Robert
Reich's Developing Plan to Co-Opt the Tea Party
by
Robert Wenzel
Economic
Policy Journal
Recently
by Robert Wenzel: Another
Ron Paul Critic at the Fed: 'I Know Some Powerful People'
I
am on the West Coast, in the San Francisco area. Whenever I am out
here, I try to get a sense for what is going on at the epicenter
of the Regressive Movement. Such an opportunity was provided to
me late yesterday afternoon when former Labor Secretary Robert Reich
delivered, at the University of Califonia-Berkeley, the Barbara
Weinstock Memorial Lecture on the Morals of Trade.
He started
his lecture by telling us that "morals of trade" in the
late 19th century, included economics, so that he was justified
in giving a speech on economics and then he proceeded to deliver
a mostly political speech.
He's no Bob
Murphy, but Reich could have a second career as a stand-up comic.
He's comfortable speaking in front of a crowd and his timing is
good when he delivers jokes.
He told us
that once when he was debating an issue on television, that during
a commercial break, the producer said into his ear plug that he
needed to get angrier in the debate. He replied to the producer
that he thought the debate was going just fine, but the producer
reiterated that he needed to become angrier because people flipping
channels will stop when they hear an angry debate. This he said
got his temperature boiling.
In watching
him speak, I got the sense that he is a surface guy. He seemed to
be aware of all the topics of the day, but there really wasn't any
depth to his knowledge. He seemed to keep up on events, but that
was about it.
I once knew
a "high class" stripper that reminded me of Reich. She
didn't seem to have a particular interest in world affairs, but
would force herself to watch at least an hour of news everyday.
I got the sense that she did this so that during breaks between
lap dances at work, she would have a working knowledge about what
men were talking to her about. She might for example recognize the
name Hosni Mubarek, but most certainly would not know that the Shah
of Iran was a dictator propped up by the U.S. and that he was replaced
during the revolution by Ayatollah Khomeini.
This was the
sense I got about Reich. Now, I can't imagine the man providing
a lap dance, but he rattled off knowledge the way my friend could
rattle off knowledge about headlines, and given that Reich gives
a lot of speeches, if he wasn't an in depth thinker, this surface
"lap knowledge" in economics would serve him well.
Getting this
sense, and given that he writes a lot of books about economics,
I decided to have a little fun with Reich during Q&A. I asked
him about excess reserves and the fact that there were a trillion
dollars sitting there because Bernanke had started to pay interest
on them and I asked him if this was a mistake.
He clearly
didn't have a clue about excess reserves and started to rattle off
about risk that execs didn't want to take. I stopped him and replied
that this wasn't about risk but the fact that Bernanke was paying,
risk free to banks, an interest rate that was 3 to 4 times the comparable
T-bill rates. He went on to make a total fabricated point as if
at the recent FOMC meeting there was some big discussion about excess
reserves. It was obvious at this point that he was just going to
continue to make inane comments, so I stopped pushing the question.
But the point
is clear, he's a real surface guy when it comes to economics, despite
all the books he has written on the topic. I have had discussions
about the Fed with another member of Bill Clinton's cabinet, where
we have debated and discussed many Fed-related topics, including
excess reserves. This cabinet member's knowledge of economics is
deep and there appears to be a real search for knowledge. In comparison,
Reich is running a carnival act.
Read
the rest of the article
March
18, 2011
©2011
Economic Policy Journal
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