Thursday, March 31, 2011
Cantor: There Is No $33B Deal
A bunch of news stories today reported on a $33 billion deal to cut spending from the current-year budget. Vice President Joe Biden has been bandying this about, and at least some Senate Democrats have used it.
But Mr. Cantor steadfastly denies the deal. Earlier today, Speaker Boehner also said there was no deal.
The Tea Party Patriots group is massing out of the Capitol in a demonstration aimed at keeping the House Republicans’ spending-cut backbone completely upright. This is good. Because actually, that $33 billion spending-cut number includes the $10 billion cut from the two prior CRs. So the new number is only $23 billion.
And in round numbers, the GOP needs $60 billion or so to get back to the 2008 baseline, which was their original pledge.
Mr. Cantor emphasized bringing the spending levels back to 2008. So he added, “Nobody is rallying around that $33 billion number. That number is not a number that I subscribe to.”
The full interview with Eric Cantor will be shown tonight at 7 p.m. EST on CNBC.
On CNBC's Kudlow Report Tonight
MARKETS
- Brett Arends, Columnist The Wall Street Journal
- Jordan Kimmel, T3Live.com Market Strategist
- Lee Munson, Portfolio Chief Investment Officer
INFLATION ALERT REPORT- CNBC’s Brian Shactman reports.
JOBS REPORT PREVIEW
- Carl Riccadonna, Deutsche Bank
- Peter Morici, University of Maryland Business Professor; U.S. International Trade Commission Fmr. Chief Economist
LIBYA LATEST
- NBC’s Richard Engel reports.
KUDLOW EXCLUSIVE
INFLATION; FED BASHING, MONETARY REFORM
- Jim Grant, founder of Grant's Interest Rate Observer
BUDGET; GOVT SHUTDOWN; KILLING OBAMACARE; GROWTH PLAN
Rep. Eric Cantor (R-VA)
GE PAYING NO TAXES; TAX REFORM
- Robert Reich, Fmr. Labor Secretary; "Aftershock: The Next Economy and America's Future" author; CNBC Contributor; Univ. of CA., Berkeley, Prof - Berkeley
- Steve Moore, Senior Economics Writer for WSJ Editorial Board; "Return to Prosperity" co-author
Full-Throttle Drill, Drill, Drill
If you buy into the energy speech President Obama delivered on Wednesday, it sure sounds like we’re headed for drill, drill, drill. It would be a total reversal of policy. I guess $100-plus oil and near $4 gas at the pump — along with a consumer economic-political revolt — will do that to you.
After bashing oil and gas companies for a couple of years and instituting a virtual drilling moratorium, President Obama now says yes to offshore oil and makes a big pitch for natural gas. There may even be incentives for faster leasing and smaller royalty payments to the government.
Is it credible? Well, when you get to the fine print, it may not be.
In the fact sheet that accompanied the speech, there’s a lot of talk about “responsible development” for natural gas fracking chemicals, state regulators, tapping experts, the environmental community, and protecting public health and the environment. In other words, the standards for new drilling could be so high that there won’t be that much new drilling.
The president doesn’t discuss the role of the EPA, which is going after coal, natural gas, and oil. And while he says he’ll speed up new leases and permits, he then blames oil companies for not using their old leases. That’s an old saw of an argument that neglects to mention dry holes.
I believe natural gas is the answer to our energy problems over the long run. It’s real cheap. And we have boodles and boodles of it. While the president says we’re going to reduce oil imports by one-third in 2025 — something that sounds suspiciously like a backdoor cap that will damage job creation and growth — the U.S. is expected to be a natural-gas exporter in the next few years. That’s how much of it we have.
So it seems to me that the trick is to figure out efficient ways to pump that natural gas into cars. Or to liquefy it and then get it into cars. Or to use the steam from the gas and get it into cars. Some mass-transit systems on the West Coast are already doing this.
And here’s another rub: Heavy federal subsidies for solar and wind, which come to roughly $24 per megawatt hour, still won’t be able to compete with cheap natural gas. Solar and wind are already less than 1 percent of total electricity. If the market can produce it, fine. But there’s no evidence of that.
And then there’s the ethanol disaster.
We’ve already learned that ethanol has a heavy carbon footprint — even Al Gore acknowledges this. But we’ve also painfully learned that farmers are planting corn for ethanol instead of for food consumption. They are foregoing wheat for the corn, and all this is helping drive food prices through the roof worldwide.
You can add Ben Bernanke’s dollar-depreciation to that food inflation. And if we had King Dollar, once again convertible to gold as Lew Lehrman has proposed, then oil prices might be closer to $25 a barrel instead of $100. During the Bretton Woods period, when the dollar was linked to gold, oil was about $2.50. And today, market forces are actually reducing oil use as a share of GDP. With higher oil prices and the onset of natural gas and other alternatives, oil per unit of economic output is down about 50 percent. That’s good.
All this is why I favor market forces and a drill, drill, drill policy. The U.S. has 112 billion barrels of oil, both on- and offshore. As much as two trillion barrels are locked up in shale rock. Even excluding shale, discovered oil resources could fuel 60 million cars for about 60 years. These are all Interior Department statistics.
And by the way, market forces create significant incentives for oil, gas, coal, and nuclear producers to be as safe and environmentally sound as human engineering can make possible. They don’t want BP-level calamities. Nor do they want repeats of the Japanese disaster.
But here’s what America wants: Less government and fewer regulatory barriers in order to unleash the great American energy industry. If we do this, not only will we get the power to fuel the economy, but millions of new high-paying jobs will be created.
Does President Obama get this?
Wednesday, March 30, 2011
On CNBC's Kudlow Report Tonight
Tuesday, March 29, 2011
We Must Keep the Legacy of Reaganomics Alive
The purpose of the event, “Supply-Side Economics: From the Reagan Era to Today,” was to review four key principles of economic growth initiated by President Reagan: Low tax rates on a broad economic base, sound monetary policy, free trade, and sensible regulatory policy.
These principles are what unleashed a wave of economic growth that led to an era of unprecedented prosperity here in America. And these same principles can restore our country to prosperity today.
Joining me in a special panel discussion moderated by CNBC’s Maria Bartiromo were two terribly bright thinkers: Lew Lehrman and Lawrence Lindsey. You can watch the entire conference at the Manhattan Institute. Here are a couple excerpts from my panel remarks.
Growth solves a lot of problems, okay? Growth solves budget problems, growth solves deficit problems, growth solves debt problems. I’m all for limiting spending. I just want to say that. Yes, yes indeed. We get back to 20 percent of GDP or less on spending, I am fine with that, okay? Fine with that. But I don’t see debt as this new red menace out there. What I see is growth as the Lord’s savior to the economy and our fiscal position. . . . Just make the dollar sound and keep marginal tax rates low. The economy will grow beautifully. But if the dollar falls, as it’s been falling for ten years — on the index it’s at a ten-year low, nearly — then it neutralizes the lower tax rates, you see what I’m saying? Because commodity prices soar and the capital flows outside the country, and it’s a dreadful policy. So, low tax rates, limited government. Keep the dollar sound.
Right now, Republican presidential candidates are beginning to prepare for the upcoming election and are formulating their respective policy agendas. The key question the GOP candidates should be asked is whether they have a real pro-growth agenda. This, along with a free-market focus and a strong dollar policy, is absolutely key.
We must keep the legacy of Reaganomics alive.
On CNBC's Kudlow Report Tonight
Pawlenty for President?
Monday, March 28, 2011
The Gasoline-Driven Inflation Hike
Real income after-tax — known as real disposable income — actually fell in February. But the inflation rate jumped 0.4 percent, which is almost 5 percent annually. And while real consumer spending did rise, over the past three months it has gained by only 1.4 percent annually.
The gasoline-driven inflation hike now puts consumer inflation as measured by the personal consumption deflator at 4 percent over the last three months. That’s higher than wage and salary income. So while energy prices are bulging along with food, real wages look to be falling — not a good combination.
So I repeat my Q1 caveat emptor.
Now, all may not be lost, because manufacturing production looks strong and job creation looks somewhat better. Housing, on the other hand, is still slumping. Some smart economists I know now think Q1 GDP could be less than 2 percent. But they expect a rebound in the spring and the rest of the year.
Well, maybe so. But a lot depends on gas and food prices and other inflation factors, and that in turn depends on the dollar. If the greenback keeps sinking and producer prices for businesses keep rising, then corporate profits may really disappoint along with the slide in real consumer spending.
How about flat-tax reform and a King Dollar linked to gold?
On CNBC's Kudlow Report Tonight
Friday, March 25, 2011
On CNBC's Kudlow Report Tonight
“TEFLON” MARKET?
- Martin Weiss, Weiss Research CEO
- Michael Cuggino, Permanent Portfolio Funds; President
- Lee Munson, Portfolio Asset Management CIO
FED UNDER FIRE: BERNANKE TRANSPARENCY … POSITIVE OR NEGATIVE FOR MARKETS? WHAT SHOULD BE FIRST QUESTION TO BERNANKE? WHAT SHOULD FED BE DOING RIGHT NOW?
- Michael Pento, Euro Pacific Capital Senior Economist
- Joe LaVorgna, Deutsche Bank Chief U.S. Economist
“TEFLON” MARKET? PART II
- David Kotok, Cumberland Advisors Chairman & Chief Investment Officer; CNBC Contributor
- Michael Farr, Farr, Miller & Washington President President
- David Tice, The Prudent Bear Fund Portfolio Mgr.
FREE MARKET FRIDAY
CORPORATE TAX HOLIDAY; REPATRIATION; TAX FREE GENERAL ELECTRIC
- Steve Moore, Sr Economics Writer for WSJ Editorial Board; "Return to Prosperity" co-author; Founder & Fmr. President of the Club for Growth
- Keith Boykin, Former Clinton White House Aide; Editor of The Daily Voice online news site; CNBC contributor
- Mark Simone, WABC Radio Talk Show Host
Please join us at 7pm ET on CNBC.
A Pro-Growth Recipe for America
Wednesday, March 23, 2011
Eric Cantor’s Pro-Growth Call
So it’s appropriate enough that Republican House Majority Leader Eric Cantor unveiled a strong pro-growth economic plan at Stanford’s Hoover Institution this week. Cantor is afraid the Republican budget-cutting message is a little too austere, so he’s attempting to balance the necessary budget cuts with a pro-growth, tax-and-regulatory reform message.
Cantor focuses especially on getting business tax rates down to at least 25 percent. He also proposes a tax holiday to repatriate the foreign earnings of U.S. companies. So many CEOs have made the same argument. And this was done successfully in 2004-05. If enacted, maybe $1 trillion in cash will flow back home for new investment and jobs.
But no sooner did Cantor make this speech, than the Treasury shot down any idea of a corporate-tax holiday. I guess this is the same Treasury that works for the Obama 2.0 pro-business president. Or not.
Cantor is completely right on this. He’s also right on his other proposals to lower trade barriers and put a freeze on regulatory burdens.
Mr. Cantor also has an interesting proposal to deal with the backlog of 700,000 patent requests in order to speed American innovation and small-business creation. He also believes the visa system should be streamlined to bring in high-skilled workers from abroad in order to create new jobs at home.
It will be interesting to see if Cantor’s growth message is taken up by other Republican leaders, most particularly Paul Ryan. Will Mr. Ryan include tax-and-regulatory reform with his tough budget-cutting proposals?
The only thing missing from Eric Cantor’s speech was a monetary hook to stabilize the dollar. The GOP needs a King Dollar policy. Otherwise, all the best tax cuts will be blunted by a sinking dollar and rising inflation.
But bravo to Eric Cantor for getting out a growth message. And let’s see if the GOP presidential wannabes pick up on the need for growth plan.
Tuesday, March 22, 2011
On CNBC's Kudlow Report Tonight
THE MARKETS
-Jim Lacamp, Macroportfolio Advisors portfolio advisor
-Michael Farr, Farr, Miller & Washington president
-Mike Holland, Holland & Company chairman
SINKING DOLLAR SINKING THE ECONOMY?
-Steve Forbes, Forbes Media chairman
-David Gilmore, FX Analytics partner
DEBT THREAT: U.S. CLOSE TO INSOLVENCY?
-Steve Moore, Wall Street Journal editorial board
-Robert Reich, former Clinton Labor Secretary
ONE-ON-ONE WITH FORMER DEFENSE SECRETARY DONALD RUMSFELD
OIL SHOCK
-John Kilduff, Again Capital
-Kevin Kerr, Kerr Trading
Please join us at 7pm ET on CNBC.
Q1 Slowdown: Caveat Emptor
A recent CNBC All American Economic Survey revealed that 37 percent of respondents expect the economy to get worse in the next year. That’s up about 15 percentage points from the December poll. The key reasons? Worries over rising food and fuel costs. Respondents anticipate prices to climb 6.6 percent over the next year. That’s double the 3 percent inflation registered in the December survey.
Supporting the CNBC poll, the early March consumer sentiment index from the University of Michigan dropped sharply, with the reading for consumer expectations falling 14 points. Additionally, one-year inflation expectations have risen to 4.6 percent in March from 3.4 percent in February.
Of course, everyone has been badly shaken by the terrible disaster in Japan. For the U.S. economy, supply-chain disruptions will damage growth. Also, the civil war in Libya and the broad unrest across North Africa and the Middle East have fueled a mild oil-price shock, also subtracting from U.S. growth.
So if the economy ending in the March quarter slows to less than 3 percent, it would mark the fourth-straight sub-3 percent GDP reading. Despite the strength in the manufacturing sector and rising corporate profits, that reading would underscore the softness of this recovery cycle.
The main cause of today’s consumer angst is undoubtedly the jump in gasoline prices. Nationwide, the pump price has climbed to $3.55 a gallon, up from $3.16 a month ago and $2.82 a year ago (for a 26 percent one-year jump). The last leg of this gas-price jump can be attributed to the $10 or $12 oil-price spike, resulting from supply worries in the Arab world. But it’s worth noting that gasoline moved from $2.70 to $3.15 just as soon as Ben Bernanke announced his money-pumping QE2 strategy in late August last year.
All things the same, the gasoline price could knock a half percent off growth and add a half percent to inflation. In fact, the consumer price index has registered three consecutive outsized monthly gains, and is running 5.6 percent at an annual rate through the three months to February. This increase is led by a 79 percent increase in gasoline prices and a 5 percent gain in food prices.
But food commodities have jumped 37 percent over the past year. So there’s more coming at the retail price level.
Meanwhile, the producer price index has spiked for three straight months and is up nearly 14 percent at an annual rate for the three months ending in February. Inside the PPI, wholesale food is up 22 percent during the three-month period through February. Plus, the import price index operating through the weak dollar is up nearly 7 percent over the past year. There’s a profit-warning here: Spiking raw-material and energy wholesale prices will pinch future corporate profits.
The dollar looks weaker and weaker. Even when the G7 intervened to lower the yen and help the beleaguered Japanese, the dollar rose 2 percent relative to the Japanese currency, but fell against all the other major currencies. Not a good sign for the greenback.
It used to be known as King Dollar, but today the greenback is closing in on all-time lows when measured against various currency baskets.
And the Fed keeps creating new dollars. Measured by the St. Louis Fed, the monetary base has grown $360 billion since early November — a 54 percent annual growth rate — as Mr. Bernanke continues his money-pumping plan.
So the Fed is pouring in new money, the dollar is sinking, and inflation is rising. Many believe this ultra-easy-money and cheap-dollar approach will cause the economy to boom. They said the same thing about the $800 billion spending stimulus. But the Keynesians are wrong. The recovery remains soft, and it may be getting even softer as of the winter-quarter results.
One final point: The decline of the dollar and the rise of inflation seem to be offsetting, or neutralizing, the effect of the December tax-cut extensions. Initially, those extensions helped bolster consumer spirits and economic growth. But the onset of food and fuel inflation from the cheap dollar looks like a tax hike that offsets a tax cut.
This is just what we saw during the George W. Bush years, when the falling dollar caused asset bubbles, commodity inflation, and oil spikes, all of which ended up undermining lower tax rates.
The world’s not coming to an end. Neither is the economic recovery. But we can do a whole lot better.
Monday, March 21, 2011
On CNBC's Kudlow Report Tonight
THE MARKETS
-Don Luskin, Trend Macro chief investment officer
-Brett Arends, WSJ & Marketwatch columnist
-Lee Munson, Portfolio Advisors chief investment officer
Q1 SLOWDOWN? CAVEAT EMPTOR?
-Keith McCullough, Hedgeye Risk Management CEO
-Joe LaVorgna, Deutsche Bank chief U.S. economist
OIL SHOCK
-John Kilduff, Again Capital partner
-David Goldman, former Bank of America Fixed Income head
ONE-ON-ONE WITH DONALD TRUMP
Please join us at 7pm ET on CNBC.
Friday, March 18, 2011
On CNBC's Kudlow Report Tonight
MARKET UNCERTAINTY
- Larry Glazer, Co-Founder of Mayflower Advisors
- Lee Munson, Portfolio Asset Management CIO
- Don Luskin, Trend Macro Chief Investment Officer
LATEST ON CONTAINMENT PROGRESS IN JAPAN
- NBC’s Robert Bazell reports from Toyko.
KUDLOW EXCLUSIVE
ONE-ON-ONE WITH STEVE SCHWARZMAN
ECONOMY: JAPAN; EUROPE; & HIS OPTIMISM HERE AT HOME
Steve Schwarzman, Blackstone Group Chmn, CEO & Co-Founder
RADIATION FEARS IN AMERICA?
- CNBC’s Jane Wells joins us from Los Angeles.
KUDLOW EXCLUSIVE
ONE-ON-ONE WITH DONALD TRUMP
FREE MARKET FRIDAY
***WHERE'S THE ENERGY POLICY?
***JUDGE ATTEMPTS TO OVERTURN WALKER'S CONTROVERSIAL UNION LAW
- David Goodfriend, Fmr. Clinton W.H. Official;"Left Jab" Co-Host/Air America Co-Founder/Fmr. Staffer to Rep. Charles Rangel & Sen. Herb Kohl
- Deroy Murdock, Scripps Howard News Service Syndicated Columnist; Media fellow with Hoover Institution at Stanford University
- Jimmy Pethokoukis, Reuters Breakingviews: Money & Politics Columnist; CNBC Contributor
Please join us at 7pm ET on CNBC.
Thursday, March 17, 2011
Hope from Japan
If they can start running water into plants No. 3 and No. 4, to replenish the spent nuclear fuel pools, then potentially the apocalyptic fright of massive radiation could be off the table.
No one knows, certainly not I. So much of this story is unknowable. But at least there’s hopefully some good news.
The human toll in Japan is already massive. That’s a tragedy. But if somehow the meltdown story leading to massive radiation can be stopped, that would be a sign of hope for the Japanese people and all the rest of us.
One of the many fear gauges for this story is the U.S. and world stock markets, including Japan’s. While the Nikkei fell 1.4 percent Wednesday, the Dow managed a 1.4 percent gain today, up 161 points. It could be nothing more than a relief rally.
Traders are pointing to a strong factory report from the Philly Fed and a solid manufacturing gain for the index of industrial production. You want to say that the U.S. economy will survive the Japanese crisis, and undoubtedly that view is correct. But no one can rule out a worst-case Japanese story. Not yet, anyway.
And should that worst case ever occur — and let us pray it does not — no economy, including ours, will be spared.
But let me be hopeful on the Japan nuclear crisis somehow being solved. If that happens, the U.S. economic outlook is still 3 percent, or reasonably good.
All the economic stuff is still a sidebar to the Japanese tragedy. So perhaps as a sidebar to the sidebar, inflation pressures in the U.S. continue to rise. Today, for example, the consumer price index showed another big gain, the third straight monthly rise. This comes to 5.6 percent at an annual rate over the past three months. Producer prices paid by businesses have jumped 13.8 percent annually over the past three months. And import prices paid by everybody are up 6.9 percent over the past year.
Mr. Bernanke still thinks it’s all temporary — just a minor bulge in food and energy. But inflation expectations in the bond market and in consumer surveys show increases, not declines. Gasoline is holding at $3.55 at the pump. A year ago, it was $2.79. I hope the Fed is paying attention.
Wednesday, March 16, 2011
On CNBC's Kudlow Report Tonight
MARKETS IN TURMOIL
- Brett Arends, columnist The Wall Street Journal
- Joe Battipaglia, Stifel Nicolaus Market Strategist
- Pat Kernan, Cardinal Capital Management trader
FOOD INFLATION
- Art Laffer, Chief Investment Officer, Laffer Investments; Fmr. Reagan Economic Advisor
- Dan Greenhaus, Miller Tabak & Co Chief Economic Strategist
DISASTER IN JAPAN: NIKKEI JAPAN'S FINANCIAL/BUSINESS UPDATE
- Sri Jegarajah joins us live from Tokyo
ECONOMIC IMPACT OF JAPAN DISASTER HERE IN U.S.
HOW LONG WILL IT TAKE TO GET THE SUPPLY-CHAIN BACK UP?
GAME THEORY -- WHAT WOULD IT MEAN HERE IN U.S. IN WORST CASE SCENARIO?
- Brian Wesbury, First Trust Advisors Chief Economist
- Niall Ferguson Harvard University Professor "The Ascent of Money" Author
- Keith McCullough, Founder & CEO of Hedgeye Risk Management; CNBC Contributor
WINNING THE WAR AGAINST SPENDING & GOVT. UNIONS
Gov. Scott Walker (R-WI) joins us.
WASHINGTON TO WALL STREET
ARE TEAM OBAMA POLICIES PUTTING A CRIMP ON PRODUCTIVITY & GROWTH?
WHY ISN'T OBAMA WHITE HOUSE HELPING BUSINESS?
WHERE'S BILL DALEY?
WHERE ARE THE CORPORATE TAX CUTS?
- T.J. Rodgers, Cypress Semiconductor CEO
- Jim Murren, MGM Resorts Chmn & CEO
Please join us at 7pm ET on CNBC.
One-on-One with Mitch McConnell
LARRY KUDLOW:
Senator Mitch McConnell, welcome back to The Kudlow Report, sir.
SENATOR MITCH MCCONNELL:
Glad to be with you, Larry.
LARRY KUDLOW:
Let me just begin with this catastrophic Japanese story, the tremendous human toll it's taking and, of course, the nuclear power worries too. First, will efforts be made in the Senate to help our friends in Japan?
SENATOR MITCH MCCONNELL:
Yeah. If it needs Senate approval, we certainly will be there for helping our friends in Japan. What a horrible environmental catastrophe they're experiencing, the loss other human life, and all the rest. We're gonna be there for them in every way possible.
LARRY KUDLOW:
What kinda stuff is being discussed right now in the way of assistance?
SENATOR MITCH MCCONNELL:
I assume that our emergency services experts are interacting with the Japanese. I know they are. The USS Ronald Reagan is either there or on the way there, you know, which-- 'cause, apparently, they would like additional helicopter support in delivering supplies. We're gonna do everything we can to be helpful.
LARRY KUDLOW:
And, the issues of the worries about a nuclear meltdown in Japan, will that effect Senate policy? Will there be hearings held to look at our whole nuclear and our energy program in the wake of these Japanese problems?
SENATOR MITCH MCCONNELL:
Well, I think it's important not to rush to a conclusion about a major American energy policy in the wake of a disaster. For example, we all vividly recall last summer the BP oil spill. One of my colleagues said, "You know, when an airline-- when-- when an airplane goes down, you don't quit flying." I mean, we need to try to learn from what happened there. But, to rush to conclusion about-- what this means with regard to our-- policy in the future for nuclear power, I think it's premature.
LARRY KUDLOW:
No shutdown of nuclear licensing and things of that sort?
SENATOR MITCH MCCONNELL:
Well, you know, it took us 30 years to get back on track after Three Mile Island. I expect that this will-- produce some difficulty. I just don't think we oughta make American domestic energy policy based upon something that happens in another part of the world. Well, we try to learn from the mistakes that were made, and apply them.
LARRY KUDLOW:
Let me talk about American budget policy. You've recently said, "Not a single one of the 47 Senate republicans will vote to raise the debt ceiling unless some credible effort, unless something credible is done about our debt." Can you expand on that? What, "something credible" would be necessary to vote for an increase in the debt ceiling...
SENATOR MITCH MCCONNELL:
Well, first, let's just talk about the situation. We have now a divided government. The American-- public last November-- decided-- as one pundit put it, "Issue a restraining order against the actions of this administration over the first two years." A divided government frequently has done very important things. Think of Ronald Reagan and Tip O'Neill. Fixed social security in '83. Ronald Reagan and Tip O'Neill did tax reform in '86.
Bill Clinton and the republican Congress did welfare reform in '96. And, Bill Clinton and republican Congress actually balanced the budget, believe it or not, in the late '90s. This is a time to do important things. Our debt situation is extremely dangerous. We now have a $14 trillion cumulative debt, the size of our economy. We begin to look a lot like Greece.
Over and above that, we have over $50 trillion in unfunded liabilities in Medicare or Medicaid and social security, promises we've made that we cannot keep. This is an important time in our history to begin to get our fiscal house in order. And, the President-- so far, is remarkably passive, just sort of sitting on the sideline. So, what I have said, to get back to your question, there are 53 democrats and 47 republicans.
Fifty-three democrats can vote for a clean debt ceiling increase if they want to. But, 47 republicans, I'm quite confident, are gonna insist that we use that opportunity, which is all about our debt, to do something important about our debt.
And, I've been trying to incentivize the President every way I can, to come to the table. He doesn't have to lay it out publicly. We need to have private discussions and see what we can come up with that would be an important accomplishment for the country.
LARRY KUDLOW:
But, to make it credible, I mean I'm gonna guess you have a couple of months. To make it credible, would you, for example, insist on any conditions from the White House to have republicans vote for a higher debt ceiling? Specific conditions--
SENATOR MITCH MCCONNELL:
Well, I'm not gonna start laying out a potpourri of options. I think they know and we know what would be significant. And, we should be discussing which of those significant items should be added to the debt ceiling. Think of putting an ornament on a Christmas tree. Add it to the debt ceiling, as a condition for having bipartisan approval, of raising the debt ceiling. And, I'm not gonna get into the specifics now--
LARRY KUDLOW:
How about a spending--
SENATOR MITCH MCCONNELL:
but we all know what our--
LARRY KUDLOW:
--limitation--
SENATOR MITCH MCCONNELL:
--we all know what are problems are.
LARRY KUDLOW:
How about a spending limitation? A number of republicans have raised this. Senator Corker has raised this, something like 20, 21 percent of GDP. If I'm not mistaken-- your whip, Senator Kyl has raised it also, Senator Mike Lee and others. A spending limitation, a debt limitation, an entitlement package. It's kinda hard to do in the next six or eight weeks. But, would those qualify as conditions--
SENATOR MITCH MCCONNELL:
All of those are the kinds of things that would be considered significant by the markets, by the American people, and by foreign countries. And, we're in the process, within the republican conference, of looking at statutory solutions. Senator Corker's got a creative and interesting one. And, we're also looking at a Constitutional amendment that would not be a good candidate for a debt ceiling 'cause the President, under out Constitution, is not involved in a Constitutional amendment to balance the budget. He doesn't play a role in that.
Entitlement reform. A lot of study has already been done. The President's own entitlement debt reduction commission has done a lotta study over the last year w-- whose-- all of these issues have been studied thoroughly. What is lacking so far is the political will to tackle them.
LARRY KUDLOW:
Senator Schumer and some others, I believe Senator Durbin also, they want to have a big package deal discussion. Spending cuts, entitlement cuts, and also taxes. And, I wanna ask you, down through the years, we've had these big, grand design deals. Are taxes on the table for such a deal?
SENATOR MITCH MCCONNELL:
Taxes are not on the table. We don't have this problem because we tax too little. We have this problem because we spend too much. And, I've made it clear, both publicly and privately, that as a result of last November's election, tax increases cannot be considered as part of the solution to any of these problems.
LARRY KUDLOW:
Are there any movements in the Senate Finance Committee to lower the business tax rate structure? President's talked about this. He's sort of making a charm offensive with business. A lotta people on Wall Street took notice of that. He's goin' to be a centrist. He's got Bill Daley as his new Chief of Staff. Is the White House pushin' for business tax reform? Is the Senate pushin' for business tax reform? Are you pushing for business tax reform?
SENATOR MITCH MCCONNELL:
Yeah, we'd like to see the American corporate tax rate be competitive with the rest of the world. And pretty soon, we're gonna have the the highest corporate tax rate in the world. I don't think that's good for business. By the way, we all be-- oughta be ratifying trade agreements, not just the Korea deal, but the Panama, Colombia deal as well. We oughta be doin' all of those things. And I'm waiting to see whether this is just a rhetorical shift on the President's part courting business whether he's gonna back it up with anything real. And, I think doin' work on lowering the corporate tax rate, passing trade agreements, all of that, would have reality match up with rhetoric.
LARRY KUDLOW:
Speaking of rhetorical shifts-- President, in his news conference Friday, last Friday, said he was in favor of domestic drilling, domestic oil and gas production. Do you believe him?
SENATOR MITCH MCCONNELL:
Well, I remember one previous President said, "Watch what we do, not what we say." And, it is no question this administration has made it tougher to drill both on and offshore in this country. It's harder to get permits. We've had to suffer through an endless moratorium in the gulf after the BP spill that is totally unpopular all across the southeastern United States because it's costing us jobs.
One of my colleagues, Senator Vitter, on the floor of the Senate actually read the list of rigs, named them, that are now-- that used to be in the gulf, that are now in places like West Africa and other places. They've been moved around the world, and the jobs have gone along with them.
So, the question is not what the President's saying, but what he's doing. We need to quit this anti-production-- view that's been pervasive. It needs to stop. The anti-pro-- production view that's so pervasive in the administration needs to change. He's the President, he can change it if he wants to.
LARRY KUDLOW:
Do you blame him for $3.57 gasoline at the pump, which many economists are saying will slow the economy and raise the inflation rate? Do you blame the--
SENATOR MITCH MCCONNELL:
No, I'm--
LARRY KUDLOW:
--President?
SENATOR MITCH MCCONNELL:
--not gonna lay that just on his shoulders. But, he is you know, in terms of domestic production, this has been an administration that's very hostile to domestic production, not just in the gulf, but in Alaska and other places, to the extent that we could reduce our dependence on foreign oil. I think we all agree that would be good. But, we're not gonna do that any time soon with the proliferation of electric cars. It's just not gonna get the job done. So, we need to be straight with the American people. And, that involves opening up more of our substantial domestic supplies of both oil and gas.
LARRY KUDLOW:
Do you blame Fed Chairman Ben Bernanke for printin' too many dollars? Value of the currency's goin' down. Food commodities are skyrocketing. Energy commodities are skyrocketing.
SENATOR MITCH MCCONNELL:
Well, I'm not an expert on Fed policy. But, anyway, we were just talking about gas prices. Nothing will send the cost of everything up faster than an increase in gasoline prices. Just a penny up, you know, will cost us hundreds of millions of dollars a year. Everybody's very sensitive to gas prices in this country.
LARRY KUDLOW:
When you heard PIMCO's Bill Gross, the big investment manager out west. He says he's pulling out of the U.S. Treasury Bond market. What kind of signal do you take that to be? What do you and the Senators feel that kind of negativism toward bonds pushes the deficit reduction, pushes the budget issue to the front page, and to the front of your agenda? Are we losing time on this? If too many Bill Grosses pull out, who's gonna buy our debt?
SENATOR MITCH MCCONNELL:
Well, I think the message is this is a serious problem, and it's a problem now. I mean, you get the impression the President hopes to finesse this past the next election. That's fine if it'll wait that long. There are many experts who come and talk to us here in the Senate who believe we need to act, and act now.
And, as I've suggested, Larry, I think the time to act is-- in connection with the debt ceiling. We all know the kinds of actions we can take that would be viewed about the bond market, for example, as an indication the American government is gonna get its house in order. We know what the steps are that need to be taken. We need to reach out and grab them with both hands, and pass them.
LARRY KUDLOW:
All right, Senator Mitch McConnell, Republican Leader, we appreciate it very much, sir.
SENATOR MITCH MCCONNELL:
Thank you, Larry.
LARRY KUDLOW:
Great. I really can't thank you enough.
Tuesday, March 15, 2011
On CNBC's Kudlow Report Tonight
MARKET FEAR
- Jim Rogers, Rogers Holdings Chairman Author/ Investor
- David Goldman, Fmr. head of fixed income research at Bank of America
- Gary Shilling, A. Gary Shilling & Co. President
IMPLICATIONS OF JAPAN’S NUCLEAR REACTOR DISASTER
- Daniel Aldrich, Purdue University Japan expert - Purdue University
- Kevin Kamps, Nuclear information & Resource Service; Nuclear Waste Specialist
GLOBAL IMPACT OF JAPANESE DISASTER
- Amb. Tom Schieffer, Fmr. Amb. to Japan (2005 - 2009)
THE RIGHT PATH TO PROSPERITY
- Jim Owens, Fmr. Caterpillar Chmn & CEO
GETTING AMERICA'S FISCAL HOUSE IN ORDER
- Sen. Rand Paul (R) Kentucky
- Sen. Mike Lee (R) Utah
Please join us at 7pm ET on CNBC.
One-on-One with John Boehner: Is a Corporate Tax Cut in the Cards?
LARRY KUDLOW:
Speaker Boehner, welcome back to the Kudlow Report.
JOHN BOEHNER:
Good to be with you.
LARRY KUDLOW:
Thank you. Let me begin, of course, with the catastrophe going on in Japan-- and ask you first, are there thoughts, policies, discussions in Congress? What can we do to help our Japanese friends?
JOHN BOEHNER:
Well, clearly our hearts and souls go out to the people of Japan, and the tragedy that they have faced and are facing. Whether it's military help, or whether it's our expertise-- food supplies-- a lot that we will be doing-- to help the Japanese people.
LARRY KUDLOW:
Will the Congress appropriate additional funds for these kinds of emergency assistance?
JOHN BOEHNER:
I think that's yet to be seen. But I would not be surprised.
LARRY KUDLOW:
And, do you think these food supplies and military assistance is gonna start right away? Is it in motion as we speak?
JOHN BOEHNER:
I think it's been in motion all weekend, and will continue.
LARRY KUDLOW:
Let me ask you also, of course related to this, is the whole issue of-- the threatened nuclear meltdown in Japan. Is that gonna effect American energy policy? Are you gonna hold additional hearings on this?
JOHN BOEHNER:
Well, Chairman Upton at the Energy and Commerce Committee already has a hearing scheduled for this week with the head of the Nuclear Regulatory Commission. And, I'm sure the question will come up about those types of plants-- what kind of experience we have here. But, it's clear that there are lessons to be learned from what's happening in Japan as we speak. And, I think that we need to learn those lessons as we continue to look at how do we produce more energy from nuclear sources here in America.
LARRY KUDLOW:
You were home this weekend and Ohio has some nuclear power plants. Did local folks, did voters, were they talking about this? Were they worried about their own nuclear plants?
JOHN BOEHNER:
No, I didn't hear any concerns raised. But as you watch these images on TV, you can't help but be concerned about what caused this. The design of these plants, as I understand, is about, they're about 40 years old. And, what improvements have been made over the course of the last 40 years and, what's the risk that we face if we continue to push more nuclear energy here in the United States. I think that's the question the American people wanna know.
LARRY KUDLOW:
And-- I'm sure you're right. Is it, are people saying, "This is the end of nuclear energy policy"? I mean, is it gonna be cut and dry? Or, are they gonna give this an honest look?
JOHN BOEHNER:
Listen, I think we need we need to take a step back, understand what happened, understand what changes have been made, and really understand what are the risks here. As we all know Japan sits in volcanic area-- prone to earthquakes. You know, they have some 1,500 earthquakes a year.
We've got parts of the United States that have some inclination toward earthquakes. But, we have other parts of the country where there's no threat. But, we need to learn those lessons. But, I don't think it should deter us from trying to do everything we can to move America toward energy independence.
LARRY KUDLOW:
Let's turn back to the budget. On Friday, you unveiled a new continuing resolution, I guess to stop a shutdown this Friday. You got another $6 billion of budget cuts in there towards your $61 billion target. Can this one get through?
JOHN BOEHNER:
I believe that the continuing resolution this week will pass for another three weeks, keeping the government open. And yet, though, cutting some $6 billion, which means that over the last several weeks, we'll be able to accumulate $10 billion worth of real savings.
All of this because the democrats did no budget last year. They did no appropriation bills, and dumped this mess in our lap. I want the continuing resolution through September 30th finished as soon as possible. But, that's gonna mean real cuts. It's gonna mean real limitations on what this administration can do for the balance of this fiscal year. And, I'm hopeful that we'll get it finished as soon as possible.
LARRY KUDLOW:
I mean, you've got a lotta pressures, as we know. You've got tea party conservatives on one side. You've got people that want policy defunding of Obamacare on the other side. Democrats are way apart. I mean, it's almost a $50 billion gap. You told me a little while ago if the democrats won't take the whole loaf of budget cuts, you're gonna give it to 'em one slice at a time. Do you think you can get most of the original $61 billion in cuts?
JOHN BOEHNER:
Well, I think we'll see. We're in discussions with the democrats in the Senate, with the administration. We want to cut spending because cutting spending will lead to a better environment for businesses to help create jobs in America. That's the core of what we're trying to do, bring some fiscal sanity to Washington DC.
LARRY KUDLOW:
And, you've also been talking about next year's budget, if you get to it, for 2012. And, you want to put some entitlement reforms in there. You wanna put some entitlement limits and caps. How specific will you be? What kind of size reduction in spending might that come to?
JOHN BOEHNER:
We've got serious fiscal challenges facing our country. And, it's time that we, as Americans have an adult conversation with each other about the serious challenges that face our country. No more kicking the can down the road. I've watched it go on for all the years that I've been here. So, you will see us bend the curve. You will see us lay out a plan that will not only balance the budget, but pay off the debt.
It's gonna take a long time to do this. But, it's time to make decisions. And, the unfortunate part of this is that the President a year ago set up a Deficit Reduction Commission. They did a lot of very good work. And, they worked very hard. And, I don't agree with everything they did.
But, when the President submitted his budget about a month ago, not one idea from his own Deficit Reduction Commission. That's just kickin' the can down the road. It's whistling past the graveyard. And, House republicans, along with our colleagues in the Senate are not going to do that. If he won't lead, we will.
LARRY KUDLOW:
How do you react to criticism from democrats? Let's see, Senator Reed, Senator Durbin, Senator Schumer, they say republican spending cuts are bad for economic growth, bad for jobs. How do you react to that and, has the Republican Party focused too much on spending austerity, and not enough on economic growth?
JOHN BOEHNER:
I gave the President a letter signed by 150 economists over a month ago that said that cutting federal spending will lead to a better environment for job creation in America. Businesses and, I used to be a small business man understand that you can't continue to borrow 40 cents for every dollar the federal government spends.
And, if we begin to cut spending, and people understand that we're serious about putting America on a sound fiscal footing it will send the signal to business people and investors that America is a place they can invest in. It's that investment that creates jobs.
LARRY KUDLOW:
What about pro-growth tax reform, particularly business tax cuts? What about pro-growth regulatory moratorium? There's been a lotta talk about over-regulation of energy, for example. We got, what, $3.50 at the gallon. Many economists believe that's gonna raise the inflation rate and lower the economic growth rate. So, tax cute-- an-- and regulatory freezes, where's the GOP on that?
JOHN BOEHNER:
Well, when you look at what it's gonna take to create jobs in America, we talked about cutting spending. We also need to look at all of this regulation coming out of this administration. And, whether it's Obamacare, whether it's the Dodd-Frank financial services bill, the EPA that's choking our ability to produce more American energy, we need to look at the regulatory side as well.
But, how about the three free trade bills that are sitting downtown the administration's holding Panama, Colombia, South Korea? Free trade will create more jobs here in the United States. And, we need to produce energy. We need to produce energy because we need to bring energy prices down.
But, let's not forget that if we begin to do all of the above on the energy side we because it'll create up up to a million new jobs here in America. So, we need to do all of these things, if we're going to create a better environment for our economy to get up and get moving and get Americans back to work.
LARRY KUDLOW:
You know, President Obama and especially Vice President Biden-- Mr. Biden was over in Russia recently, talking about admitting Russia into the World Trade Organization, which would require a congressional vote. Wouldn't it be better to get these free trade deals passed before we put Russia into the World Trade Organization?
JOHN BOEHNER:
Well, these free trade bills, some of them have been out there for three or four years. I believe that-- and then, the South Korea trade agreement. Let's deal with these. And if Russians want to actually agree to play by the rules then we can have a discussion about whether ascension into the WTO is the right step.
LARRY KUDLOW:
Let me ask one last one. Do you believe that President Obama has turned pro-business? I get this question all the time. He had a charm offensive, he spoke to the Chamber of Commerce, and particularly his new Chief of Staff, Bill Daley. Have you spoken to Mr. Daley? Have you heard from him that they want a pro-business, pro-growth agenda? How do you come out on all that? Have any changes really been made in the last couple months in the White House?
JOHN BOEHNER:
Well, I've talked to the President a lot over the last couple of months. And, I've talked to Mr. Daley a number of times. Talk is cheap. Actions speak louder than words. I haven't seen any new actions yet.
LARRY KUDLOW:
What are you looking for? What would be a hint?
JOHN BOEHNER:
Well, send the three free trade agreements to Congress for our consideration. Let's put a real moratorium on new regulations coming out of his administration, which he's also called for.
LARRY KUDLOW:
How about Mr. Camp, your Chairman of the Ways and Means Committee? He runs tax policy, I know he runs trade policy too. Have you deputized him to come with a business tax cut reform bill?
JOHN BOEHNER:
If we want to make America more competitive, we've got to reform our corporate tax code. It is in the way of job creation in America. Dave Camp is a great Chairman. We came to Congress together 21 years ago. He is working on that reform. There's a number of hearings that are already set up. The administration appears to have some interest in wanting to pursue this. And, I'm optimistic.
LARRY KUDLOW:
Could this happen in my lifetime?
JOHN BOEHNER:
It could happen this year.
LARRY KUDLOW:
(LAUGH) Okay.
JOHN BOEHNER:
I hope that much was in your lifetime.
LARRY KUDLOW:
I have high expectations. You think it could, you think you could get business tax reform this year, that's possible?
JOHN BOEHNER:
I do. I actually do.
LARRY KUDLOW:
All right. Speaker John Boehner, we appreciate your time very much, sir.
JOHN BOEHNER:
Nice to see you.
LARRY KUDLOW:
Great.
* * *END OF TRANSCRIPT* * *
Monday, March 14, 2011
On CNBC's Kudlow Report Tonight
GLOOM SETTLING OVER THE MARKET?
- Ron Kruszewski, Stifel, Nicolaus Chairman & CEO
- Todd Harrison, Minyanville Founder & CEO
- Jim LaCamp, Macroportfolio Advisors Sr. VP, Portfolio Manager
GEOPOLITICS (JAPAN/MIDEAST) & THE ECONOMY
- Niall Ferguson, Harvard University Prof. of History; "Ascent of Money" Author
- Gen. Barry McCaffrey, 4-star Gen.; NBC Military Analyst; U.S. Army (Ret.); McCaffrey Associates Pres.
ONE-ON-WITH WITH JOHN BOEHNER
House Speaker John Boehner joins us.
ONE-ON-ONE WITH MITCH MCCONNELL
SENTAE Minority Leader Sen. Mitch McConnell joins us.
OIL SHOCK IMPLICATIONS
- Larry Nichols, Devon Energy CEO
- Larry Dickerson, Diamond Offshore CEO
Please join us at 7pm ET on CNBC.
Friday, March 11, 2011
On CNBC's Kudlow Report Tonight
VOLATILE MARKETS
-Brian Kelly, Kanundrum Capital president
-David Dietze, Point View chief investment strategist
-Stephanie Link, TheStreet director of Research
SHOULD U.S SEND MILITARY TO LIBYA & SAUDI ARABIA?
-Retired Army Gen. Barry McCaffrey
-Dan Senor, foreign policy expert
HUNDREDS KILLED IN JAPAN EARTHQUAKE
-CNBC's Tokyo bureau chief
PRESIDENT OBAMA'S FAILED GREEN AGENDA
-Steve Moore, Wall Street Journal editorial board
-Robert Reich, former Clinton Labor Secretary
FREE MARKET FRIDAY
-Andrew Ross Sorkin, New York Times
-Deroy Murdock, syndicated columnist
-Evan Newmark, Wall Street Journal
Please join us at 7pm ET on CNBC.
Thursday, March 10, 2011
Unknown Unknowns Out There
All eyes are turned to Saudi Arabia as the so called “day of rage” begins. Reports are that Saudi police opened fire on protesters in the kingdom’s east. Most experts do not expect a major protest to develop, such as in Egypt. But frankly, who knows?
The Shia underclass comprises most of the workers in the oil fields. And former Saudi ambassador Robert Jordan told me in a CNBC interview that he didn’t think the fully employed Shia workers would have any desire to shut down the oil fields. That may be why the Saudi stock market jumped 15 percent this week and the world price of oil edged lower.
As Donald Rumsfeld would say, it’s an unknown unknown.
But in the midst of today’s stock market gloom there are two positives: First, a new government report shows that corporate profits – the mother’s milk of stocks — reached new all-time record highs. In fact, after-tax economic profits are up 107 percent from the late 2008 trough. That’s a bigger gain than the 91 percent increase in the S&P 500. The growth of future profits will undoubtedly slow. But the level will continue to rise. The same could be said for the overall stock market, despite today’s 2 percent correction.
A second positive is trade. While the monthly trade deficit increased slightly, total U.S. trade — exports plus imports — reached its highest level since August 2008. That is a sign of growth. What’s more, large import gains for industrial supplies and capital and consumer goods is another sign of strong domestic growth.
But even with these positives, I acknowledge some more unknown unknowns.
For example, the big rise in gasoline prices since last August, with pump prices hitting $3.53 today, is a $182 billion annualized tax on motorists, according to veteran analyst Peter Beutel. He goes on to say that including diesel, heating oil, jet fuel, and other parts of the rising cost of the oil barrel, the total energy tax on the economy is $330 billion.
And the fact remains that Fed head Ben Bernanke is monetizing the energy-price spikes by pumping in excess QE2 money. That could set a significant inflation threat.
So I am being realistic. There are unknown unknowns out there. That may be the message of today’s stock market sell-off.
On CNBC's Kudlow Report Tonight
BIG MARKET SELL-OFF
-Ed Yardeni, Yardeni Research president
-Lee Munson, Portfolio Advisors CIO
-Keith McCullough, Hedgeye Risk Management CEO
CHAOS COMING TO SAUDI ARABIA?
-Helima Crofy, Barclays Geopolitcal analyst
-Ken Timmerman, author of “St. Peter’s Bones”
WISCONSIN DAY OF RAGE
-Howard Dean, former Vermont governor
PUTIN'S RUSSIAN ROULLETE
-Richard Perle, former Bush administration official
-Mark Brzezinksi, foreign policy expert
Please join us at 7pm ET on CNBC.
Wednesday, March 9, 2011
Government Gone Wild: One-on-One with Paul Ryan
LARRY KUDLOW, host:
Now there's a story raging on cnbc.com right now that is telling the truth
about government handouts, Social Security, Medicare, unemployment insurance.
It makes up more than a third of total wages and salaries of the US
population, a third of what you earn. It's a record figure that will only
increase if nothing is done to stop it. The Senate is going to vote in the
morning on the Republican plan to cut $61 billion. The Dems say they have a
better plan, a piddling six billion. The sparring over spending, however,
appears to be getting us nowhere. So here now we are honored to have House
Budget Committee Chairman Paul Ryan, Republican of Wisconsin.
Mr. Ryan, you are very kind. I know you are a very busy person. I just want
to ask you this, the public is seething over this out of control budget
spending and borrowing and deficits and the rest of it. Seething. Now why is
it--I hear it from Jeff Sessions, Eric Cantor's press conference today, you
have said it. It seems like the Republican position now, since you can't get
your budget cuts through, is to do everything to avoid a shutdown. Is that
the case? And why?
Representative PAUL RYAN: It's not to do everything to avoid a cut--shutdown.
It's to get these lower spending levels. Look, we want spending cuts and
we're basically saying, `If a shutdown occurs, it is because the president and
Harry Reid don't want to do any spending cuts.' This on top of the fact they
increased discretionary spending on domestic government agencies by 24
percent. You throw a stimulus on top, it was 84 percent. A blowout of
spending that occurred. And so what they're trying to do is lock those
numbers in, those high levels for five years. And so if they could--if the
government is shut down, it's because they are unwilling to bring back those
massive spending increases, double-, triple-digit increases at the government
agencies. And we want to see the cuts. We want to go back to normalcy. They
don't. And if--and if there is s shutdown, that's why.
KUDLOW: All right. So, OK, fine, you phrased it differently and that sounds
more interesting to me.
Rep. RYAN: Good.
KUDLOW: Look, at this--at this moment, what are the odds that you'll get
you'll $61 billion budget cut with the Democrats at, I don't know, six, seven,
eight, $9 billion? And the White House doesn't even have plan. Eric Cantor
blasted them today, saying they don't even have a plan. The--your majority
leader. What's the odds, Paul, that this is going to happen.
Rep. RYAN: I don't know what the final number is going to be, Larry. But I
do know this, it's not going to be 2010 levels. We're already now below 2010
levels. We already cut four billion in the current two week cycle we're in
below the 2010 levels that the president swore he was going to maintain. So
we're already going in the right direction. We've already gone below
President Obama's spending floor that he tried to put in his budget. So as
far as I'm concerned, we're going in the right direction. Are we going to get
all the way to 61 billion? I don't know. But we are showing that we are not
going to accept those elevated 2010 spending levels. The president has
already gone below that. The question is, how much farther do we go? And
that's what we're debating over.
KUDLOW: All right, let me ask you this. I think that the public, ordinary
citizens and so forth--I hear this on my radio show all the time. You know,
they see gasoline prices jumping to $3.50.
Rep. RYAN: Right.
KUDLOW: Maybe on the way to four, maybe on the way higher. They're real
worried about that. They're still...
Rep. RYAN: I paid 3.67 today.
KUDLOW: All right. They're still worried about their paychecks. They're
worried about jobs. Tell us how this budget battle affects jobs and growth,
which I think has still got to be the end game.
Rep. RYAN: It is.
KUDLOW: Growth, growth, growth.
Rep. RYAN: Our end game, Larry--and you'll see this in our budget--is
economic growth, is job creation, is prosperity. Today's really big deficits
simply translate to tomorrow's big tax increases and interest rate increases.
Our fiscal policy is on a collision course with our monetary policy and our
tax policy. So the more government borrows and spends and prints today, the
more businesses will pay for it tomorrow and the less economic growth we will
have. Getting these deficits and debt under control today means more jobs and
economic growth today. We want tax reform. We want budget reform. We want
government to live within its means so that the entrepreneurial economy can
take off.
So look, we're talking about $61 billion out of a $3.8 trillion budget. We
have a $1.6 trillion deficit this year alone. And so when we keep borrowing
all of this money, Larry, we are simply saying we're going to pay higher taxes
tomorrow, higher interest rates tomorrow.
KUDLOW: All right, that's a key point. I don't hear Republicans making that
point the way you just did.
Rep. RYAN: I say it every single day.
KUDLOW: A higher spending and greater deficits guarantees humongous tax
hikes.
Rep. RYAN: Absolutely.
KUDLOW: Which will sink this economy if we don't get it through. What...
Rep. RYAN: Higher tax rates loose--and don't forget the monetary policy
angle of this.
KUDLOW: Right.
Rep. RYAN: We're going to have an interest rate problem, as well.
KUDLOW: All right. That's a great message.
Now final point in our limited time. There are going to be some entitlement
proposals in your 2012 budget.
Rep. RYAN: Mm-hmm. That's right.
KUDLOW: If we ever get to the 2012 budget.
Rep. RYAN: Right.
KUDLOW: Now how far are you going to go? You have been a great leader. You
have been willing to say things that most people shy away from. You're not
afraid to touch this story. On the other hand, you may be alone in Washington
DC. What are you going to say, Paul Ryan, on the entitlement fix?
Rep. RYAN: Well, I'm not going to be alone come April. April is when we put
our budget out, and we will propose fixes to our fundamental entitlement
problems. We will attack the drivers of the US debt and we will put in place
a plan that gets growth back in the economy by getting this debt under
control. So, yes, we will tackle the big drivers of our debt. Those are our
health care entitlements. We're going to offer reforms that are prospective.
And the point we make, Larry, is we can have prosperity and not austerity if
we go now. The changes we're going to propose do not affect people in a near
retirement. They're for prospective generations, but it's a plan to keep our
taxes low, our interest rates stabilized, and get our debt taken care of and
our deficit taken care of.
KUDLOW: Are you talking...
Rep. RYAN: That's a plan for prosperity.
KUDLOW: All right, Mr. Chairman, are you talking about benefit cuts? That's
a tough sell. You may be right.
Rep. RYAN: So...
KUDLOW: But are you talking about benefit cuts?
Rep. RYAN: It's very clear that these entitlements are growing themselves
into bankruptcy, that they are going bankrupt. So we need to reform these
entitlements going forward so that they're sustainable. So what we're going
to do is propose plans that reform these entitlement programs that prevent
people in and near retirement from any kinds of changes, and reforms for the
next generation, my generation, you know, the X generation on down, so that we
actually have these benefits for us when we retire.
KUDLOW: But, Paul...
Rep. RYAN: Right now nobody in my generation thinks they're going to get
these benefits.
KUDLOW: I...
Rep. RYAN: We're going to fix these things, and it will change the way the
benefits operate. You'll see all the details, Larry, when we bring our budget
out in April.
KUDLOW: All right. I want to see--I'm dying to see it.
But what do you say to supply siders and others who argue--regarding Social
Security, not health care--if you grow the economy in the next 50 years at 3
1/2 percent per year, which is the long-term growth since World War II, then
Social Security will fix itself?
Rep. RYAN: No, it doesn't.
KUDLOW: Now that doesn't mean we shouldn't have personal account option and
so forth, but that's what they argue. If you grow the economy, growth,
growth, growth, then we don't have to slash benefits and the Republican Party
will look better, not worse.
Rep. RYAN: Except, first of all, nobody is talking about slashing benefits.
We're not even talking about touching benefits for people in and near
retirement. But we've run those numbers on growth and Social Security and
they don't catch up, because when you have more growth and you have more
Social Security contributions, you have more expenses. The more you pay in,
the more you get out. So growth, you cannot grow yourself out of our Social
Security solvency problem. I've run those numbers with the actuaries. You do
need to make some changes in Social Security benefit for the future
generations to make this program solvent.
KUDLOW: But the actuaries say you can only grow at 2 percent for the next 50
years.
Rep. RYAN: No. But even if you run bigger growth numbers through the
system, you still don't fix the problem. I've run those numbers. I've run
the 3 and 3 1/2 percent growth numbers through the system. We are kidding
ourselves if we think we can simply grow ourselves out of our entitlement
problems. We can't. We have an $88.6 trillion unfunded liability with our
entitlement programs, according to the GAO. Last year that was a $76.4
trillion problem. Every year we delay fixing these entitlement programs. We
go about $10 trillion deeper into our unfunded liabilities.
KUDLOW: All right. I got to get out.
Rep. RYAN: We got to fix this stuff and we got to have pro-growth economics
to help us do that.
KUDLOW: Right. I need to spend a solid hour with you on the air to walk
through this, but it's great stuff. You're fascinating.
Rep. RYAN: All right.
KUDLOW: It's great. Look, I wish you all the best in the world. You're
wonderful to come back on the program. House Budget Chairman Paul Ryan of
Wisconsin.
Tuesday, March 8, 2011
On CNBC's Kudlow Report Tonight
THE MARKETS
-Keith McCullough, Hedgeye Risk Management CEO
-Todd Schoenberger, Land Colt Trading
-David Goldman, former head of BofA Fixed Income Research
TICK TOCK, WASHINGTON BUDGET CRISIS...
Rep. Paul Ryan (R-WI)
IF SAUDI ARABIA IS SAFE, COULD OIL GO DOWN?
-John Hofmeister, former Shell CEO
-Peter Beutel, energy analyst
OBAMA'S GAS PRICE MIGRAINE
-Kim Strassel, Wall Street Journal
-Michael Brune, Sierra Club
Please join us at 7pm ET on CNBC.
Russia Ca$hing in on Oil Spike
Saturday, March 5, 2011
Government Shutdown? So What?
And that’s a far cry from the GOP’s annualized $100 billion pledge-to-America mark, and an even farther cry from the hundreds of billions of dollars in cuts that are necessary over the next five to ten years. As I recall, the Simpson-Bowles deficit commission suggested more than $1 trillion in cuts to the domestic discretionary baseline over ten years. I think the Paul Ryan plan would do the same.
Surely the Tea Party advocates will push the GOP to stay on message and stay the course. That’s what last November’s elections were all about. And if a satisfactory deal cannot be reached, one that keeps the GOP spending-cut pledge and includes a spending-limit rule with real teeth, then why not shut down the government?
Reading through various reports from the Wall Street Journal and Washington Post, you get the sense that no great harm will come from a shutdown. Social Security checks will be mailed. Other benefit payments will be met. Air-traffic controllers will do their jobs. Border protection and military operations will continue. Uniformed military personnel will be exempted. The Post Office will do its business uninterrupted. And incoming revenues can be designated for interest payment on the debt.
Doesn’t sound that bad to me. It sure isn’t the end of the world.
Back in the the early ’80s, when I served in the OMB under President Reagan, we went through several brief government shutdowns. Yes, the Washington Monument and a bunch of public parks closed. So what? Non-essential personnel got a holiday. The rest of us had to work.
But non-essential programs were not funded during the shutdown, and their unused budgets were subsequently rescinded. Savings were significant.
Of course, in the event of a shutdown, the political blame-game will run full hog, like it did during the mid-1990s. But the public mood today is far more hostile to big-government overspending, borrowing, and taxing than it was in 1995. Most important, taxpayers will benefit from a shutdown. That’s the key point. And voters will reward leadership.
So this is a moment when GOP promises to slash spending must be kept.
But let me reiterate: Any budget deal should include some clear rules on budget-spending limitation. Several Republican senators, including Bob Corker and Mike Lee, want to limit federal spending as a share of the economy to around 20 percent. Today it stands at 25 percent. If a proper spending-limit rule were put in place, strict budget-cutting penalties would be automatically triggered when the rule is broken.
This kind of budget rule is essential to any deal. The GOP should not settle for anything less. Why? Because this is the moment. This is the upshot of last fall’s elections.
Governors like John Kasich in Ohio, Scott Walker in Wisconsin, Rick Scott in Florida, Mitch Daniels in Indiana, and Chris Christie in New Jersey are making the good taxpayer fight to curb spending with strict limits on government unions — even if government shutdowns are part of the battle.
The message from the states is clear: Lower spending is necessary a) to stop the bankruptcy and b) to return taxpayer money to citizens, small businesses, and families. Each spending-cut dollar in effect translates to an equivalent tax-cut dollar. That’s pro-growth, pro-jobs, pro-lower-unemployment, and pro-financial-prudence.
But Washington Republicans must join the state-by-state battle by waging their own war against bankruptcy, high taxes, and overwhelming debt.
Frankly, a government shutdown in Washington is a minuscule price to be paid for the greater good of financial solvency and economic growth. If the Republicans can’t get the right deal for full-fledged spending cuts and a clear budget-limitation rule with severe budget-cutting penalties, they should go ahead and shut down the federal government.
Message to House Republicans: Don’t pull your punches. Hang tough. Stand tall.
Friday, March 4, 2011
On CNBC's Kudlow Report Tonight
MARKETS
- Ted Parrish, Co-Portfolio Manager, Henssler Equity Fund
- Jim LaCamp, Macroportfolio Advisors Sr. VP, Portfolio Manager
- Don Luskin, CNBC Contributor; Trend Macro Chief Investment Officer
INFLATION/COMMODITES
- Jim Rogers, Rogers Holdings Chairman Author/ Investor
UTAH RETURNING TO THE GOLD STANDARD?
- State Rep. Brad Galvez (R) Utah
BUDGET SHOWDOWN … WHAT WILL HAPPEN IF THE GOV’T SHUTS DOWN? IS IT SUCH A BIG DEAL?
- CNBC’s Trish Regan reports.
- Robert Reich, Fmr. Labor Secy; "Aftershock: The Next Economy &America's Future" author; CNBC Contributor; Univ. of CA., Berkeley, Prof.
- Dan Mitchell, CATO Senior Fellow
FREE MARKET FRIDAY
1. PINK SLIP DAY IN WISCONSIN - WILL THIS BRING THE DEMS HOME? ARE GOVT UNIONS BANKRUPTING OUR COUNTRY?
2. BOEHNER TAKES AIM AT SOCIAL SECURITY & MEDICARE -- IS IT POLITICAL SUICIDE? DOESN'T IT HAVE TO BE TACKLED TO CALM THE DEFICIT BEAST?
- Mark Simone, WABC Radio Talk Show Host
- John Tamney, RealClearMarkets & Forbes Opinions Editor; H.C. Wainwright Economics Sr Economic adviser
- Bernard Whitman, President & CEO Whitman Insight Strategies LLC
Please join us at 7pm ET on CNBC.
Stocks Diss Oil, for Now
Of course, nobody can predict events in war-torn Libya and other hotspots, or, for that matter, in Saudi Arabia. Sure, if Saudi Arabia erupts into violence on its so-called “day of rage” on March 11, oil prices will spike like we’ve never seen before, causing incalculable damage to the U.S. and world economies.
But for now U.S. stock markets have pushed that scenario aside. They’re much more interested in ISM reports showing a mini economic boom.
On the manufacturing side of the ISMs, 61 percent of survey participants reported better business. For non-manufacturing services, 60 percent of companies on the composite index and almost 67 percent on the overall business-activity index improved. Together, these supply-manager reports suggest as much as 4 to 5 percent economic growth.
Stocks surged on Thursday when the services report was first put out. But additional good news helped stoke the market enthusiasm.
On the employment front, there was a big decline in initial jobless claims, which fell to 368,000. The four-week average of jobless claims now stands at 388,500, the lowest reading since July 2008. And the so-called “whisper number” for Friday’s nonfarm payrolls report is approaching 300,000 new jobs.
In addition, car sales have surged to 13.4 million at an annual rate, consumer confidence has unexpectedly improved, and same-store retail sales are well above consensus, coming in over 4 percent in the latest report.
So while stocks have been highly volatile over the past few weeks — since Libyan oil fields were shut down — bullish trading suggests that in its wisdom Mr. Market not only believes economic recovery will survive the $10 or $15 jump in oil prices, but that the stock rally is far from over if the economy produces unexpectedly strong growth.
That said, it’s also possible that we experience unexpectedly strong inflation.
While Fed head Ben Bernanke remains in full denial, those ISM reports show mounting inflationary pressures. Business-prices paid are rising at least 20 percent above year-ago. Commodity indexes are running 30 to 40 percent ahead of year-ago. Even the consumer price index has registered back-to-back increases of four-tenths of 1 percent for December and January, coming to 5.1 percent at an annual rate.
Mr. Bernanke believes that oil, gold, commodities, and other upward price pressures will be transitory, so he is determined to keep printing new money through his much-criticized QE2 program. The dollar is suffering. He might be better advised to look across the ocean to European central banker Jean-Claude Trichet.
This week, Trichet signaled that he may raise the ECB target rate in April in order to stop the oil shock and prevent other price increases from spreading. Trichet has become the Paul Volcker of Europe. He will not monetize the oil increase. He is exactly right.
Ben Bernanke on the other hand looks more like Arthur Burns in the 1970s, back when the Fed increased the money supply in an attempt to fight negative oil-shock effects, but instead monetized oil into a raging stagflation.
In any event, I side with clear-eyed Wall Street forecaster John Ryding, who believes the $10 or so oil-price hike will reduce real growth by only one-quarter of a percent while adding a like amount to inflation. Ryding expects 3.5 percent growth this year.
Historically, a combination of spiking oil prices and an inverted Treasury yield curve signaling ultra-tight Fed money are precursors to inflationary recession. This has pretty much held true for the last six economic downturns. But right now, the oil spike is modest and Fed money printing is ultra-easy. The yield curve is steep and upward sloping, with long-term rates 350 basis points above short-term rates. This argues against recession right now.
And let’s not forget: Corporate profits remain very strong, an extension of the Bush tax cuts is helping the economy grow, and the one-time payroll tax cut may help cushion the oil shock.
So at the moment, barring a blowup in Saudi Arabia, the economy will survive.
In the end, however, a surge in gasoline prices at the pump may be the deciding economic and stock market factor. Pump prices jumped another 4 cents Thursday to a national average of $3.43 per gallon, according to AAA. Gas prices are about 25 percent higher than they were a year ago. Some forecasters are projecting $4 a gallon or more.
If income-producing jobs fall short of Wall Street hopes, the gasoline-tax increase on consumers and small businesses could melt stock market optimism. Besides the Saudi threat, gasoline prices are the biggest if in the economic outlook.