If Barack Obama wins re-election, let him thank his lucky stars that entitlements are out of control. If Medicare spending was capped and couldn't shoot up automatically, unemployment would probably be in double digits.
Out-of-control health care spending is the only stimulus the Republicans can't stop. What else is there?
Go out late at night in some of the darkest American cities. Whether it's Cleveland, Baltimore or St. Louis, it seems the only thing left to light up the gloom is a big hospital, shining like a 12-gated city, inlaid with MRIs like precious jewels. And for that we can give thanks to Medicare and Medicaid.
Imagine Cleveland without the Cleveland Clinic, or Baltimore without Johns Hopkins. Even in Chicago, with a more diversified base, the city would seem flat without the expansion at Northwestern Memorial Hospital and Rush University Medical Center -- with all that hammering and sawing as they get ready for Obamacare.
If Medicare, in particular, wasn't out of control, many inner-city high-school grads would find it even harder to get jobs. According to research cited in the Harvard "Pathways to Prosperity" report in 2011, health care by itself added a half-million jobs even in the recession -- not just ones for high-school grads as security guards and cooks, but jobs for those with "some college," such as respiratory technicians.
It's not the WPA, but all this health care spending creates the kind of "middle-skilled" jobs we have to push now in lieu of assembly lines. Many high-school grads -- or those we may euphemistically say have "credentials short of an associate's degree" -- earn more than those with college diplomas. Thanks to entitlements being out of control, there is still at least one way into the middle class.
All this also has a Keynesian-type effect to make up for the way state and local governments keep cutting back spending. This was the first recession where we responded by cutting public-sector jobs.
Government employment has fallen to its lowest level since 1968, Bloomberg's BGOV Barometer shows. The cutbacks forced by balanced-budget clauses in many state constitutions only hold back a real recovery.