We may see more ‘flexible’ Obama during second term

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As for the “fiscal cliff” — also known as the package of major tax hikes and spending cuts that are scheduled to be implemented on New Year’s Day unless a deal is consummated — Brill says a “failure to act will push the economy into recession in 2013. I hope Democrats recognize the fragile state of the current economy and the danger posed by failure to resolve the ‘fiscal cliff’ this fall. With regard to taxes, it’s not more cuts that we need. It’s a better tax system that we need.”

Like Davis, Roger Wilkins, the nation’s first black assistant attorney general in the U.S. Justice Department, sees tangible signs for increased optimism during Obama’s second term. Wilkins believes Obama’s survival skills will produce a philosophical dictum that will embolden his leadership status with the American people. In other words, Obama has gained much-needed cachet as a result of weathering a blistering campaign challenge from Romney and the Republicans.

“I think people will recognize what he’s gone through in order to get his second term,” says the 80-year-old Wilkins, who served in President Lyndon B. Johnson’s administration from 1965-68. “He’s proven to the American people that he has the backbone to stand up to the biggest battering in the history of presidential politics.”

Peter Morici doesn’t offer a rosy picture on the four-year economic outlook of GDPs and CPIs. Morici, the guy with the glasses and bow tie who appears on numerous financial TV shows, is a professor of economics at the University of Maryland’s Robert H. Smith’s School of Business.

He predicts there will be a quick uptick in the economy after the election and into the spring, but it will be short-lived. “The prospects for an improved economy are not there,” Morici says. “What he proposes is the same old Obama. What he’s tried hasn’t worked.

“I fault him for not trying different things, new things.”

The bottom line: Morici believes Obama had enough time in his first term to make an economic difference. “Our growth rate should be better than 1.5 to 2 percent,” Morici says. “It should be 4 to 5 percent.”

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