Late last week, after we’d learned the economy created nearly a quarter of a million jobs in January, President Obama delivered a not-so-subtle message to Congress: “Don’t muck it up.”
This was not a stray thought from the president. Economic conditions appear to be improving, but Americans have seen encouraging data before, only to have the strength of the recovery falter. The three best months for job creation since the start of the recession were February, March, and April of last year, but the trend didn’t last — the Eurozone crisis, a disaster in Japan, and Republicans’ decision to play a suicidal game with the full faith and credit of the United States “mucked” things up.
As Ezra Klein noted this morning, the projections for 2012 look good, but Congress still has the capacity to do real damage to the recovery.
In a perfect world, we wouldn’t just smoothly extend the payroll tax cut and the unemployment benefits, but we would begin a large program of infrastructure investment, and we would pass a deficit-reduction package that began in 2014, and the Federal Reserve would step up with a bit more support for the economy. […]









