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freshwest

(53,661 posts)
6. I'm sure they're fine folks, but he has a history.
Sun Mar 31, 2013, 06:46 PM
Mar 2013
Office of Management and Budget

Stockman became one of the most controversial OMB directors ever during a tenure that lasted until his resignation during August 1985.


Committed to the doctrine of supply-side economics, he assisted the approval of the "Reagan Budget" (the Gramm-Latta Budget), which Stockman hoped to be a serious curtailment of the "welfare state", gaining a reputation as a tough negotiator with House Speaker Tip O'Neill's Democratic-controlled House of Representatives and Majority Leader Howard Baker's Republican-controlled Senate.

During this period, although only in his early 30s, Stockman became well known to the public during the contentious political wrangling concerning the role of the federal government in American society.

Stockman's influence within the Reagan Administration decreased after the Atlantic Monthly magazine published the famous 18,246 word article, "The Education of David Stockman",[6] in its December 1981 issue, based on lengthy interviews Stockman gave to reporter William Greider. The White House's public relations team thereafter attempted to limit the article's damage to Reagan's perceived fiscal-leadership skills.


Stockman was quoted as referring to Reagan's tax act as: "I mean, Kemp-Roth [Reagan's 1981 tax cut] was always a Trojan horse to bring down the top rate.... It's kind of hard to sell 'trickle down.' So the supply-side formula was the only way to get a tax policy that was really 'trickle down.' Supply-side is 'trickle-down' theory."

[7] Of the budget process during his first year on the job, Mr. Stockman is quoted as saying: "None of us really understands what's going on with all these numbers," which was used as the subtitle of the article.

After Stockman's first year at OMB and after "being taken to the woodshed by the president" due to his candor with Atlantic Monthly's William Greider, Stockman became inspired with the projected trend of increasingly large federal deficits and the rapidly expanding national debt. On 1 August 1985, he resigned OMB and later wrote a memoir of his experience in the Reagan Administration titled The Triumph of Politics: Why the Reagan Revolution Failed (ISBN 0060155604), in which he specifically criticized the failure of congressional Republicans to endorse a reduction of government spending as necessary offsets to the large tax decreases, in order to avoid the creation of large deficits and an increasing national debt.
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Fiscal legacy


President Jimmy Carter's last signed and executed fiscal year budget results ended with a $79.0 billion budget deficit, ending during the period of David Stockman's and Ronald Reagan's first year in office, on October 1, 1981.[8] The gross federal national debt had just increased to $1.0 trillion during October 1981 ($998 billion on 30 September 1981). By 30 September 1985, four and a half years into the Reagan administration and shortly after Stockman's resignation from the OMB during August 1985, the gross federal debt was $1.8 trillion.[9] Stockman's OMB work within the administration during 1981 until August was dedicated to negotiating with the Senate and House about the next fiscal year's budget, executed later during the autumn of 1985, which resulted in the national debt becoming $2.1 trillion at fiscal year end 30 September 1986.[10]


http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/David_Stockman#Office_of_Management_and_Budget

Just kidding about the gold and going along with that theme. And I'm sorry, but this man has the destruction of the social safety next and lot of bodies in his closet and is not suffering one bit.

Having lived through those days and seeing what the Reagan policies did across the board, I can't give him a pass. Call me unfair, but what was done to people still puts all of them in the dog house for me, anyway.

YMMV, and that's okay with me.

Krugman no only has a brain but he iemitsu Mar 2013 #1
Didyou see the Stockman piece? I read it right before I went to Sunday brunch and CTyankee Mar 2013 #2
Yeah, it is difficult to know what to do and when to do it iemitsu Mar 2013 #13
My accountant, who is no lover of Wall St., said my stuff was pretty balanced so Ifelt CTyankee Apr 2013 #14
Eventually, we'll find that Stockman has bought shares in Independence Park, LLC. freshwest Mar 2013 #3
Stockman lives in a pretty cushy house in Greenwich, CT. His wife, Jennifer Blei CTyankee Mar 2013 #4
I'm sure they're fine folks, but he has a history. freshwest Mar 2013 #6
I'm not defending his theories at all. I agree with Krugman. CTyankee Mar 2013 #11
It's a bit crazy, but it appeals to a certain audience that's getting bigger. freshwest Mar 2013 #12
k&r nt steve2470 Mar 2013 #5
According to BI.com Stockman's book is released on Tuesday Ruby the Liberal Mar 2013 #7
I guess he's jockeying for prime position on the remainder tables. winter is coming Mar 2013 #8
Expect him on Morning Joe and god knows where else in 3..2..1.. CTyankee Mar 2013 #10
One problem with the right, including traditional conservatives Dawson Leery Mar 2013 #9
somebody posted an old article about Stockman which stated he isn't actually an economist magical thyme Apr 2013 #15
Stockman was never trained in Economics. At Harvard he studied social sciences and CTyankee Apr 2013 #16
Did anyone read his book? Or hear his interview on NPR?? adigal Apr 2013 #17
we hear that yakety-yak all the time...government spending BAD. CTyankee Apr 2013 #18
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