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Democratic control of Congress may not be a bad thing for business

Kevin G. Hall - McClatchy Newspapers

November 08, 2006 03:00 AM

WASHINGTON—Wall Street and business leaders welcome the Democrats' capture of power in Congress as a formula for gridlock that should lead to lower government spending and no significant change in tax law.

That's not to say that the Democrats' victory won't have any economic impact. It jeopardizes several trade deals that President Bush has negotiated but Congress hasn't passed yet. It may well mean a hike in the federal minimum wage. And it's sure to mean tougher scrutiny of Big Oil, and perhaps the first regulation of speculative hedge funds, the investment pools favored by the very wealthy.

But experts think that the biggest impact may be on the federal budget process, with renewed efforts to reduce government spending in order to improve the long-term outlook for the federal deficit and national debt. That in itself shows how much politics has changed in recent years; before the Bush administration, Republicans embraced small government and low spending, and Democrats generally favored the opposite.

"In an environment where you've got a Democratic majority, even a narrow Democratic majority, you are going to have more interest in budget reform," said Stephen Slivinski, the director of budget studies for the Cato Institute, a libertarian research center in Washington. "There's now a re-energized moderate Democrat presence on the budget front."

Slivinski authored the recent book "Buck Wild," which documents how Republicans strayed from their conservative roots to embrace big government and big spending. In it he shows how divided government has yielded lower federal spending since 1965.

Since 2000, President Bush and the Republican-led Congress increased discretionary spending on domestic programs—excluding defense and homeland security—by 7 percent annually. That's nearly twice the 4.2 percent annual growth under President Clinton and a Congress run by pre-Bush Republicans.

In fact, Slivinski said, Republican presidents with Republican-controlled Congresses posted average annual spending gains of 3.6 percent per person, while Democratic presidents with their own party controlling Congress boosted spending 3.3 percent. Divided governments, however, increased spending by only 1.5 percent.

"The (stock) market historically likes gridlock. The big bull market of the 1990s really didn't get going until late 1994, when the GOP took over the Congress," said Al Goldman, chief market strategist for A.G. Edwards, a national brokerage firm.

Divided government makes sweeping changes improbable.

"I don't think any big economic question will get on the agenda," said Mark Zandi, chief economist for Moody's Economy.com.

The threat of gridlock could ease some compromises, however, said Jay Timmons, the senior vice president of the National Association of Manufacturers.

"In divided government, you have almost a better opportunity to get things done than when one party controls it," he said. He hopes the parties will expand offshore drilling for oil and gas. "It forces both sides to reach agreement and not get 100 percent of what they want."

Another compromise could be immigration revisions and a guest-worker program. Two-thirds of the Democrats in both chambers of Congress either have supported guest-worker programs or opposed construction of a wall along the U.S.-Mexican border, said Bruce Josten, the executive vice president of government affairs for the U.S. Chamber of Commerce.

"What you are left concluding . . . is that the opportunities to proceed forth in moving a comprehensive immigration bill have been enhanced," he said.

One test of bipartisan cooperation will come in the House Budget Committee, where the incoming chairman will be Rep. John Spratt, D-S.C. He's expected to push for a 1990s-style compromise to impose caps on federal spending.

"The main goal would be to put the budget on a path to balance, as we did in 1997 with the balanced-budget agreement," said Charles Fant, a spokesman for Spratt. "There was some genuine give and take on both sides; he'd like to see that again."

Trade also will test bipartisanship. Rep. Charles Rangel, D-N.Y., the incoming chairman of the tax-writing Ways and Means Committee, promised an America-first approach to trade Wednesday.

"We have to protect American jobs. We have to protect American workers," Rangel said.

He pointed to a trade deal with Peru, negotiated but not approved yet by Congress, and said it wouldn't pass unless it was amended to require the Andean nation to adopt international labor standards.

That pleases trade critics.

"The shift in the House certainly creates more opportunities to shine the spotlight on the misguided trade policies of recent years," said Alan Tonelson, a senior researcher for the U.S. Business and Industrial Council, a coalition of small U.S.-based manufacturers.

———

(c) 2006, McClatchy-Tribune Information Services.

GRAPHICS (from MCT Graphics, 202-383-6064): ELECTION

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