was born in Washington D.C. and started out as a speechwriter for Richard Nixon.

    He's got a big ego and he is a talented actor.

    Like a lot of conservatives, he makes outlandish statements which he pretends were meant to be humorous if they are judged stupid, offensive or too wide of the mark.

    But not too many people are laughing anymore.
    Reply | Link to Comment
  •  
    Dec 01 11:06 AM
    Ben Stein and Anatole Kaletsky, of the Times of London, are two peas in a pod.

    Time to boil and eat them.
    Reply | Link to Comment
  •  
    Dec 01 12:26 PM
    Mr. Volcker a fine economist??? Sure, if you really want to kill the housing industry, which is almost what he accomplished in the early '80's. Volcker knows about stimulus, like W knows opera.
    Reply | Link to Comment
  •  
    Dec 01 01:29 PM
    Ben has a funny and unique comic delivery and is a pretty well informed, smart guy. But, that is all he is.

    He is an interesting entertainer, but certainly is not qualified to give us financial nor gov't advice.

    So very odd how some people in Hollywood think they can turn a career as an entertainer into a totally different one, one of getting paid for spouting advice from disparate fields far outside of entertainment that some people might respect and then follow. And, some dopes surely do. What a country.
    Reply | Link to Comment
  •  
    Dec 01 01:50 PM
    Ben Stein reached the high point of his career with Ferris Beuller. it's been downhill ever since.
    Reply | Link to Comment
  •  
    Dec 01 11:35 PM
    Felix Salmon is the one who should be criticized on this blog. If anyone commenting would have used the links to Ben Stein's columns, they would find Felix is being disingenuous. Stein is NOT inconistent. He is only pointing out that any BIG stimulus should not be like the 1930s WPA. This is not a flip-flop as Felix implies. I know this because I actually READ Stein's articles rather than relied on Felix Salmon. But then everyone on this blog who criticizes is a genius, right? They're so much better than Ben Stein and can prove him wrong without any research at all. So what do I know? I know NOT to listen to Felix Salmon--he's a blowhard and just proved it.
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