Republicans who hated the stimulus accused the $787 billion spending bill of being stuffed with wasteful, pork-filled spending tailored to lawmakers’ special interests. That story is contradicted by a new study from Brookings, a Washignton, D.C.-based think tank, which shows that political clout actually had little influence over where stimulus funds were spent.
But the spending didn’t always go where there were the most job losses, either.
The study looks specifically at the discretionary spending in the stimulus — $308 billion in funds that have traditionally been the main vehicle for pork-barrel and special-interest spending. Researchers measured political clout by examining leadership positions, length of time in office and political party, and found these factors had no significant impact on where the money went, according to the paper presented Thursday at the annual conference of the Brookings Papers on Economic Activity.
“Party leaders did not receive more funds than rank-and-file legislators. Democrats in swing districts did not receive more than Republicans in such districts. Ideological moderates and pivotal members of Congress received slightly less than average,” wrote the paper’s authors, Christopher Boone of Columbia University, Arindrajit Dube of the University of Massachusetts Amherst, and Ethan Kaplan of the University of Maryland.
The findings supported Democratic promises to keep earmarks and special-interest spending out of the bill.
Democratic districts did receive slightly more funds than Republican ones — about $510 per capita, compared to $416 per capita in GOP areas. But researchers say this difference was negligible once they factored in employment and poverty levels. What’s more, legislators in politically-vulnerable areas didn’t receive any more funds on average. “Neither of the two parties appear to have targeted extra funds towards marginal districts, i.e., those with close outcomes in the previous election,” the authors wrote.
Suzy Khimm









