Obamanomics: What You Can Expect if President Obama Wins the Election
Posted on May 08, 2012 at 06:00 AM EDT
Now that we are left with a two-horse race for president, the markets are going to begin to handicap the November results. However, when the markets begin to handicap the race it will be about a lot more than just picking the eventual winner. Instead, everything will revolve around the policies and consequences that come along with the winner. The difference in approach promises to be stark with "Obamanomics" on the left and "Romneynomics" on the right. Each one comes with its own set of consequences, though. Today I'm going to look at "Obamanomics II," or the policies we will get if President Obama is re-elected. But those on the left shouldn't despair...In my next piece, it's Romney's turn. As for the horserace itself, it's too close to call, with neither side having much chance of winning a big victory. President Obama Has the Edge Even still at the moment, President Obama appears to be ahead. Apart from his modest lead in the polls, my former home state of Virginia appears to be swinging definitively toward the Democrats. Yes, Republican Bob McDonnell did win the Virginia governorship handily in 2009, but he was a very good candidate. Moreover, turnout in gubernatorial elections is normally low. Thus I believe the latest polls showing Obama with a 7% lead in Virginia are accurate, and without Virginia Romney has a very difficult path to the presidency. If we believe the presidential election will be close, then it follows that Congress and the Senate elections must be close, too. If Obama wins in November, the most likely outcome must be that the Democrats will hang on to the Senate, while the Republican House majority survives, albeit much smaller than at present. With this combination, the president's more extreme wishes (or those of his team) will be restrained. But as a newly re-elected figure he will nevertheless have more power to get what he wants than he does currently. Whatever the congressional numbers may be, the president's first task will be to face the "fiscal cliff" of January 2013, when the Bush tax cuts and temporary payroll tax cuts expire and automatic spending "sequestration" comes into effect. To continue reading, please click here...