Skip to Content
Streetsblog Los Angeles home
Streetsblog Los Angeles home
Log In
President Obama

CBO Echoes Obama’s Candor on the Pitfalls of ‘Shovel-Readiness’

During last month's White House jobs summit, President Obama carved out
some common ground with critics of his first stimulus law's $47 billion
in infrastructure spending -- which was distributed mainly by the book
through state DOTs. "The term "shovel-ready," let’s be honest here,
doesn’t always live up to its billing," he acknowledged.

1_19_10_graph.jpgThe CBO modeled the job-creation power of various policy options, including infrastructure investments.

Now, as the Senate mulls its response to the House jobs bill that included
$27.5 billion for highways and $8.4 billion for transit, the
independent Congressional Budget Office (CBO) is echoing some of
Obama's concerns.

In a report released Thursday, the Capitol budgeteers concluded
that most of the economic benefits of sending more transportation aid
to states would not be felt until 2011 at the earliest.

The
"large-scale construction projects" that could fundamentally reshape
local infrastructure tend to take years before their impact is felt on
the economy, the CBO noted:

[F]or example,building new transportation infrastructure that requires establishingnew rights-of-way and developing and implementing alternative energysources would probably have their biggest effects on output andemployment after the recovery was well along. As a practical matter,the experience with [the first stimulus] suggests that fewer projectsare “shovel ready” than one might expect ...

Moreover, given the substantial increase in infrastructurefunding provided by [the first stimulus], achieving significantincreases in outlays above the amounts funded by [the first stimulus]would probably take even longer. Thus, most of the increases in outputand employment from this option would probably occur after 2011.

Overall, the CBO gave new infrastructure aid a "multiplier effect" of
somewhere between 0.50 and 1.20, meaning that every $1 in spending
would translate into $1.20 in economic benefits in the best-case
scenario.

But
in the end, the report was not wholly skeptical of transportation's
power to create jobs. Only two policy options yielded a higher
multiplier effect than infrastructure, according to the CBO's modeling:
more aid to the unemployed (between 0.70 and 1.90) and payroll tax cuts
for firms that add new workers (between 0.40 and 1.30).

The
CBO's take is unlikely to dampen lawmakers' enthusiasm for adding
infrastructure spending to the pending jobs bill, but it provides more
fodder for House members who have contended that a new six-year transportation bill would serve as a better long-term "second stimulus."

In addition, lingering House-Senate tension
over the timing for the upper chamber's jobs bill could keep the debate
over particular provisions raging well into March -- past the February
28 expiration date for Congress' latest short-term extension of
existing transport law. As this page noted back in September, transportation policy could be headed for another deja vu moment.

Stay in touch

Sign up for our free newsletter

More from Streetsblog Los Angeles

Kevin de León’s Cynical CD14 Debate Performance Shows How Little He’s Grown

De León repeatedly accused Jurado of being a liar who lacked substantive accomplishments while taking credit for a number of projects initiated prior to his tenure.

October 16, 2024

SGV Connect 129: Looking at Measures A and G

Both ballot measures need a simple majority to pass. SGV Connect will be back after the election to review what voters decided locally, regionally and across the state.

October 16, 2024

Metro Weekday Ridership Surpasses One Million

Metro ridership is at 86 percent of pre-pandemic levels, well ahead of the nationwide average of 76 percent

October 16, 2024

This Week In Livable Streets

Metro 405 Freeway widening meeting, weekend Metro A Line closures (Duarte to Azusa), Metro Rail to Rail path construction, and more

October 15, 2024
See all posts