THE drums have been beating on Wall Street all week. They belong to Operation Occupy Wall Street, organised by social activism group Adbusters, which has brought hundreds of protesters to New York's financial hub. The group does not just include your typical professional hipster protesters. Among the crowd are former white-collared mums and dads who are struggling to comprehend that they are now considered to have been unemployed ''long term'' (that is to say, they have been without a job for more than 26 weeks). They are laying the blame for the jobs crisis at the door of corporate America, which they feel is playing puppeteer to the President.
The protest is ill-timed, however, and perhaps misguided, coming in a week when President Barack Obama has been accused of engaging in ''class warfare'' for the plan that he laid out on Monday to tax the rich more. The President has been brushing up on his history and has decided to channel former president Bill Clinton, who faced the same accusation of engaging in class warfare in 1993. Instead of shying away from it, Clinton made it a centrepiece of his campaign and it struck a chord with voters. He followed through on his promise and created a new marginal rate that affected the top 1.8 per cent of income earners. Despite the Republican shrieking that it would cost millions of jobs, it is now viewed as one of the major reasons why the economy lifted during the Clinton years.
In laying out his plan to cut more than $US3 trillion in national debt over 10 years, Obama showed he had also learnt from recent history. He said that if Congress repeated the debacle witnessed during the raising of the debt ceiling then he would let all the tax cuts from 2001 and 2003 expire in 2012 and close other loopholes. He vowed to veto any bill that is sent to him that proposes cuts to Medicare without raising taxes on the super wealthy, including Wall Street. The President is making a significant shift to ensure he is not seen as a lame duck.
His $US3 trillion-plus plan includes $US447 million for his American Jobs Act unveiled two weeks ago. It promises to cut $US1.1 trillion from the drawdown of troops in Afghanistan and Iraq, $US320 billion from overpayments in the Medicare and Medicaid programs and $US33 billion in subsidies from farmers who are often paid for crops they no longer produce.
The headline measure in the package is the so-called Buffett Rule. Billionaire businessman Warren Buffett has provided Obama with some momentum by declaring that it is ''grossly unfair'' that his secretary pays a higher rate of tax than he does. Obama's plan is for those earning more than $US1 million a year to be unable to pay a lower tax rate than America's middle class. Currently middle-class Americans pay between 23 and 33 per cent in income tax, while the very wealthy can pay as little as 15 per cent.
''This is not class warfare. It's math,'' Obama said. ''It is wrong that in the United States of America, a teacher or a nurse or a construction worker who earns $US50,000 a year should pay higher tax rates than somebody pulling in $50 million.''
While Obama made positive and more decisive steps towards stronger fiscal policy this week, the 10-member board of the Federal Reserve was tackling monetary policy. Chairman Ben Bernanke has also turned to history, and an idea by another Democrat hero, John F. Kennedy, to overcome an unemployment rate he said would ''only gradually decline'' without intervention.
In 1961, Kennedy convinced the central bank to sell short-term Treasuries and use the money to buy long-term bonds. It was called Operation Twist, its name taken from the popular Chubby Checker song and used to describe the flattening of the yield curve.
On Wednesday, Bernanke said the board had voted 7-3 in favour of twisting again. He said the Fed would buy $US400 billion of Treasury securities maturing between six and 30 years and sell an equal amount of securities with maturation dates of three years or less. What that will do is bring down longer-term interest rates in the hope of encouraging companies to build new factories, consumers to buy new washing machines, and home owners to refinance their mortgages. The economic thinking is that if yields are low, it will push investors into riskier investments such as stocks.
How effective it will be is being fiercely debated. Remember, three members of the usually united Fed voted against the policy action.
John Silvia, chief economist at Wells Fargo, America's second-largest bank, says the problem with Operation Twist is that rates have been low for three years and that still isn't spurring people to buy. ''Companies won't hire unless demand is there. The Fed can lower the cost of credit, but it can't force companies to create jobs,'' he said.
Economists aren't optimistic that the Fed's move will make a dent in the 9.1 per cent unemployment rate. A Bloomberg survey of 42 economists found 61 per cent felt the plan would fail in creating jobs. About 15 per cent said it could actually be harmful to the nation's recovery.
Operation Twist hasn't left Wall Street's retail banks dancing for joy either. Most are likely to see profits weakened as they earn less on loans and investments. That is against a backdrop of already low interest rates and little demand for loans.
Ratings agency Moody's also cut the debt ratings of Bank of America, Wells Fargo and Citigroup this week, highlighting its feeling that the relationship between the US government and the big end of town is far from being as cosy as Wall Street protesters proclaimed this week.
Moody's said it believed that the government is ''more likely now than during the financial crisis to allow a large bank to fail should it become financially troubled''.
Obama and Bernanke's Back to the Future week provided the sort of boost in leadership that both required. A Clinton-style campaign could help galvanise support from Obama's home base. But the double-act around fiscal and monetary policy needs to continue. Bernanke must deploy a third round of qualitative easing if Operation Twist fails and there is no sign of job creation. Meanwhile, Obama should not miss the opportunity for significant tax reform to build on the measures already announced.
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