I Still Like Mike

Who is to blame for the Depression that we find ourselves in?  Some bloggers blame the economic stimulus program of Obama, despite it starting before he became President.  Others like to point to Bush, on whose watch the big downturn started.  Neither of these pat answers sounds all that great when you think about how much influence a President has on the economy, however.  Does a nation this big really turn so quickly?

A little bit of analysis shows that if you have to blame policies from Washington, the best place to go is back a full generation – to Ronald Reagan.  There are two distinct inflection points in both National Debt and Balance of Trade – what Democrats like Mike Dukkakis used to call the “Twin Deficits” – that clearly point to policy changes from that time.

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The 70s

Every New Year, the memory comes back to me as if it happened yesterday.  Craig turned to me in homeroom and said, “Can you believe the 70s are nearly over?”  31 years on it seems more like a ghost than a question.  But the 70s, as a decade, were a lot more than really bad hair, clothes, and dancing.  A lot of interesting things crystallized at this time that define the world we live in now.

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Political Violence

A shocking act of political violence has turned our politics in on itself.  The attempted murder of a Congresswoman who had endured many threats and survived a number of frightening situations begs to have made sense of it.  The gunman appears to be nothing more than a lone nut acting out his own mental illness, but that doesn’t change the pressure placed on our politics by tough, violent talk over the last several years.  What can we possibly make of it?

A step back is essential when something like this happens.  I’d like to do my part to make sense of what is often called “senseless”.

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Jesse Checks

On Monday, Mark Dayton officially became Minnesota’s Governor.  He joins many new governors around the US who started this week with their swearing-in and are likely to end it with a swearing-at.  The job isn’t easy with the river of red ink confronting nearly every state, and we are no exception.  The size of the gap for the next two year cycle (2012-2013) is 6.2B$, which is to say about 16% of the total General Fund Budget for the same time period.

The festivities surrounding the new Governor’s official acceptance of this responsibility are probably the last time we’ll have a chance to reflect back on what might have been before every politician in the state rolls up their sleeves and gets to swinging their fists … er, gets to work.  It’s as good of a time as any to remember that 12 years ago we started handing out what would be known as “Jesse Checks”, the sales tax rebate that totaled $2.6B over a three year period.

What would the Legislature do with that money now?

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