The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Trump misreprese­nts Obama’s stimulus act

Spending focused more on tax cuts than infrastruc­ture.

- By Louis Jacobson PolitiFact

“There was a very large infrastruc­ture bill that was approved during the Obama administra­tion, a trillion dollars. Nobody ever saw anything being built.”

Just over eight years ago, President Barack Obama signed the American Recovery and Reinvestme­nt Act, more commonly known as the stimulus.

Its supporters give it a measure of credit for making the Great Recession milder than it could have been. But critics, including President Donald Trump at a town hall Tuesday

President Trump at a town hall on Tuesday

for CEOs, say it was a whole lot of nothing.

“You know, there was a very large infrastruc­ture bill that was

approved during the Obama administra­tion, a trillion dollars,” Trump said. “Nobody ever saw anything being built. I mean, to this day, I haven’t heard of anything that’s been built. They used most of that money on social programs, and we want this to be on infrastruc­ture.”

Let’s take a look at what the stimulus did, and didn’t, achieve.

The stimulus ultimately cost just over $800 billion. (Earlier estimates had been higher, so we won’t quibble with Trump’s rounding it up to $1 trillion.)

The “shovel-ready” aspects of the stimulus tended to attract the most attention. But only a fraction was ever intended to go to infrastruc­ture.

According to the Council of Economic Advisers, about 35 percent of the expenditur­es went for tax cuts for individual­s and businesses; about 18 percent went for aid to cash-strapped state government­s to offset cuts to health and education programs; and about 14 percent went for “safety-net” expenditur­es paid to individual Americans, such as added unemployme­nt payments.

That leaves 34 percent for “public investment.” And the amount actually spent on infrastruc­ture was even smaller than that, since the “public investment” category also covers such things as Pell grants, education for disabled students and scientific research.

In his book, “Money Well Spent? The Truth Behind the Trillion-Dollar Stimulus, the Biggest Economic Recovery Plan in History,” ProPublica journalist Michael Grabell estimated that only about $80 billion, or roughly onetenth of the act’s spending, was devoted to what people would normally think of as “infrastruc­ture.”

By the numbers, then, it would be at least as accurate to call the stimulus a tax-cut bill as it would be to call it an infrastruc­ture bill.

Meanwhile, saying the bill spent money on “social programs,” as Trump did, is an exaggerati­on at best.

Perhaps the safety-net expenditur­es and aid to government­s could be considered “social programs.”

Building did occur

Even observers who see some value in the act acknowledg­e it was far from perfect.

For instance, Grabell concluded in a 2012 op-ed that a lesson of the stimulus is that “government can create jobs — it just doesn’t often do it well.”

“‘Shovel-ready’ projects, those that would put people to work right away, took too long to break ground,” he wrote. “Investment­s in worthwhile long-term projects, on the other hand, were often rushed to meet arbitrary deadlines, and the resulting shoddy outcomes tarnished the projects’ image.”

That said, the stimulus did build things.

“The notion that the New Deal built bridges and dams while all the stimulus did was fill potholes isn’t entirely true,” Grabell wrote in his book. “Generation­s from now, there will be countless projects that communitie­s can point to as the enduring legacy of the American Recovery and Reinvestme­nt Act. The $80 billion for roads, runways, waterworks, rails, federal buildings, and parks was one of the largest investment­s in the nation’s infrastruc­ture since President Eisenhower establishe­d the Interstate Highway System in the 1950s.”

Just to cite a few of the bigger projects, the Recovery Act helped push to completion the $1 billion DFW Connector highway in Dallas-Fort Worth; a $650 million elevated truck route to the Port of Tampa; and new light-rail lines in Salt Lake City and Dallas.

Our ruling

Trump said, “There was a very large infrastruc­ture bill that was approved during the Obama administra­tion, a trillion dollars. Nobody ever saw anything being built.”

His characteri­zation is flawed.

The single biggest portion of the law actually consisted of tax cuts. As for the infrastruc­ture portion of the law, it did indeed produce results, even if they were somewhat more underwhelm­ing than its backers had initially hoped.

We rate the statement Mostly False.

‘The notion that the New Deal built bridges and dams while all the stimulus did was fill potholes isn’t entirely true.’ Michael Grabell, author and journalist

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