Before
President Barack Obama can sit back and bask in the achievement of securing a
second term in office, he may want to ponder some of the challenges ahead.
HERE ARE FIVE KEY ISSUES AWAITING HIM IN HIS IN-TRAY.
1. A STILL-STRUGGLING ECONOMY
The US is slowly crawling out
of the worst economic downturn since the Great Depression.
Unemployment has fallen but remains stubbornly high, at 7.9%,
and hiring remains too slow to absorb the millions of unemployed or
underemployed Americans. Economic growth remains sluggish - 2% in the third
quarter.
The slightest shock - see below - could send the economy
crashing down again.
Among the many factors dragging on the US are the debt crisis in
Europe and the resulting impact on global trade, continuing troubles in the US
real estate market, uncertainty about US government fiscal policy in the near
term, and concern about political gridlock in Washington.
Despite all that, Americans have enjoyed spots of good news in
recent weeks - modest job growth, GDP slowly picking up, signs the housing
market is at last recovering, and an up-tick in consumer confidence that
suggests Americans may at last be ready to open their wallets.
If, as some economic forecasters now believe, a roaring economy
is just ahead, Mr Obama will no doubt claim credit.
2. THE FISCAL CLIFF AND AFTER THAT, THE BUDGET DEFICIT
On 1 January comes an
immediate across-the-board volley of tax rises and government spending cuts
that will affect nearly every American and could devastate the weak economy -
unless Congress takes action to head them off.
The so-called fiscal
cliff is no accident of policy and finance. It was deliberately engineered in a
2011 compromise between Mr Obama and Congress as an incentive for them to agree
on a plan to reduce the yawning US budget deficit over the long term.
The idea was that the
Democrats and Republicans would act to prevent cuts to defence and social
programmes dear to either side, as well as the expiration of a temporary
payroll tax cut and the low tax rates dating back to the George W Bush
presidency.
Those were written
into law to be temporary, but Congress has shown little inclination to allow
them to lapse.
The combination of the
drastic spending cuts and tax rises could throw the fragile US economy back
into recession, according to just about every mainstream economist.
"That's just
simple macro economics," says Peter Morici, an economist and professor of
business at the University of Maryland.
"Whether you're a
conservative or a liberal, if you have a $500bn (£313bn) reduction in demand
because of increased taxes and lower spending, you're going off a cliff."
It is hoped a deal
that backs the US away from the fiscal cliff will also at last address the
deficit, which this year reached $1.1tn (£685bn), or about 7% of GDP.
To do that, the
president and Congress will have to fight it out over rapidly expanding social
programmes like Medicare and Social Security, the $651bn (£407bn) defence
budget, and the income tax structure.
3. IRAN
Iran stands at the
nexus of several US policy challenges - winding down US engagement in
Afghanistan, ensuring stability in Iraq, promoting a resolution to the
Israel/Palestine situation, fighting terrorism, ensuring open access to energy
and preventing nuclear proliferation.
The US remains
determined to prevent Iran gaining a nuclear weapon. Iran maintains its nuclear
programme is solely peaceful, and its leaders have vowed to resist
international sanctions that are increasingly weakening its economy.
"The US and Iran
are essentially in a state of cold war," says Karim Sadjadpour, an Iran
analyst with the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace.
Under Supreme Leader
Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, the Iranian government has come to define its national
interests in opposition to the US, he says.
Another factor Mr
Obama must consider is the threat of an Israeli military strike against Iran's
nuclear infrastructure - and an Iranian promise to retaliate.
The key for Mr Obama
will be to check Iran's nuclear ambitions without resorting to military force,
Mr Sadjadpour says.
"In this context
you can't shun Iran," he says. And a military strike on that country would
exacerbate every other problem the US faces on the international stage and
could spark a regional war.
"To paraphrase
Winston Churchill, diplomacy is the worst option save for all others."
4. MEDICARE COSTS
Medicare, the enormous
government healthcare programme for over-65s and disabled Americans, is projected
soon to run out of money.
The nearly half-century old programme, one of the Democrats'
signature achievements, is suffering under two pressing burdens - the
ever-growing cost of an inefficient healthcare system and the imminent
retirement of the baby-boom generation, more and more of whom are becoming
eligible for benefits.
Medicare's hospital insurance programme is currently projected
to run out of money in 2024. The doctor visit and prescription drug programmes,
which have an unlimited pot of money, will rise to 3.4% of GDP in 2035 from 2%
last year.
Addressing the cost rises is "daunting", says Paul Van
de Water, a senior fellow at the Center for Budget and Policy Priorities.
Don Berwick, former administrator of the US Centers for Medicare
and Medicaid Services, says the challenge ahead is much more complicated than
merely tweaking Medicare's funding structure. Rather, the entire healthcare
system needs an overhaul.
"Medicare's symptoms - rising costs beyond what we can
support as a country - are not Medicare symptoms, they're healthcare
symptoms," he says.
"America's healthcare delivery structure is unresponsive to
the needs we've got. One needs to see this as a problem with the way that
American healthcare is shaped and delivered for everyone, not with
government-sponsored healthcare."
5. WORKING WITH CONGRESS
Mr Obama finds himself again
contending with a bitterly divided congress that has been mired in
parliamentary gridlock for the past four years and barely capable of passing
legislation more controversial than renaming a post office.
Most analysts predicted Congress would remain divided, with the
Republicans in control of the House of Representatives and the Democrats
maintaining a narrow, possibly single-vote, majority in the Senate.
At least in the short term, nothing suggests the Republicans who
control the House and have enough votes in the Senate to block legislation,
will be any more willing to compromise with the Democrats than in his first
term.
"There is no real prospect that this election is going to
lance the boils, break the fever, bring us back to bipartisan
policymaking," says Norman Ornstein, a prominent congressional scholar and
co-author of It's Even Worse Than It Looks: How the American Constitutional
System Collided With the New Politics of Extremism.
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