Obama’s Little Plan

Under pressure from Mitt Romney, President Obama has finally released his own policy vision for a second term. And, yes, it’s the same old, same old. Some are calling it a second first term.

There isn’t a single true economic-growth incentive in this scant plan. There’s no serious spending, deficit and debt reduction, and no attempt to solve the Social Security and health-entitlement problems, which are moving us toward bankruptcy.

Nothing. Nada.

But before getting into the details of this little plan, my basic conclusion is this: Mr. Obama wants to slash defense spending, raise all other spending and hike taxes to finance the largest government size he can possibly get.

In fact, if he had his way, I believe he would allow all the Bush tax cuts to expire in order to generate as many revenues as possible to increase the size of government. He might even propose a value-added tax (VAT) for an additional revenue grab for government unions and green energy.

And he’s already stated that across-the-board, budget-cutting sequestration will not happen. In other words, a mini-stimulus plan, like the one that didn’t work in 2009.

I think this view surfaced during the three debates. And because Mitt Romney calmly, coolly and presidentially set forth his contrasting agenda of smaller government, lower debt and deficits, pro-growth tax reform and an entitlement fix, he is now riding a popular polling wave toward victory.

The two economic visions couldn’t be more different.

Romney has shown more than 70 million TV viewers that he’s not an evil plutocrat robbing the middle class, that he won’t kill women whose health care insurance may have run out and that he’s not the man pushing granny over the cliff. People have listened carefully to his pro-growth, free-enterprise, increase-take-home-pay vision for our anemic economy, which is growing at the slowest pace in modern times going back to 1947. And they’ve learned about his deal-making experience in the business sector, and can see him reaching across the aisle to find common ground with Democrats in Congress and elsewhere. A huge point.

On the other hand, if you take a look at Obama’s so-called second-term vision, with more spending on teachers and government unions, more ineffectual job training, more green-energy cronyism, more temporary tax credits (which have no economic-growth consequences at all) and more Obamacare, it’s a pretty safe assumption that he will seek to keep government around the 25 percent of gross domestic product that he achieved in his first two years and would take that number higher if he could. In contrast, Romney has stated time and again that he wants to lower spending to 20 percent of GDP.

Outside of already counted savings from Afghanistan and Iraq and the sequestration that Obama now opposes, you can’t find any specific spending cuts anywhere in the president’s plan.

Using Congressional Budget Office assumptions of both future GDP and government revenues at 18.5 percent of GDP revenues over the next 10 years, the Obama plan would increase publicly held debt from today’s 73 percent of GDP to 99 percent of GDP. That comes to an increase of about $13 trillion in debt.

Romney, by comparison, would reduce the debt to 58 percent of GDP over the next 10 years, which is a reduction of $10.1 trillion from the current debt baseline. That implies the lowest spending rate of the Romney plan would be $23 trillion less in terms of debt than Obama’s high-spend approach.

And Romney’s 58 percent debt-to-GDP ratio would not impede economic growth, according to most economists, whereas nearly 100 percent of GDP debt from Obama certainly would.

These are all back-of-the-envelope calculations, but I think they tell an important story. And Romney has brought that story to light, even during the last debate on foreign policy. In that round, Romney borrowed two key thoughts from Ronald Reagan: First, a strong foreign policy to achieve American leadership around the world requires a strong domestic economy. Second, lower marginal tax rates, especially for the middle class, will significantly increase take-home pay, in addition to adding much-needed incentives for the investment and entrepreneurial classes.

I have argued this year that Mitt Romney is the most conservative Republican standard-bearer since Reagan. I have also argued that he’s the most underrated politician in the country. Nobody is perfect. Nobody gets it right on everything all the time. But with two weeks to go, Romney is on a roll.

To find out more about Lawrence Kudlow and read features by other Creators Syndicate writers and cartoonists, visit the Creators Syndicate web page at www.creators.com.

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Lawrence Kudlow is an American economist, television personality, and newspaper columnist. He is the host of CNBC's The Kudlow Report.

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