How the World Works

The spending spree that never happened

In February, I asked Salon's readers how they intended to spend their fiscal stimulus checks. By and large, with a couple of notable exceptions (hookers and blow!) you all presented yourself as a reasonably responsible bunch. The vast majority declared you would either pay down your debt or sock it away as savings.

And guess what? Apparently, the entire nation followed the same plan. Writing in the Wall Street Journal today, economist Martin Feldstein says that the most recent government statistics indicate that only 10-20 percent of the economic stimulus checks were spent.

Tax rebates of $78 billion arrived in the second quarter of the year. The government's recent GDP figures show that the level of consumer outlays only rose by an extra $12 billion, or 15% of the lost revenue. The rest went into savings, including the paydown of debt.

Feldstein originally supported the tax rebate plan, but now uses its supposed failure to argue that Obama's plan for a second stimulus boost won't work either.

Perhaps not. But isn't the real story here the implicit recognition on the part of the American public that we are mired in too much debt and maybe, just maybe, spending even more money isn't the best way to extricate ourselves from the morass?

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Obama: "A clean break from a troubled past"
The president-elect makes his case to the nation for immediate action on the economy. Let's hope Senate Republicans were listening.
Even Wal-Mart gets the blues
Cutbacks in discretionary spending take their toll, even at the "low-price leader"
How humans cooled the earth -- 500 years ago
After pandemics caused a mass die-off in the New World, farmland turned to forest and temperatures dropped

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