Obama Jobs Bill Falls Short
WASHINGTON & SANTA FE, NM (By Fareed Zakaria) October 2. 2011 ― President Obama’s jobs bill is better than doing nothing in the face of a national crisis, but it won’t have much impact on unemployment. Many of the measures are short-term tax breaks and benefits that are unlikely to affect demand for products and services — business’s fundamental problem — and so won’t boost hiring. Moreover, many of the measures are efforts to get consumers spending again. Given what happened after Americans maxed out their credit cards and used homes as ATMs, consumers are understandably cautious.
There is one area
where government can
create demand —
regardless of
private-sector
behavior — and in a
way that is
productive for
long-term growth:
building
infrastructure. The
president’s plan
contains some
proposals for this,
but we need
something much more
ambitious. The
American Society of
Civil Engineers
estimates America’s
crumbling
infrastructure —
ranked ninth in the
world a decade ago
and, according to
the World Economic
Forum’s Global
Competitiveness
Report, now 24th and
falling — needs $2
trillion worth of
repairs, upgrades
and expansions. With
needs on that scale,
why are proposals at
one-20th that size
being floated? We
need a more
ambitious effort —
which requires a
grand bargain
between Republicans
and Democrats.
The first element of
the bargain would be
funding. Already,
there are several
good proposals for
infrastructure
banks, including
from Obama and Sen.
Kay Bailey Hutchison
(R-Tex.). They adapt
a model used in much
of the world,
particularly in
Europe. Relatively
small public
investments can be
leveraged to attract
much larger sums of
private capital.
Projects should be
awarded based on
need and merit only.
Compared with other
nations, the United
States has
astonishingly little
private-sector
involvement in the
building of
infrastructure such
as roads, bridges
and highways. Such a
bank would allow us
to create smart
public-private
partnerships that
are market-friendly
and efficient. But
Republicans would
have to agree to
make serious public
investments so banks
could take on
projects on a scale
that would make a
dent in
unemployment.
Obama said he was
surprised there are
so few shovel-ready
projects. But the
regulations, reviews
and permits required
to approve
infrastructure
ensures any major
project takes years,
often decades, to be
shovel-ready. In
fact, one study of a
set of
infrastructure
projects found, of
all countries
examined, the United
States has the
highest proportion
of projects stuck at
the “pre-approval
stage” of announced
but still three to
10 years from
construction — more
than 3.5 times the
number of such
projects, by value,
in Europe.
The other problem is
the law requiring
infrastructure
projects to pay the
“prevailing wage”
means a relatively
small number of
highly skilled
workers get all the
jobs. What if the
goal were to, say,
pay people to dig up
the concrete around
the Detroit River
and create
parklands? If people
were hired not at
union-level wages of
$26 per hour but at
half that price, an
army of unemployed
workers in that area
could be tapped. By
getting unions to
agree to
below-prevailing
wages, General
Motors has been able
to hire thousands of
workers over the
past two years.
The president should
announce a national
jobs emergency.
Infrastructure
projects listed
under this rubric
should be
fast-tracked through
the environmental
review process, with
approvals granted
within 60 days, and
the Davis-Bacon wage
requirement should
be suspended. In
return for these
exemptions,
Democrats should
seek $200 billion in
capital for the new
infrastructure
banks, which could
easily attract
private capital of
hundreds of billions
within weeks. The
efforts Obama and
Jeffrey Immelt, his
jobs czar, have made
to cut the
regulatory cycle
time are a good
start but not
enough; we need
something much
bigger and bolder.
There is really no
debate about the
need to invest in
America’s
infrastructure. The
conservative-leaning
Center for Strategic
and International
Studies issued a
report in 2006
noting U.S.
productivity and
living standards
were declining as a
consequence of
neglect. It urged
federal involvement
and investment,
pointing out
“creating
infrastructure
assets with
long-lived benefits
should not be
determined by
short-term cash
availability.” It
also noted: “Federal
deficits sap our
economic growth, and
must inevitably be
paid. But failing to
support long-term
growth could prove
even more vexing.
. . . By whatever
means, it is
imperative we make
new investments.”
Of the 2012 presidential candidates, just one was a signatory to that report on “Guiding Principles for Strengthening America’s Infrastructure.” I look forward to hearing a full-throated case for infrastructure spending during the campaign from that person — Rick Perry.











