Oh yes, your cash has got us very ‘stimulated,’ indeed

In old-fashioned retailing, it’s called the “Bait ’n Switch.”

Advertise a product at an unheard-of low price to draw in the shoppers. Once they arrive, the salesman goes to work, showing them how they can get SO much more value for their money if they’ll just “step up” to the next higher quality model, at an ever-so-slight increase in price. You DID want the extended five-year warranty for a modest additional six dollars a month, right?

In extreme cases, it can even turn out that the fine print said “while supplies last.” The three low-cost models were gone in five minutes, of course. “But we happen to have something even better, if you’ll just step this way. …”

Governments use the technique a little differently. Perhaps the police tax hike referendum promised voters the money would be used to “put 500 more cops on the streets.” A few years later, when nothing like 500 new officers are on patrol, a department spokesman blithely explains some of the money was used to buy new computers, “which are considered to be the manpower equivalent of one-and-a-half new officers …”

More recently, remember how all those billions in “stimulus” money allocated in Washington City last year were reserved for “shovel-ready” projects, creating new construction jobs and additionally re-building our infrastructure — roads, piers, bridges, stuff like that?

Wellllll … let the man in the plaid sports coat and the white Corfam shoes explain it all to you, Mr. or Ms. Voter. Turns out you didn’t want a bunch of crummy infrastructure, after all, Instead, they found something MUCH better to spend your money on, if you’ll just step this way …

As it turns out, most of that money is going where government always puts most of its money — into fat paychecks for “social service” bureaucrats.

“Most of the roughly $300 billion coming directly to the states is being funneled through existing government programs for health care, education, unemployment benefits, food stamps and other social services,” The Associated Press reported this week, out of Sacramento.

Two-thirds of recovery money that flows directly to states will go toward health care. Not hiring new doctors or nurses, mind you. Just paying medical bills for poor people — and the salaries of those who handle this redistribution of your hard-earned cash.

By comparison, about 15 percent of the stimulus money will end up going for transportation — including airports, highways and rail projects — according to Federal Funds Information for States, a service of the National Governors Association and the National Conference of State Legislatures.

Overall, two-thirds of the stimulus funds will go to subsidize state budgets and unemployment compensation — paying people NOT to work. Much smaller pieces of the pie will be allocated for weatherization, affordable housing and other projects designed to create jobs, The AP reports.

“We all talked about ‘shovel-ready’ since September and assumed it was a whole lot of paving and building when, in fact, that’s not the case,” explains Chris Whatley, the Washington director of the Council of State Governments, a trade group for state governments. He estimates states will get three times more money to prop up payrolls in the government schools than for transportation.

John Husing, a Southern California economist, agrees keeping teachers and cops employed could help prevent the recession from getting worse. But he says the stimulus package would have improved communities’ ability to grow over the long haul if it had dedicated more money to public works — as promised.

If the aim of the stimulus package was to jolt the economy, the government could have concentrated more of the money on areas that have suffered the steepest declines during the recession — housing, auto, retail and restaurants — says Edward Leamer, an economist with the Anderson School of Management at the University of California, Los Angeles.

Instead, in Georgia for instance, two-thirds of the $3.9 billion in “stimulus” funds the state expects to receive over the next 16 months will go to support existing social programs. Mississippi expects to spend about only 13 percent of its $2.8 billion in federal “stimulus” money on highways n bridges. The rest will be spent, as it is in other states, to preserve existing government programs and jobs.

Seven hundred billion dollars “to bail out the welfare moms and make sure government bureaucrats continue to get fat paychecks, benefits, and raises”?

That’s quite a campaign slogan. Is that actually what they promised us, last year? If so, you’d think we would have remembered.

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