Pioneer Institute for Public Policy Research

Will they give the money back?Thickheadedness

Overstimulated

Steve PoftakBy Steve Poftak
January 5th, 2009


Ed Glaeser has an interesting and thoughtful piece in today’s Globe on the various stimulus ideas floating around.

I am a bit concerned about the rush to spend billions of dollars willy-nilly. The stimulus package has turned into a Christmas Tree of sorts, with every group hanging their desired ornament on it.

But I fear most people are not paying attention to the details. The State has cranked out its list. There are some worthy projects here, but there is also a lot that has not been fully vetted. $200 million for rebates for biomass pellet furnaces? $200 million buys you about 60,000 of those furnaces outright (against a housing stock base of around 2.5 million) and it increases as you lower the rebate (e.g. at 50% rebate, you are supporting the purchase of 120,000 units). Now, I’ve no idea if these furnaces are a good idea or not, but I’m not comfortable with the notion that the state should be subsidizing them on such a broad scale. Put differently, if you had $200 million, what would you do with it?

Another issue is spending on operating items that exacerbate the structural deficit. The City of Boston initially put in for a one-time grant for 10 police officers*. Great, but who pays their salaries and benefits next year?

*The request for the cops is gone now, so maybe that’s a sign of progress.

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