1.
The "fiscal cliff" isn't a cliff at all
CBS NEWS/ November 26, 2012
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Warning -
fiscal cliff ahead!
News Analysis
You're
going to be hearing the phrase "fiscal cliff" a lot over the next few
weeks: The phrase has emerged as a shorthand way to describe the combination of
tax hikes and spending cuts set to start kicking in at the end of the year.
Lawmakers are now feverishly negotiating over how to keep many of those
spending cuts and tax increases from kicking in - to keep from what is often
described as "going off the fiscal cliff."
Yet
if no deal comes, the nation won't actually be going over a metaphorical cliff.
The word cliff implies an all-or-nothing situation - once you go over a cliff
you plummet to earth. There's no going back.
But
the situation the nation faces is not like that. The so-called "fiscal
cliff," in fact, would be more accurately described as a "gradual
fiscal slope." Though that admittedly doesn't have quite the same ring to
it.
There
are two parts to the so-called fiscal cliff. The first is the scheduled
expiration of the tax cuts enacted in 2001 and 2003 under President George W.
Bush, the payroll tax holiday enacted under President Obama, and a host of
other tax breaks. The second is $1.2 trillion in automatic spending cuts to
defense and domestic programs that are looming due to a 2011 deal that resulted
from House Republicans' reluctance to raise the debt limit.
Now,
it's true that if lawmakers fail to work out any sort of deal, there will be
severe long-term consequences for the economy: According to the Tax Policy
Center, going off the "cliff" would affect 88 percent of U.S.
taxpayers, with their taxes rising by an average of $3,500 a year. Many
economists, as well as the nonpartisan Congressional Budget Office, say the
combination of spending cuts and tax hikes that are set to take effect would
tip the economy into a new recession. The Congressional Budget Office has
forecast that implementing all the mandated government spending cuts and tax
hikes would reduce real GDP by 0.5 percent in 2013, with growth sinking in the
first half of the year before resuming at a modest clip later in the year. The
CBO forecasts that inaction would push up the unemployment rate to 9.1 percent
by the end of 2013.
Can the U.S. economy
endure the fiscal cliff?
But
here's the thing: If the nation goes over the cliff - but then lawmakers work
out a deal in, say, late January - it will not be nearly as bad as all that
suggests. It's true that many of us would see slightly more money coming out of
our paychecks at the start of the year, but lawmakers could retroactively
reverse the tax hike once they work out a deal. (You'd then effectively get a
bonus in your next paycheck.) Since both parties agree that the Bush-era tax
cuts should be extended for the vast majority of Americans, it's unlikely that
most of us would end up taking a serious hit over the long run.
2. U.S.
set for fracking bonanza, says historian Ferguson - CNN.com
CNN November 23, 2012
Hong
Kong (CNN) -- If there's been one consistent thread running through the U.S.
economic story since 2008, it's been the steady drumbeat of gloom.
Outright
recession or sub-standard growth, stubbornly high unemployment and fiscal
crises have been the topics du jour when it comes to the world's biggest
economy.
But
now an unlikely champion for U.S. growth under the Obama administration has
emerged -- a former adviser to a Republican Party presidential candidate and
Harvard history professor, Niall Ferguson, who says America could actually be
heading toward a new economic "golden age."
And
it has nothing to do with Washington and everything to do with energy.
Ferguson,
who is also an author and commentator, believes the production of natural gas
and oil from shale formations via a process known as "fracking" --
forcing open rocks by injecting fluid into cracks -- will be a game changer.
"This
is an absolutely huge phenomenon with massive implications for the U.S.
economy, and I think most people are still a little bit slow to appreciate just
how big this is," he said in Hong Kong this week.
"Conceivably
it does mean a new golden age."
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