Senate Minority Leader Harry Reid (D-Nev.) may have been a little intemperate when he called Federal Reserve Chairman Alan Greenspan “one of the biggest political hacks we have here in Washington” last month, but then again, if the shoe fits…
Bloated budget deficits pose a danger to the nation’s long-term economic health, Federal Reserve Chairman Alan Greenspan warned anew Thursday. He issued a fresh call to policy-makers to move swiftly to get the government’s fiscal house in order. […]
Greenspan said the persistence of swollen budget deficits in the years ahead “would cause the economy to stagnate or worse” unless the situation is reversed. “The federal budget is on an unsustainable path, in which large deficits result in rising interest rates and ever-growing interest payments that augment deficits in future years,” Greenspan said.
Yeah, now he tells us. Those would be the same record-high deficits caused by Bush tax cuts that Greenspan endorsed in 2001 — and supports making permanent into the future.
Indeed, let’s not forget how tragically misguided Greenspan has been on the subject. In 2001, the Federal Reserve chairman helped boost Bush’s tax-cut package by saying it would help balance the budget.
“In today’s context, where tax reduction appears required in any event over the next several years to assist in forestalling the accumulation of private assets, starting that process sooner rather than later likely would help smooth the transition to longer-term fiscal balance.”
Later, after his mistake was plainly obvious, he tried to spin his way out of it.
When Fed chief Alan Greenspan acknowledged last week that he’d been wrong to expect tax cuts to produce budget surpluses, he cast his mistake as part of a collective, unavoidable error. “It turns out that we were all wrong, ” he told the Senate Special Committee on Aging. It was not just the belief of the Fed and the tax-hating Republicans, but “an almost universal expectation amongst experts” that cutting taxes for the wealthy would generate more government revenue.
Of course, as Hillary Clinton reminded him, “Just for the record, we were not all wrong, but many people were wrong.”
If Greenspan doesn’t want to be called a “hack,” he’ll have to stop acting like one.