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FAIR
post
January 8, 2021

Billionaire-Owned Media Look Out for Neediest by Demanding They Get No More Money

Alan MacLeod
Billionaire-Owned Media Look Out for Neediest by Demanding They Get No More Money

 

A lot of extremely rich people seem to be against the idea of giving money to the rest of us. In recent weeks, as the US continues to flounder amidst a surging Covid-19 epidemic, a wide range of political figures, from Bernie Sanders to Donald Trump, have come out in support of a one-time $2,000 check to Americans who make less than $75,000.

WaPo: Why Increasing the Stimulus Checks From $600 to $2,000 Is a Bad Idea

Washington Post (12/29/20)

Chief among the doubters of the plan have been corporate media. A Washington Post editorial (12/29/20) denounced the project as a “bad idea” that would compound all the government’s errors from the previous nine months. As is tradition with the Post (FAIR.org, 3/8/16, 2/24/20, 4/6/20), the editorial board reserved its strongest denunciations for the independent senator from Vermont. “Especially wrongheaded in this regard is the progressive left, spearheaded by Sen. Bernie Sanders,” it wrote, scoffing at Sanders portrayal of “desperate Americans” in need of aid, because “huge amounts” would go to “perfectly comfortable families.”

They did acknowledge the need for something to be done, but advised that the money would be better spent on “longer extension of unemployment benefits, aid to state and local governments, and vaccines.” Of course, the choice on the table when the Post published its editorial was not whether to distribute money as stimulus checks or to target that money to unemployment benefits and to state and local governments, but to spend additional money on stimulus or not spend it at all. As Eric Levitz noted in New York (12/29/20):

Donald Trump is not about to force Republican senators to support federalizing unemployment insurance. It’s $2,000 checks for almost all, or inadequate aid to the poor.

Given that choice between stimulus or nothing, the Post picked nothing, concluding that the proposed relief would amount to simply “blowing nearly half a trillion taxpayer dollars.”

Apart from the matter of whether helping people keep the wolf from the door is “blowing” it,  how much is half a trillion dollars, really? The increase in wealth of the top 15 richest Americans in 2020 alone is enough to cover the entire cost of the $464 billion plan. US billionaires taken together have seen their wealth rise by almost $2 trillion in 2020, so they could fund the plan while still keeping three-quarters of their gains.

The Post’s owner (and world’s richest human) Jeff Bezos has increased his own wealth from $113 billion to $186 billion since the start of the pandemic, according to the Forbes billionaire list. While that 65% increase wouldn’t allow Bezos to pay for the stimulus by himself, he could personally mail a $300 check to every American adult and still be as rich as he was in March. He could even use his own Amazon delivery service to do it.

Don’t hold your breath for the Post to advocate for such a measure, however, as the newspaper has always assiduously protected its plutocratic owner from scrutiny (FAIR.org, 5/22/15, 7/28/17) and diligently promoted his interests to its readers (FAIR.org, 10/25/17, 3/14/18, 7/25/18).

The Post, by the way, is in favor of $2,000 checks—for some. Last week, it announced that all its employees would be given a special $2,021 bonus for their “exceptional service through the challenges of 2020.” Two grand for me, but not for thee.

Bloomberg: Trump's $2,000 Stimulus Checks Are a Big Mistake

Bloomberg (12/27/20)

Not to be outdone, Bloomberg (12/27/20) published a bitter attack on the idea from former Treasury secretary, World Bank chief economist, National Economic Council director and Harvard University president Lawrence Summers, who warned that a $2,000 check would be a “big mistake,” as it risked “overheating the economy.” Like the Post, Summers accepted that some kind of action was necessary, writing that “victims of Covid-19 disruption can and should receive generous targeted support, as should the poor,” but suggested that $2,000 was simply too much. “There is no good economic argument for the $2,000 checks,” he categorically concluded.

The economic argument for stimulus checks, actually, is that the economy is in need of stimulus—and as US employment is still down more than 6% from where it was in February, it’s a persuasive point. Stimulus does not have to go only to the neediest to stimulate; it simply has to go to people who are likely to use it. A $2,000 boost would also help state and local governments by increasing local spending and generating sales tax revenues.

And the widely touted (though politically unlikely) alternative of expanding unemployment benefits would, in fact, miss many of the neediest people who would be helped by a broader based stimulus. As the People’s Policy Project (12/17/20) has pointed out, many of those who are currently living in poverty and food insecurity—namely, the long-term unemployed, the elderly and disabled—are ineligible for unemployment benefits, meaning that shifting the stimulus funds to that program wouldn’t help them at all.

Furthermore, the checks are already means-tested, so the bogeyman of the multi-millionaire family throwing an extra $2,000 onto their already enormous pile is a false one.

Why anyone should take anything Summers says on the economy as gospel is unclear. While Chief Economist at the World Bank, his organization pushed devastating austerity measures on much of the developing world. Summers was also one of the masterminds behind the Clinton-era deregulation of the finance sector, policies which led to the collapse of the US economy in 2008. And as head of Harvard, he took reckless risks with its endowment, moves that reportedly lost the university $1.8 billion.

Bloomberg, of course, is owned and operated by Michael Bloomberg, the world’s 23rd richest individual, and a 2020 presidential candidate held up by corporate media as the antidote to both Sanders and Trump (FAIR.org, 2/14/20). Bloomberg was endorsed by influential New York Times columnists like Thomas Friedman (11/12/19) and Bret Stephens (11/8/19). Like Bezos, he has also seen his wealth rise during a time of global economic collapse.

The Times’ heavyweight columnists, unsurprisingly, also came out against giving money directly to Americans. “We need to invest in infrastructure,” Friedman complained on Twitter (12/30/20).

We need to buttress our cities that are running out of money. We need to invest in infrastructure. But a $2,000 untargeted giveaway, in many cases to people who don’t need the help, is crazy. Can we stop and think?

Economist/columnist Paul Krugman (Twitter, 12/29/20) expressed a similar sentiment, lamenting that such a “divisive” idea was “not great policy” (as “the economics aren’t very good”), but may be politically “necessary part of selling the deal” for any aid at all. Given that the public support the idea of sending the checks by a margin of 78% to 17%, it is clear that, in this instance, Krugman is using “divisive” in its Newspeak definition, meaning “controversial among the ultra-wealthy donor class.”

The $2,000 check is indeed far from a perfect plan to help ordinary Americans, yet if it is the only plan currently on the table, many in corporate media are inclined to leave it there. “How to pay for it” is the question they perennially ask when the prospect of helping ordinary people is raised. One very simple solution would be to tax a handful of their multi-billionaire owners. Don’t expect the press to be suggesting that any time soon, however; their role is to represent their owners’ interests, not challenge them.

 

 

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Filed under: Budget, Coronavirus, Economy

Alan MacLeod

Alan MacLeod

Alan MacLeod @AlanRMacLeod is a member of the Glasgow University Media Group. His latest book, Propaganda in the Information Age: Still Manufacturing Consent, was published by Routledge in May 2019.

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Comments

  1. AvatarDoug Latimer

    January 8, 2021 at 7:28 pm

    Scrooging us all year ’round

    Reply
  2. AvatarLarry Erickson

    January 8, 2021 at 11:26 pm

    It strikes me that all this pontificating about how ordinary people “don’t need” a stimulus check means that the media moguls making the claim should raise no objections to a significant increase in their taxes, as they obviously need such money even less.

    Reply
  3. AvatarJesse Wilson

    January 11, 2021 at 6:22 pm

    How to “pay for it” is a trick they use for any progressive plan. The answer is to pay for it the same way they pay for military expenditures or corporate bailouts – just appropriate the money.

    Reply
  4. AvatarGeorge Trudeau

    January 12, 2021 at 1:28 am

    Anyone wanting to understand the rich would do well to get the book “Money And Class In America” by one of the greatest essayist’s in our times: Mr. Louis H. Lapham. The rich must always get richer, even when they hit 95 years old they are still grasping for that next billion dollars, none of them understanding that their coffin will be empty except for their bodies. “To die rich, is to have lived in vain.” J. Krishnamurti……

    Reply
  5. AvatarGeoff Burns

    January 12, 2021 at 1:22 pm

    Wow, Alan, you seem to be everywhere these days, continuing your ad hominem attack on Larry Summers. I am no fan of Summers, but it is always best to counter a person’s argument rather than attack the person. BTW, who initiated the idea of a $2000 check? Oh yeah, it was Trump. Is he your economic guru, Alan?

    You say, “Stimulus does not have to go only to the neediest to stimulate; it simply has to go to people who are likely to use it. A $2,000 boost would also help state and local governments by increasing local spending and generating sales tax revenues.” But is it true that the bulk of this helicopter money dump would be spent? Retail sales are up 4% YOY. Consumer spending is only a problem where spending isn’t possible due to pandemic related closures. How much of this money would be used to further inflate the stock market bubble? Or housing costs (which would adversely affect the people you purport to help)?

    Yes, a significant percentage of the population is in dire need. We must enact policies targeted to help them. But a gratuitous money dump, while obviously popular with the public and politically expedient, will likely have damaging effects to the economy that will end up hurting the most vulnerable among us.

    Reply
    • AvatarJoshua Irish

      January 14, 2021 at 11:21 pm

      Geoff,
      The last money distributed was mostly spent, a small portion saved.
      That is what the economy needs.
      And, no, Trump didn’t come up with the $2000 idea…..that, as usual, was Bernie Sanders, like back in August, I think?
      Trump doesn’t come up with policy ideas ever….he just cherry picks a few Progressive ideas over here, so he can cover for the mass corruption/racism he engages in over there.
      As for the idea of “targeted aid”, people like myself who get the aid & spend the money, also get a good portion of that turned back into income taxes come April 15th.
      Also, you seem to be missing the fact that the $2000 is the only plan on the table, as Alan notes. When you would rather do nothing in a disaster, than do something that isn’t perfect, you are essentially siding with the disaster.
      Also, I am interested in the “damaging effects” on the economy that say will happen. Will the be worse than the people suffering from need right now? If so, how much worse? If they won’t be worse, why should we care?

      As for Larry Summers, Is it ad hominem to attack the credibility of a supposed “economics expert” when his actions show a reckless disregard for stable economies? Or they seem designed to inflame the suffering of the poor, to help the rich get a few percent better return on their investments? It is truth telling about who a messenger is, versus who they have purported to be.

      Reply
      • AvatarGeoff Burns

        January 16, 2021 at 2:27 pm

        Your statement: “The last money distributed was mostly spent, a small portion saved.”

        The NY Fed did a survey on how the last stimulus checks were spent. Their findings:

        Consumption: 29%
        Savings: 36%
        Debt Repayment: 35%

        They also asked how respondents would spend a second stimulus check.

        Consumption: 24%
        Saving: 45%
        Debt Repayment: 31%

        Retail sales fell off a cliff last April, not because consumers didn’t have money to spend but because the retail sector was shut down. It has since partially recovered.

        Potential negative effects of helicoptering money include inflation that would drive the cost of rent and food higher. Without a corresponding rise in wages this would hurt the very people this policy is intended to help. Just because this is the only proposal on the table doesn’t mean that it is a good proposal. More than 90% of Americans would qualify for the second round of stimulus, the majority of whom have been unaffected economically by the pandemic. This money dump is a very inefficient and potentially harmful way to help those in need.

        Bernie’s proposal made last May was far more generous than Trump’s. He proposed sending $2000 checks every month until the pandemic has passed. A family of 4 with an income of less than $200,000 would get an additional $96,000 a year. I’ll let you judge for yourself the efficacy of his proposal.

        I believe that proposals must be argued on their merits, not on the perceived reputation of the person making the proposal. I have admired Bernie for almost 30 years now and supported both of his campaigns for the presidency. But I don’t agree with him on how best to help those who are hurting during this pandemic.

        Reply
  6. AvatarJeffrey Ginsberg

    January 20, 2021 at 11:31 am

    Larry Summer was responsible for the slow recovery from the Great 2008 recession, by halving the recovery program !

    Reply

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