Friday, January 18, 2013

'It Appears That the Strategy has Worked'

Brad DeLong:

Jake Sherman:

House Republicans plan debt ceiling vote: House Republicans will vote next week on a bill that would raise the nation’s debt ceiling for three months and stop pay for members of Congress if the Senate doesn’t pass a budget, GOP officials said Friday…. It’s also a shift from House Speaker John Boehner…. But Boehner isn’t retreating on the debt ceiling without conditions; He’s framing this as a way to force Senate Democrats to lay out a budget…

Twenty-seventh Amendment to the United States Constitution:

No law, varying the compensation for the services of the Senators and Representatives, shall take effect, until an election of Representatives shall have intervened.

Everybody in the House and Senate now knows that this Charles Krauthammer-John Boehner "no pay for the Senate unless it passes a Budget Resolution" condition is unconstitutional.

But Jake Sherman does not tell the readers of Politico. Why not?

Why oh why can't we have a better press corps?

Paul Krugman:

Not With A Bang But With A Whimper: When you’re wrong, you’re wrong. I thought that by ruling out any way to bypass the debt limit, the White House was setting itself up, at least potentially, for an ignominious cave-in. But it appears that the strategy has worked, and it’s the Republicans giving up. I’m happy to concede that the president and team called this one right.
And it’s a big deal. Yes, the GOP could come back on the debt ceiling, but that seems unlikely. It could try to make a big deal of the sequester, but that’s ... not good, but not potentially catastrophic, and therefore poor terrain for the “we’re crazier than you are” strategy. And while Republicans could shut down the government, my guess is that Democrats would actually be gleeful at that prospect: the PR would be overwhelmingly favorable for Obama...
The key point to remember here is that Obama achieves his main goals simply by surviving. Above all, health reform gets implemented, and probably becomes irreversible.
A good day for sanity, all around.

I'm finding it hard to convince myself that this ends the era of the manufactured crisis, it's difficult to believe that Republicans won't regroup and strike again when they get the chance. But that's the thing, short of creative steps not yet on the radar, it's hard to see when a chance will come that isn't likely to backfire in the ways described above (or here).

    Posted by on Friday, January 18, 2013 at 12:53 PM in Budget Deficit, Economics, Politics | Permalink  Comments (11)


    'Health Care Rationing Is Nothing New'

    On health care rationing in the US:

    Health Care Rationing Is Nothing New [Excerpt], by Beatrix Hoffman: ... Opponents of the 2010 Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act warn that the new health care law will lead to rationing, or limits on medical services. But many observers point out that health care is already rationed in the United States. "We've done it for years," said Dr. Arthur Kellermann, professor of emergency medicine and associate dean for health policy at Emory University School of Medicine. "In this country, we mainly ration on the ability to pay." ...
    Countries with universal health systems ration health care via controlled distribution, whether through national budgeting, government setting of prices and provider fees, restrictions on some services, or a combination of methods. The United States health care system rations primarily by price and insurance coverage—and ... many other methods as well. Americans have learned to fear European or Canadian types of rationing, but don't see that the United States practices both price rationing and other types of rationing in health care.
    Rationing in the United States is ... practiced by government agencies, private health insurance companies, hospitals, and providers, in ways both official and unofficial, intended and unintended, visible and invisible. The American way of rationing is a complex, fragmented, and often contradictory blend of policies and practices, unique to the United States. ... Health care has been rationed by race, in the case of the Jim Crow health system and other types of racial discrimination; by region, in the case of the uneven distribution of health facilities and personnel throughout the country; by employment and occupation, in the case of the job-based health insurance system; by address, in the case of residency requirements for various kinds of health care; by type of insurance coverage, in the case of health insurance that limits benefits and choice of doctor and hospital; by parental status, in the case of Medicaid (childless individuals are often excluded); by age, in the case of Medicare and the State Children's Health Insurance Programs—and the list goes on. These types of health care organization ... have rarely been called rationing. ...

      Posted by on Friday, January 18, 2013 at 11:14 AM in Economics, Health Care, Regulation | Permalink  Comments (1)


      Paul Krugman: The Dwindling Deficit

      The budget deficit is not our biggest problem:

      The Dwindling Deficit, by Paul Krugman, Commentary, NY Times: It’s hard to turn on your TV or read an editorial page these days without encountering someone declaring, with an air of great seriousness, that excessive spending and the resulting budget deficit is our biggest problem. Such declarations are rarely accompanied by any argument...; it’s supposed to be part of what everyone knows.
      This is, however, a case in which what everyone knows just ain’t so. ...
      It’s true that right now we have a large federal budget deficit. But that deficit is mainly the result of a depressed economy — and you’re actually supposed to run deficits in a depressed economy to help support overall demand. The deficit will come down as the economy recovers... Indeed, that’s already happening. ...
      Still, will economic recovery be enough to stabilize the fiscal outlook? The answer is, pretty much..., the budget outlook for the next 10 years doesn’t look at all alarming.
      Now, projections that run further into the future do suggest trouble, as an aging population and rising health care costs continue to push federal spending higher. But here’s a question you almost never see seriously addressed: Why, exactly, should we believe that it’s necessary, or even possible, to decide right now how we will eventually address the budget issues of the 2030s?
      Consider, for example, the case of Social Security. ... At this point, “reform” proposals are all about ... moves that would gradually reduce benefits... So the plan is to avoid cuts in future benefits by committing right now to ... cuts in future benefits. Huh? ...
      And much the same logic applies to Medicare. So there’s a reasonable argument for leaving the question of how to deal with future problems up to future politicians. ...
      So, no big problem in the medium term, no strong case for worrying now about long-run budget issues.
      The deficit scolds dominating policy debate will, of course, fiercely resist any attempt to downgrade their favorite issue. They love living in an atmosphere of fiscal crisis: It lets them stroke their chins and sound serious, and it also provides an excuse for slashing social programs, which often seems to be their real objective.
      But neither the current deficit nor projected future spending deserve to be anywhere near the top of our political agenda. It’s time to focus on other stuff — like the still-depressed state of the economy and the still-terrible problem of long-term unemployment.

        Posted by on Friday, January 18, 2013 at 12:33 AM in Budget Deficit, Economics, Unemployment | Permalink  Comments (69)


        Links for 01-18-2013

          Posted by on Friday, January 18, 2013 at 12:06 AM in Economics, Links | Permalink  Comments (88)


          Thursday, January 17, 2013

          Who First Said the US is 'An Insurance Company with an Army'?

          Underbelly Buce does some digging:

          The Holland Principle: Who first said that the US government is "an insurance company with an army." Paul Krugman often gets the credit, but he says it is  not original with him: "this isn't original" he wrote, invoking the principle on April 27, 2011. Ezra Klein also gets credit; he presented it alongside a lovely pie chart  on Feb. 14, 2011, but I find a (second-hand) reference back in 2007 crediting Krugman, so Krugman at least trumps Klein. A polisci textbook (Jan. 1, 2010) credits it to "a Bush administration staff member."  
          And here's a ref dated April 5, 2004 crediting it to "OSTP's Mike Holland" as from Science in for 4/11/2003. I haven't taken the time to track it all the way to JSTOR. OSTP=Office of Science and Technology Policy? "Mike Holland" would appear to be this guy, whose Linkedin profile shows that he was at OSTP at the relevant point in time.
          Recognizing that no quote is original, and that we can probably count on finding an earlier avatar on a clay pot in Sumer, I'd say that for a moment we ought to call it "The Holland Principle." Yo Mike, okay with you?

          Update: Paul Krugman emails:

          Someone should have asked me. Peter Fisher, undersecretary of the Treasury, in 2002.

            Posted by on Thursday, January 17, 2013 at 02:29 PM in Economics | Permalink  Comments (18)


            'More Ideological Excuse Making for Bad Banks'

             Barry Ritholtz takes on:

            ...this bit of AEI silliness:

            “And here I thought it was the borrower’s job to determine if he has the means to repay a loan.”

            It used to be. Homebuyers would look at their income, assets, monthly cash flow, job security, debt outstanding and things like that to determine if the family could afford to own a home. The lender’s job was to perform adequate due diligence and protect against loss by requiring a down payment.

            No. That is Wrong. It so wrong on so many many levels that I have to stop what I was going to be doing this morning and respond to this silliness instead:

            1. Banks — not borrowers — are the ones who actually make the loan decision.

            2. Banks have access to capital. Depositors give banks money (FDIC helps that) and banks also can tap the Fed for even more capital. The banks have obligation to all of these entities to adhere to good lending standards.

            3. It is the banks job to determine credit worthiness. THAT IS WHAT THEY DO. If they do not care to be bother to make this determination, then perhaps they should consider something other than the money lending business as a vocation.

            Left to themselves, most humans would borrow much more money than they can reasonably handle. This is not a political statement, it is an observation about Human Nature.

            Banks and other credit sources know this — that is why they review income and FICO scores and past payment history and debt load and employment record and tax returns. It is to verify the credit worthiness of the applicant.

            No, this isn’t an exercise in due diligence — “Hey, figure out what you can afford, and we will check your work for you.” That is not what maintaining Lending Standards means.

            This is why the no doc, no credit check, liar loans were destined to fail. ...

            He is discussing a column by Caroline Baum:

            Further..., Ms. Baum could not help herself to bring up the usual bugaboos: “Without re-litigating the cause of the housing bubble — greedy bankers or government housing policy” — that’s because that debate is over, and the Peter Wallisons and Ed Pintos of the world overwhelmingly lost it.
            The only reason to go back to that debate — as was done repeatedly in the column — is because the outcome of that disagrees with your ideology. The statement “Government housing policies caused the crisis” is enormously useful, however, as it signifies cognitive dissonance on the part of its proponent.

            No matter how much evidence piles up against it, and there is presently a significant amount, they can't let go of the idea that the housing crisis was caused by the government trying to help poor people. That's not what happened, but the facts are a large blow to their ideology and they aren't about to admit that what they've been claiming is wrong.

              Posted by on Thursday, January 17, 2013 at 11:15 AM in Economics, Housing | Permalink  Comments (43)


              'US Incarceration Rates Are Out of Control'

              This was in today's links, but in case you missed it this is from Michael Froomkin:

              US Incarceration Rates Are Out of Control, by  Michael Froomkin: I knew it was bad, but not this bad:

              (Spotted via Ian Welsh, Justice is not Law, Law is Not Justice.)

              There is an important qualification:

              I admit the graph is a tiny bit misleading — it uses absolute numbers rather than percentages of population, which would be better.

              However:

              But even making that correction doesn’t change much: US population grew from 226.5 million in 1980 to 308.7 million in 2010, a 73% increase. Meanwhile, however, the number of persons incarcerated almost quadrupled.
              Our incarceration rate is by far the highest in the world. ...

                Posted by on Thursday, January 17, 2013 at 10:04 AM in Economics | Permalink  Comments (36)


                Links for 01-17-2013

                  Posted by on Thursday, January 17, 2013 at 12:06 AM in Economics, Links | Permalink  Comments (97)


                  Wednesday, January 16, 2013

                  'The Right’s Resistance to Regulation'

                  Peter Dizikes of MIT News:
                  The right’s resistance to regulation, by Peter Dizikes, MIT News Office: James Watt, who served as Secretary of the Interior from 1981 to 1983, is remembered primarily for a short, business-friendly tenure that ended with his resignation soon after an ill-judged remark about women, minorities and the disabled. And yet, as MIT professor Judith Layzer observes in her new book about environmental politics, “Open for Business,” there is good reason to regard Watt’s impact differently.

                  For one thing, Watt, among others on the political right, managed to cut government funding for conservation efforts. For another, he installed staff members who emphasized the development of natural resources, rather than just the protection of land. In so doing, Watt was one of many Republicans who instituted fundamental changes in U.S. environmental policy.

                  “I will build an institutional memory that will be here for decades,” Watt once said of his department, as Layzer recounts.

                  These kinds of under-the-radar changes, Layzer argues, are one of two ways conservatives have dramatically altered environmental politics since the 1970s, when environmentalists probably reached the high point of their political influence.

                  The other, says Layzer, an associate professor of environmental policy at MIT, is ideological and rhetorical: Conservatives have gained enormous traction by touting “the virtues of the market system and the horrors of regulation,” thus limiting public backing for stricter government-imposed controls on natural resources. By arguing that the market economy, when left alone, is effectively self-policing and morally sound, conservatives have put environmentalists on the defensive, making them tentative about arguing for environmental protections as a good in themselves. So whereas President Richard Nixon once green-lighted the Environmental Protection Agency, today’s political debates often touch on the necessity of opening further federal lands for oil exploration.

                  “The set of conservative ideas has really pushed the framing of issues to the point where many people today aren’t even aware of the [older] alternatives,” Layzer says. “Only if you’d been involved or lived through this history would you know it hasn’t always been thus.” ...[continue]...

                  The one thing I'll note is that "free market rhetoric," which is said to have played a key role in winning (or at least shifting) the battle of ideas, was the vehicle for defending other interests, e.g. business interests in having as few environmental regulations as possible. It (free markets) was not the goal in and of itself.

                  As to what should be done, for this reason I'm not so sure that “It really was about ideas." And you have to fight ideas with ideas.” It was also about having the political power to make the ideas heard, and to turn them into actual legislation that served the interests of the of those supporting the politicians financially. So I'd say, "It was really about using ideas to serve the interests of those who held the reins of power." Or something like that.

                    Posted by on Wednesday, January 16, 2013 at 02:37 PM in Economics, Environment, Politics, Regulation | Permalink  Comments (38)


                    Will Online Education Reduce the Income Gap?

                    My latest column argues that online education has the potential to help lots of people, but contrary to some claims:

                    ...traditional colleges are not going away, and the potential of online education to reduce inequality is overrated. ...

                    See: Will Online Education Reduce the Income Gap?

                      Posted by on Wednesday, January 16, 2013 at 09:21 AM in Economics, Income Distribution, Technology, Universities | Permalink  Comments (68)


                      European Labor Markets: Six Key Lessons

                      Jonathan Portes (he also provides discussion of each of these points):

                      European labor markets: six key lessons from the Commission report, by Jonathan Portes: I haven't always been complimentary about the European Commission - either its economic analysis or its policy advice. So it's nice to be able to be wholeheartedly positive about the excellent report "Employment and Social Developments in Europe 2012"...
                      The report is really worth reading. But it's close to 500 pages, and the main messages deserve as wide an audience as possible, so I thought I'd try to highlight them with some commentary. To my mind, the key ones are the following:
                      1. Economic weakness in Europe, and the consequent rise in unemployment, are mostly to do with a lack of aggregate demand, which in turn is the result of mistaken macroeconomic policies - especially aggressive fiscal consolidation...
                      2. Although financial markets may have stabilized - who knows for how long - things are getting worse, not better, in the real economy of the crisis countries...
                      3. Countries with more generous welfare states, but also more flexible labor markets, have fared best...
                      4. Following on from this, structural reforms in labor markets are required in many countries - but they need to be based on evidence! Segmented labor markets are a problem and raise youth unemployment...
                      ..and even in recession, minimum wages at a sensible level do more good than harm. ...
                      5. Where they were allowed to operate, the "automatic stabilizers" worked...(in both macroeconomic and social terms)...
                      ...while where they were overridden, in the pursuit of "self-defeating austerity", things have got worse...
                      6. Latvia, Ireland (and even Estonia) may look like "success stories" to some in the Commission, and perhaps to the financial markets (at present) but the reality in terms of jobs and incomes is rather different. ...

                      Too bad fiscal policymakers didn't do their homework and learn these lessons about austerity, social insurance, automatic stabilizers, and so on before putting harmful or ineffective policy in place (or failing to implement policy when action is called for, e.g. to reduce unemployment). Wish I thought they were doing their homework now.

                        Posted by on Wednesday, January 16, 2013 at 12:24 AM in Economics, Fiscal Policy, Politics, Social Insurance, Unemployment | Permalink  Comments (101)


                        Links for 01-16-2013

                          Posted by on Wednesday, January 16, 2013 at 12:06 AM in Economics, Links | Permalink  Comments (53)


                          Tuesday, January 15, 2013

                          Fed Watch: Money and Debt, Continued

                          Tim Duy:

                          Money and Debt, Continued, by Tim Duy: Paul Krugman responds to Steve Randy Waldman, noting that perhaps they are having a failure to communicate. I hope I can bridge that gap (I suppose we can't discount the risk that I make it wider).

                          Krugman begins:

                          What Waldman is now saying is that in the future the Fed will manage monetary policy by varying the interest rate it pays on reserves rather than the size of the conventionally measured monetary base. That’s possible, although I don’t quite see why.

                          Correct, a key point in this discussion is that the Fed can manage policy by interest on reserves. Indeed, as Waldman notes, now that they have this tool, they are not likely to give it up. I would say that the issue of "I don't quite see why" is irrelevant. The basis of Waldman's argument is that they can, not that they will. This isn't an argument about existing institutional arrangements, but potential institutional arrangements. Krugman continues:

                          But in his original post he argued that under such a regime “Cash and (short-term) government debt will continue to be near-perfect substitutes”.

                          Well, no — not if by “cash” you mean, or at least include, currency — which is the great bulk of the monetary base in normal times.

                          I don't think Waldman means "cash" as currency, but both currency and reserves. Such that reserves and government debt are essentially the same (more on this later). At least, I think this is what Waldman is driving at, but clarification is needed (I find myself getting sloppy on the term "cash," so I can't really throw stones). Back to Krugman:

                          But this could come across as word games. I think the way to get at the substance is to ask the question that set this discussion off: what happens if the US government issues a trillion-dollar coin to pay its bills?...

                          ...But what happens if and when the economy recovers, and market interest rates rise off the floor?

                          There are several possibilities:

                          1. The Treasury redeems the coin, which it does by borrowing a trillion dollars.

                          2. The coin stays at the Fed, but the Fed sterilizes any impact on the economy, either by (a) selling off assets or (b) raising the interest rate it pays on bank reserves

                          3. The Fed simply expands the monetary base to match the value of the coin, an expansion that mainly ends up in the form of currency, without taking offsetting measures to sterilize the effect.

                          What Waldman is saying is that he believes that the actual outcome would be 2(b). And I think he’s implying that there’s really no difference between 2(b) and 3.

                          I think that Waldman is saying the outcome could be 2(b), but that depends on the relationship between the Treasury and the Fed. But I do not believe he is saying it will be the same as option 3 because, as Krugman notes:

                          Option 3 would be inflationary; on the other hand, it would not lead to any increase in government debt.

                          and Waldman is looking for a noninflationary outcome. Krugman continues:

                          Option 2(b) would not be inflationary — but it would affect the federal budget. Why? Because the Fed’s additional interest payments would reduce the amount it can remit to the Treasury.

                          I don't think that Waldman ever said that the Fed's use of the required reserve tool would be costless to the Treasury. This is an important point - that cost is what prevents the platinum coin from being simple debt monetization. The platinum coin is not a free lunch. Krugman is on the right path when he continues:

                          In fact, the effects of option 2(b) would be identical, both for the economy and for the federal government’s cash flow, to option 1. Either way, the budget deficit would be enlarged by the payment of interest on $1 trillion of borrowing. In that sense, the Treasury will have redeemed the coin, for practical purposes, even if it never redeems the coin.

                          Compare this to what I said:

                          The Fed has a portfolio of bonds which is a indirect transfer from Treasury which in turns allows it to pay interest on reserves. Lacking such a portfolio, the Fed would need to receive a direct transfer from the Treasury to pay interest on reserves. Operationally, these are the same. As long as both have the same objective function, it makes no difference if the Treasury's transfer goes through the middleman of a bond or just directly to the Fed.

                          As Krugman correctly notes, in this world the Treasury, not the Fed, is effectively paying the interest on reserves. Thus, we really shouldn't consider the excess reserves as monetary base (with the connotation that these reserves are simply cash ready to be lent out), but as psuedo-government debt (and I thank Gavyn Davies for pointing this out to me, so I hope I got his meaning correct).

                          In the old world, the banks held an asset called government debt that paid interest. In the new world, they hold an an asset called excess reserves that pay interest. And in both cases the entity paying the interest is the Treasury, either directly or indirectly. Both cases are noninflationary, but one relies on pieces of metal with a number on them (platinum coins), while the other relies on pieces of paper with a number on them (government debt).

                          Now, back to Krugman's statement: "That’s possible, although I don’t quite see why." Which is to say, why should we believe it would be institutionally possible to issue platinum coins rather than debt? This gets to my point:

                          But what if the Treasury does not have the same objective function, does not want higher interest rates, and thus does not want to transfer the resources to the Fed? What claim does the Fed have on the Treasury to force it to act?

                          Somewhere in this space is why we have come to accept the importance of an independent central bank.

                          I think if Krugman and Waldman have a failure to communicate, it is because the latter is not shackled to the current institutional structure. Waldman is describing a system in which the relationship between the fiscal and monetary authorities is fundamentally different than that of the current system. This is evident when Waldman says:

                          What used to be “monetary policy” is necessarily a joint venture of the central bank and the treasury.

                          My takeaway from Waldman is that under some institutional structures, there is little difference between platinum coins and government debt (or because we have debt we have a particular institutional structure?) In effect, the the zero-bound issue and platinum coin debate have forced us to think down paths that blur the lines between fiscal and monetary policy. The longer we are in at the zero-bound, the more we will challenge the existing status-quo.

                          Alternatively, this can also be simply a misunderstanding on Krugman's part if he believes that Waldman is saying that we can use platinum coins to literally monetize deficit spending with neither budgetary nor inflationary implications. I don't think Waldman is thinking this, and if he is, then I think he would be wrong.

                          Perhaps this clears up this issue, at least a little bit. Or perhaps not (see Stephen Williamson for another take). In any case, I hope I have not mangled either author's thoughts too badly.

                            Posted by on Tuesday, January 15, 2013 at 04:57 PM in Economics, Fed Watch, Monetary Policy | Permalink  Comments (58)


                            'Egregious in its Misuse of Data'

                            Jeff Sachs is unhappy with the WSJ's editorial page (and not for the first time):

                            Wall Street Journal: Get a Fact Checker, by Jeffrey Sachs: ...I ... want to talk about fact checking. The [Wall Street] Journal editorial board is egregious in its misuse of data. It writes what it wants without fact checking. Where is the journalistic profession to call them out?
                            There are two editorial pieces this weekend of note. The story on "Europe's Bankrupt Welfare State" asserts that, "the European way of welfare is bankrupt." This is easy to check. Look at European countries with large welfare states, and see how they are doing in terms of debt, deficits, unemployment, and other indicators of "bankruptcy." I do this in Table 1 here comparing the US with Europe's five leading welfare states: the Netherlands, Denmark, Norway, Sweden, and Germany. ...
                            Looking at Table 1..., the conclusion is simple. The European welfare states tax and spend more than the US as a percent of GDP, yet also have lower budget deficits as a share of GDP, lower debt-GDP ratios, and lower unemployment rates. Note that the government sectors of Norway and Sweden have net assets rather than net debt. Some bankruptcy!
                            The second comment is by editorial board member Holman Jenkins, Jr. Mr. Jenkins tries to debunk global warming by writing that "the warmest year on record globally is still 1998 and no trend has been apparent globally since then."
                            His claim is both false and irrelevant. It is false because most data point to more recent years as being warmer than 1998. ... The claim is also irrelevant, since 1998 was an exceptionally strong El Nino (essentially, a tilt of Pacific warm water towards the west coast of Latin America). ... Comparing subsequent years to a very strong El Nino year mixes up trends and inter-annual variability. ...
                            The Wall Street Journal editors have failed to notice that even the climate skeptics have come around. ...
                            The Wall Street Journal editorial board needs a fact checker plain and simple. It's a major paper, with excellent news coverage, and should not destroy its integrity by an editorial board that flouts the basic process of checking the facts.

                              Posted by on Tuesday, January 15, 2013 at 04:20 PM in Economics, Environment, Press, Social Insurance | Permalink  Comments (52)


                              'Monetary Policy is Currently Not Accommodative Enough'

                              Via a speech by Minnesota Fed president Narayana Kocherlakota, something that is too often forgotten in discussions of monetary policy, the long (and variable) lags between policy changes and the impact on the economy:

                              ...The FOMC acts to achieve its two mandates—maximum employment and price stability—by influencing interest rates through the purchase and sale of financial assets. When the FOMC raises interest rates, households and firms tend to spend less and save more. The fall in spending puts downward pressure on both employment and prices. Similarly, when the FOMC lowers interest rates, households and firms tend to spend more and save less. This puts upward pressure on employment and prices.
                              However, these pressures on employment and prices from lower interest rates are not felt immediately. Instead, it typically takes a year or two for the effects of monetary policy adjustments to manifest themselves in inflation and unemployment. Hence, the FOMC’s decisions about appropriate monetary policy necessarily hinge on the members’ forecasts of the evolution of prices and employment over the next year or two—what we typically call our medium-term outlooks for inflation and unemployment. ...

                              Given these lags, and the forecast for recovery, is policy too tight or too easy?:

                              I’ve described the Fed’s current monetary policy stance in some detail, and I’ve emphasized that the Fed’s stance is much more accommodative than it was five years ago. That observation alone might suggest that the Fed’s policy is too accommodative. But there have been big changes in the economy since 2007. ...
                              As you will hear, my main conclusion is that my outlook implies that monetary policy is currently not accommodative enough. ...

                              He concludes his speech with:

                              Monetary policy affects the economy with a lag of one or two years. Hence, a policymaker’s views about the appropriate level of monetary policy accommodation depend on his or her forecast for how the economy will evolve over the next year or two. My own outlook is that growth will remain moderate over the next two years. As a result, under current policy, my outlook for inflation is that it will run below the Fed’s target of 2 percent over the next two years and that the unemployment rate will be above 7 percent over that same period. Hence, the FOMC can better promote price stability and promote maximum employment, as mandated by Congress, by adopting a more accommodative policy stance. It can provide that extra accommodation by lowering the unemployment rate threshold in its forward guidance to 5.5 percent from the current setting of 6.5 percent. ...

                              I was highly critical of Narayana Kocherlakota in the past, especially over his view that the unemployment problem is largely structural and hence out of the reach of Fed policy. But he deserves credit for changing his views in light of the evidence, and his call for even more accommodative policy makes him one of the more dovish policymakers at the Fed. If only other policymakers were as open-minded.

                                Posted by on Tuesday, January 15, 2013 at 10:05 AM Permalink  Comments (39)


                                'Skill-Biased Technological Change and Rising Wage Inequality'

                                Lots of discussion recently about whether technological change is the primary source of wage inequality in recent decades (as opposed to policy and institutions). According to this, there are many "problems and puzzles for the skill biased technical change story": 

                                Skill-Biased Technological Change and Rising Wage Inequality: Some Problems and Puzzles, by Owen Sidar: Dylan Matthews has a nice post on the inequality & skill biased technical change debate between David Autor, who is one of my favorite labor economists, and some folks at EPI.

                                I wanted to highlight this paper by David Card and John DiNardo that goes through some problems and puzzles for the skill biased technical change story. Here’s how they conclude:

                                Our main conclusion is that, contrary to the impression conveyed by most of the recent literature, the SBTC hypothesis falls short as a unicausal explanation for the evolution of the U.S. wage structure in the 1980s and 1990s. Indeed, we find puzzles and problems for the theory in nearly every dimension of the wage structure. This is not to say that we believe technology was fixed over the past 30 years or that recent technological changes have had no effect on the structure of wages. There were many technological innovations in the 1970s, 1980s, and 1990s, and it seems likely that these changes had some effect on relative wages. Rather, we argue that the SBTC hypothesis by itself is not particularly helpful in organizing or understanding the shifts in the structure of wages that have occurred in the U.S. labor market. Based on our reading of the evidence, we believe it is time to reevaluate the case that SBTC offers a satisfactory explanation for the rise in U.S. wage inequality in the last quarter of the twentieth century. 

                                I think that skill-biased technical change is part of the explanation for rising inequality, but it's far from the entire story.

                                  Posted by on Tuesday, January 15, 2013 at 09:24 AM in Economics, Income Distribution, Productivity, Technology, Unemployment | Permalink  Comments (43)


                                  Links for 01-15-2013

                                    Posted by on Tuesday, January 15, 2013 at 12:06 AM in Economics, Links | Permalink  Comments (80)


                                    Monday, January 14, 2013

                                    'I’m Open to Making Modest Adjustments to Programs Like Medicare'

                                    President Obama today in his press conference:

                                    ... Now, the other congressionally imposed deadline coming up is the so-called debt ceiling... So I want to be clear about this: The debt ceiling is not a question of authorizing more spending. Raising the debt ceiling does not authorize more spending. It simply allows the country to pay for spending that Congress has already committed to.
                                    These are bills that have already been racked up, and we need to pay them. ... So ... Republicans in Congress have two choices here: They can act responsibly and pay America’s bills or they can act irresponsibly and put America through another economic crisis.
                                    But they will not collect a ransom in exchange for not crashing the American economy. The financial well-being of the American people is not leverage to be used. The full faith and credit of the United States of America is not a bargaining chip.
                                    And they’d better choose quickly because time is running short. The last time Republicans in Congress even flirted with this idea, our triple-A credit rating was downgraded for the first time in our history, our businesses created the fewest jobs of any month in nearly the past three years, and ironically, the whole fiasco actually added to the deficit. ...
                                    What I will not do is to have that negotiation with a gun at the head of the American people; the threat that unless we get our way, unless you gut Medicare or Medicaid or, you know, otherwise slash things that the American people don’t believe should be slashed, that we’re going to threaten to wreck the entire economy. ... That’s not how we’re going to do it this time. ...
                                    Q: ...I want to come back to the debt ceiling, because in the summer of 2011, you said that you wouldn’t negotiate on the debt ceiling, and you did. Last year you said that you wouldn’t extend any of the Bush tax cuts for the wealthy, and you did. So as you say now that you’re not going to negotiate on the debt ceiling this year, why should House Republicans take that seriously and think that if we get to the one-minute-to-midnight scenario that you’re not going to back down? ...
                                    PRESIDENT OBAMA: No, no, look, what I’ve said is is that I’m happy to have a conversation about deficit reduction.
                                    Q: So you technically are willing to negotiate.
                                    PRESIDENT OBAMA: Nope. ...

                                    He also says:

                                    I’m open to making modest adjustments to programs like Medicare to protect them for future generations.

                                    The old we'll save Medicare and Social Security from benefit cuts by cutting benefits. I wonder how he defines "modest"?

                                      Posted by on Monday, January 14, 2013 at 11:20 AM in Budget Deficit, Economics, Politics | Permalink  Comments (121)


                                      Paul Krugman: Japan Steps Out

                                      Will we learn from Japan?:

                                      Japan Steps Out, by Paul Krugman, Commentary, NY Times: For three years economic policy throughout the advanced world has been paralyzed ... by a dismal orthodoxy. Every suggestion of action to create jobs has been shot down with warnings of dire consequences. If we spend more, the Very Serious People say, the bond markets will punish us. If we print more money, inflation will soar. Nothing ... can be done, except ever harsher austerity, which will someday, somehow, be rewarded.
                                      But now it seems that one major nation is breaking ranks — and that nation is, of all places, Japan. ... Shinzo Abe, the new prime minister, has ... already taken steps orthodoxy says we mustn’t take. And the early indications are that it’s going pretty well.
                                      Some background: Long before the 2008 financial crisis plunged America and Europe into a deep and prolonged economic slump, Japan held a dress rehearsal in the economics of stagnation. When a burst stock and real estate bubble pushed Japan into recession, the policy response was too little, too late and too inconsistent. ... because it’s hard getting policy makers to accept the need for bold action. That is, the problem is mainly political and intellectual, rather than strictly economic. For the risks of action are much smaller than the Very Serious People want you to believe...
                                      Enter Mr. Abe, who has been pressuring the Bank of Japan into seeking higher inflation — in effect, helping to inflate away part of the government’s debt — and has also just announced a large new program of fiscal stimulus. How have the market gods responded?
                                      The answer is, it’s all good. Market measures of expected inflation, which were negative not long ago — the market was expecting deflation to continue — have now moved well into positive territory. But government borrowing costs have hardly changed at all; given the prospect of moderate inflation, this means that Japan’s fiscal outlook has actually improved sharply. True, the foreign-exchange value of the yen has fallen considerably — but that’s actually very good news, and Japanese exporters are cheering.
                                      In short, Mr. Abe has thumbed his nose at orthodoxy, with excellent results.
                                      Now, people who know something about Japanese politics warn me not to think of Mr. Abe as a good guy. ... Whatever his motives, Mr. Abe is breaking with a bad orthodoxy. And if he succeeds, something remarkable may be about to happen: Japan, which pioneered the economics of stagnation, may also end up showing the rest of us the way out.

                                        Posted by on Monday, January 14, 2013 at 12:33 AM in Economics, Fiscal Policy, Monetary Policy | Permalink  Comments (62)


                                        Fed Watch: A Trap of My Own Making

                                        Tim Duy:

                                        A Trap of My Own Making, by Tim Duy: Steve Waldman at interfluidity catches me in a trap of my own making. Waldman focuses on this quote of mine:

                                        Ultimately, I don't believe deficit spending should be directly monetized as I believe that Paul Krugman is correct - at some point in the future, the US economy will hopefully exit the zero bound, and at that point cash and government debt will not longer be perfect substitutes.

                                        Waldman has two responses. The first:

                                        Consistent with the “Great Moderation” trend, the so-called “natural rate” of interest may be negative for the indefinite future, unless we do something to alter the underlying causes of that condition. We may be at the zero bound, perhaps with interludes of positiveness during “booms”, for a long time to come.

                                        I suppose this is why I added the modifier "hopefully." I am no stranger to concerns that the economy is locked on the zero bound for a long, long time.

                                        The second response is this:

                                        What I am fairly sure won’t happen, even if interest rates are positive, is that “cash and government debt will no[] longer be perfect substitutes.” Cash and (short-term) government debt will continue to be near-perfect substitutes because, I expect, the Fed will continue to pay interest on reserves very close to the Federal Funds rate.

                                        I call this a trap of my own making because I was headed in this direction:

                                        If you follow Ip's analysis through to its logical conclusion, then why should the Treasury issue debt at all? Why not just issue platinum coins? Could cash and government debt combine to serve the same functions together that they serve separately? Consider the disruptiveness of that outcome to the status quo.

                                        Compare to Waldman:

                                        Printing money will always be exactly as inflationary as issuing short-term debt, because short-term government debt and reserves at the Fed will always be near-perfect substitutes.

                                        So, why did I back away from that direction? Because it ended me up at the same place as Waldman:

                                        What used to be “monetary policy” is necessarily a joint venture of the central bank and the treasury. Both agencies, now and for the indefinite future, emit interchangeable obligations that are in every relevant sense money.

                                        A key part: "joint venture" disrupts the status quo. The ability to pay reserves and the subsequent equivalency of debt and cash moves us one step closer to the elimination of monetary policy independence. Coordination is necessary not only, as I have argued, conditionally, but always. This works - by works I mean does not generate hyperinflation - so long as both share the same objective function, which I think they do at the zero bound (even if they pretend that don't have the same objective function). But it is not evident that this will be the case away from the zero bound, which is why we place value on central bank independence.

                                        I think what I had in mind is this (and I admit that I am not wed to this, a little open-microphone now): The Fed has a portfolio of bonds which is a indirect transfer from Treasury which in turns allows it to pay interest on reserves. Lacking such a portfolio, the Fed would need to receive a direct transfer from the Treasury to pay interest on reserves. Operationally, these are the same. As long as both have the same objective function, it makes no difference if the Treasury's transfer goes through the middleman of a bond or just directly to the Fed. But what if the Treasury does not have the same objective function, does not want higher interest rates, and thus does not want to transfer the resources to the Fed? What claim does the Fed have on the Treasury to force it to act?

                                        Somewhere in this space is why we have come to accept the importance of an independent central bank. Indeed, this is a concern should the Fed need to pay interest on reserves that exceed the interest earned on its bond portfolio. Then the Fed would need to turn to the Treasury and say "Remember when we paid you $89 billion? Well, we need some of that back now."

                                        Ultimately, though, I have to agree with Waldman when I allow for the two authorities to have the same objective function. This is another way of saying that one side effect of the zero bound is the blurring of what many thought were sharp lines between fiscal and monetary authorities.

                                          Posted by on Monday, January 14, 2013 at 12:24 AM in Economics, Fed Watch, Links | Permalink  Comments (67)


                                          Links for 01-14-2013

                                            Posted by on Monday, January 14, 2013 at 12:06 AM in Economics, Links | Permalink  Comments (75)


                                            Sunday, January 13, 2013

                                            'The White House Insists That it is Absolutely, Positively Not Going to Cave or Indeed even Negotiate over the Debt Ceiling'

                                            Paul Krugman:

                                            ... I get calls. The White House insists that it is absolutely, positively not going to cave or indeed even negotiate over the debt ceiling — that it rejected the coin option as a gesture of strength, as a way to put the onus for avoiding default entirely on the GOP. Truth or famous last words? I guess we’ll find out.

                                            The problem is that the White House's definition of what it means to cave may be quite different from my own. If the White House believes entitlements need to be cut, and agrees to "strengthen" programs in this way, is that a cave? Maybe the "or even negotiate" clause covers this, but I'm wary.

                                              Posted by on Sunday, January 13, 2013 at 09:36 AM in Economics, Politics | Permalink  Comments (79)


                                              Links for 01-13-2013

                                                Posted by on Sunday, January 13, 2013 at 12:06 AM in Economics, Links | Permalink  Comments (49)


                                                Saturday, January 12, 2013

                                                Fed Watch: On The Disruptiveness of the Platinum Coin

                                                Tim Duy:

                                                On The Disruptiveness of the Platinum Coin, by Tim Duy: Apparently fiscal and monetary cooperation is alive and well - the US Treasury and the Federal Reserve conspired to kill the platnium coin idea. In retrospect, we should have seen this coming. As the debate continued, it became increasingly evident that the platinum coin threatened the conventional wisdom in very deep and profound ways. It was a threat that could not be endured by Washington.

                                                This realization hit me this morning, working on my last piece. Begin with the effectiveness of monetary policy at the zero bound. Or, more accurately, the lack of effectiveness as the Federal Reserve is swapping one zero-interest asset for another. Rarely do we take this to its logical conclusion for fiscal policy: If there is no difference between cash and Treasury bonds, why should we issue bonds at all? Why not simply issue cash? In other words, at the zero bound, what is the argument against monetizing deficit spending?

                                                Indeed, the lack of any difference explains how Japan can sustain massive fiscal deficits year after year. At the zero bound, cash and government debt are the same thing. We would assume that as long as inflation was not a concern (which it wouldn't be at the zero bound), the fiscal authority could issue as much cash as it wants, so why couldn't it issue as many bonds as it wants? After all, at the zero bound the two are equivalent. Hence Japan continues to defy predictions of doom despite ongoing debt issuance.

                                                Carrying the argument further, the illusion of a difference between cash and debt at the zero bound is counterproductive because it prevents the full application of fiscal policy. Fears about the magnitude of the government debt prevent sufficient fiscal policy, but such fears are not rational if debt and cash are perfect substitutes. If cash and debt are the same, the fiscal authority should prefer to issue cash if debt concerns create a false barrier to fiscal policy. Still, I would argue that this is best done in cooperation with the monetary authority. Note that this is not really a new idea, as then Governor Ben Bernanke drew a similar conclusion with regards to Japan:

                                                However, besides possibly inconsistent application of fiscal stimulus, another reason for weak fiscal effects in Japan may be the well-publicized size of the government debt...In addition to making policymakers more reluctant to use expansionary fiscal policies in the first place, Japan's large national debt may dilute the effect of fiscal policies in those instances when they are used....My thesis here is that cooperation between the monetary and fiscal authorities in Japan could help solve the problems that each policymaker faces on its own. Consider for example a tax cut for households and businesses that is explicitly coupled with incremental BOJ purchases of government debt--so that the tax cut is in effect financed by money creation.

                                                And then we come to the platinum coin, which threatened to expose the illusion that cash and debt are different at the zero bound. By extension, the platinum coin threatened to expose as folly any near-term deficit reduction plan. If you could issue a coin to support near term spending without inflationary consequences, what exactly is the rational for tighter policy now? There is none - but that would run directly contrary to the conventional wisdom among Very Serious People on both sides of the aisle that the debt needs to be addressed right now.

                                                And just think about what it would mean for the Fed if it became evident that, even if only temporarily at the zero bound, deficit spending could be monetized with no impact on inflation. The lines between monetary and fiscal policy would blur further, threatening the existing state of affairs in Washington. Monetary policymakers would face an increasingly hard time defending their need for independence as akin to an Eleventh Commandment.

                                                Ultimately, I don't believe deficit spending should be directly monetized as I believe that Paul Krugman is correct - at some point in the future, the US economy will hopefully exit the zero bound, and at that point cash and government debt will not longer be perfect substitutes. Note that Greg Ip disagreed with this point:

                                                I disagree. The Fed does not have to sell its bonds, or the $1 trillion coin, to control inflation (though it may do so anyway). It only needs to retain control of interest rates, and that does not depend on the size of its balance sheet.

                                                Ip argues that interest on reserves gives the Fed the power to control interest rates, and consequently the power to control inflation, regardless of the size of the balance sheet. If you follow Ip's analysis through to its logical conclusion, then why should the Treasury issue debt at all? Why not just issue platinum coins? Could cash and government debt combine to serve the same functions together that they serve separately? Consider the disruptiveness of that outcome to the status quo.

                                                Bottom Line: The platinum coin idea was ultimately doomed to failure because neither the Federal Reserve nor the Treasury could allow for even the remote possibility it might be successful. Its success would not just alter the political dynamic by removing the the debt ceiling as a threat. The success of a platinum coin would fundamentally alter the conventional wisdom about the proper separation of fiscal and monetary policy and the need to control the debt immediately.

                                                  Posted by on Saturday, January 12, 2013 at 02:16 PM in Budget Deficit, Economics, Fed Watch, Monetary Policy, Politics | Permalink  Comments (53)


                                                  'Treasury: We won’t Mint a Platinum Coin'

                                                  Ezra Klein:

                                                  Treasury: We won’t mint a platinum coin to sidestep the debt ceiling: The Treasury Department will not mint a trillion-dollar platinum coin to get around the debt ceiling. If they did, the Federal Reserve would not accept it.
                                                  That’s the bottom line of the statement that Anthony Coley, a spokesman for the Treasury Department, gave me today. “Neither the Treasury Department nor the Federal Reserve believes that the law can or should be used to facilitate the production of platinum coins for the purpose of avoiding an increase in the debt limit,” he said. ...

                                                  Republicans are now free to take the economy hostage if they so desire. The question is whether Obama can make them pay for it politically if they decide to invoke this threat.

                                                  But maybe they've kept a card up their sleeve? Paul Krugman:

                                                  So What Will You Do, Mr. President?: If I’d spent the past five years living in a monastery or something, I would take the Treasury Department’s declaration that the coin option is out as a sign that there’s some other plan ready to go. Maybe 14th Amendment, maybe moral obligation coupons or some other form of scrip, something.
                                                  And maybe there is a plan.
                                                  But as we all know, the last debt ceiling confrontation crept up on the White House because Obama refused to believe that Republicans would actually threaten to provoke default. Is the WH being realistic this time, or does it still rely on the sanity of crazies? ...[D]efault ... would risk a huge collapse of confidence.
                                                  So is there a plan, or will it just be another case of tough talk followed by a tail-between-the-legs retreat?
                                                  As I said, if we didn’t have some history here I might be confident that the administration knows what it’s doing. But we do have that history, and you have to fear the worst.

                                                  Yep -- hard to be confident that "there's some other plan ready to go," and it's also hard to be confident that Obama can win the battle politically -- make the political cost so high that Republicans back off on any threats. So here we are again.

                                                    Posted by on Saturday, January 12, 2013 at 01:48 PM in Budget Deficit, Economics, Politics | Permalink  Comments (48)


                                                    Fed Watch: Safe Assets and the Coordination of Fiscal and Monetary Policy

                                                    Tim Duy:

                                                    Safe Assets and the Coordination of Fiscal and Monetary Policy, by Tim Duy: Kansas City Federal Reserve Bank President Esther George considers the long-run consequences of Federal Reserve policy:

                                                    But, while I agree with keeping rates low to support the economic recovery, I also know that keeping interest rates near zero has its own set of consequences. Specifically, a prolonged period of zero interest rates may substantially increase the risks of future financial imbalances and hamper attainment of the FOMC’s 2 percent inflation goal in the future.

                                                    A long period of unusually low interest rates is changing investors’ behavior and is reshaping the products and the asset mix of financial institutions. Investors of all profiles are driven to reach for yield, which can create financial distortions if risk is masked or imperfectly measured, and can encourage risks to concentrate in unexpected corners of the economy and financial system...The push toward increased risk-taking is the intention of such policy, but the longer-term consequences are not well understood.

                                                    We must not ignore the possibility that the low-interest rate policy may be creating incentives that lead to future financial imbalances. Prices of assets such as bonds, agricultural land, and high-yield and leveraged loans are at historically high levels. A sharp correction in asset prices could be destabilizing and cause employment to swing away from its full-employment level and inflation to decline to uncomfortably low levels. Simply stated, financial stability is an essential component in achieving our longer-run goals for employment and stable growth in the economy and warrants our most serious attention.

                                                    Brad DeLong wonders:

                                                    The Fed's current Quantitative Easing ∞ program involves its buying risky bonds--thus diminishing the pool of risky assets that the private sector can hold. Esther George objects because… it does not make complete sense to me...Because there is less in the way of risky assets for the private sector to hold--and because that pushes prices of risky assets up and returns on risky assets down--QE ∞ actually makes private-sector portfolios riskier? Is that the argument?

                                                    I think DeLong is looking at a continuum of assets from safe to risky, where cash anchors the safe end of the continuum. Right next to cash is the somewhat riskier Treasury security. Thus by exchanging cash for Treasury securities, you by definition must be removing risk from the continuum, and thus the public's portfolio is now less riskier.

                                                    But, as he notes, this is obviously not how George views the situation. And, note that George claims that the intention of Fed policy is in fact to push people into riskier portfolios, which implies that the Fed believes that they are in fact making the public's portfolio more, not less, risky. This implies that DeLong's view is not just in opposition to George's, but to that of the majority of policymakers as well.

                                                    I think a way you can explain George's position if you consider Treasuries as less risky than cash. At first, this sounds crazy, but if you assume there is no default risk (which I don't think there should be if you can print currency of the same denomination as the bond), then the Treasury bond may be perceived as a safer because it provides some return. Assuming no default risk, for any given inflation rate, the Treasury bond will thus be a safer store of value. If you viewed the world from this perspective, then the Fed is increasing riskiness of the public's portfolio.

                                                    This, however, is not how I think the Fed considers the situation. I think the Fed tends to view the public's desired cash holdings as roughly constant (although the rise in deposits would call this into question). If by QE the Fed swaps out some of the safe Treasury securities for cash, the public, not wanting to hold anymore cash, takes the cash and, by default, purchases riskier assets, and thus is left with holding a portfolio of riskier assets. George believes this disrupts the natural order of things by creating financial market distortions.

                                                    In any event, I tend to take this in a different direction from here. George appears to be saying that the Fed is eliminating (more accurately, removing) the safe assets that the public wants to hold. Suppose that this is true. Does this mean that the Fed should reverse policy to increase the proportion of safe assets in the public's hands? Or does it mean that another agency - perhaps a fiscal authority, hint, hint - should take action to increase the proportion of safe assets in the public's hands?

                                                    Once again, we come back to the issue of coordinating monetary and fiscal policy. If the public has a strong demand for noncash safe assets, monetary policy has something of a secondary role by providing an accommodative environment by which the fiscal authority can issue those assets. If the proportion of safe to risky assets is not "correct", the the fiscal authority should have a role in correcting that imbalance. In this world, then, it is not really the actions of the monetary authority that is creating the financial sector imbalances that concern George. It is the lack of action by the fiscal authority that creates those imbalances. George should be criticizing the fiscal authorities, not the monetary authority.

                                                    In other words, if a recession is the result of the public shifting to safe assets, the Fed is trying to respond by taking away the option of safe assets, leaving only risky assets. Instead, the Fed should view their role creating an environment (making clear that default is not an option) that allows the fiscal authority to issue more safe assets.

                                                    All of this, however, suggests that fiscal policy has a much greater role in stabilizing economy activity than conventional wisdom would hold. I suspect, however, that thinking along these lines is anathema to Federal Reserve officials who maintain that stabilization policy is the domain of monetary policy only. But if in fact there needs to be greater cooperation, and instead we continue to rely solely on monetary policy, then we will continue to experience less-than-satisfactory economic outcomes which will eventually endanger the cherished independence of central banks.

                                                    In short, I don't think you can have a discussion about the influence of monetary policy on the riskiness of the public's portfolio without including some discussion about the role of the issuer of those safe assets, the fiscal authority.

                                                      Posted by on Saturday, January 12, 2013 at 11:19 AM in Economics, Fed Watch, Financial System, Monetary Policy | Permalink  Comments (8)


                                                      Links for 01-12-2013

                                                        Posted by on Saturday, January 12, 2013 at 12:06 AM in Economics, Links | Permalink  Comments (97)


                                                        Friday, January 11, 2013

                                                        Video: Paul Krugman Explains the Keys to Our Recovery


                                                        [via]

                                                          Posted by on Friday, January 11, 2013 at 03:04 PM in Economics, Video | Permalink  Comments (34)


                                                          'The Natural Experimenter'

                                                          As I struggle to beat the deadline for having next year's full class schedule ready, another quickie:

                                                          The Natural Experimenter, by Peter Dizikes: Josh Angrist is an acclaimed experimentalist who does not work in a lab. ... Angrist has built a kind of virtual laboratory of economics, where he generates precise answers to difficult social questions. As much as any scholar, he has helped popularize the idea that microeconomic research can, and should, imitate the conditions of lab experiments. Many other microeconomists base their work on models that make large assumptions about human behavior. But Angrist uses only empirical data that illuminate causal relationships in society.
                                                          Consider an issue Angrist has been pondering a lot lately: the effectiveness of high schools. To evaluate schools, you might compare test scores, graduation rates, or college acceptance data. Yet it could just be that the top-rated school districts attract a greater proportion of families with well-prepared students. 
                                                          Scholars can’t answer questions like this by randomly assigning students to schools themselves and studying the results. So to gain traction on such slippery problems, Angrist relies on natural experiments—cases in which two otherwise similar groups of people have been distinguished by one particular circumstance. If, say, a school district line is redrawn, instantly transferring one group of students to a new school, it might create what economists call a "clean identification" of cause and effect that isolates the schools’ own impact.
                                                          Over two decades, Angrist’s natural experiments have made him a prominent figure within economics. As of August, he was one of the 100 most-cited economists in the world... Among his best-known papers are studies on the relationship between length of schooling and income; the effect military service has on earnings; and the link between class size and student achievement.
                                                          Angrist did not invent his quasi-­experimental methods; they were largely popularized from the 1980s onward by a group of prominent economists including Alan Krueger (currently chair of the White House’s Council of Economic Advisers), with whom Angrist has co-authored multiple papers; Lawrence Katz of Harvard University; David Card, now of the University of California, Berkeley, who was one of Angrist’s graduate-school advisors; and Angrist’s principal mentor, Orley Ashenfelter of Princeton University. But no one has been a more staunch advocate of lab-like economics.
                                                          "He’s had tremendous influence," says Whitney Newey, PhD ’83, chair of MIT’s Department of Economics, who was one of Angrist’s graduate-school advisors. ......

                                                          Much, much more here, for example:

                                                          Angrist, for his part, says he is not opposed to model-based work for the purposes of, say, forecasting the effects of a policy change. But he maintains an "experimentalist mind-set" and believes that any such models should be based on significant amounts of empirical data.
                                                          To be sure, many economists, as Card puts it, still view their discipline as "a kind of mathematical philosophy" based on ideas about rationality and predictable responses to incentives. These scholars find pure empiricism "very alienating." And some younger economists working in the mode of Angrist, Card, and Krueger have drawn criticism; they are sometimes depicted as opportunists looking for any topic that can yield a clear conclusion, even about something as seemingly inconsequential as the use of gym memberships. A 2007 article in the New Republic decried the "academic parlor game" played by new scholars using natural experiments.
                                                          "There has been some pushback in the last 10 years, that guys like me, or my students, or my school of thought—that we’re all about the tools and not about the questions," Angrist says. "But I don’t think that’s fair." ... In general, he says, "it’s the combination of a cool tool applied to a central question that leads to good research." ...

                                                            Posted by on Friday, January 11, 2013 at 01:06 PM in Economics, Methodology | Permalink  Comments (6)


                                                            Paul Krugman: Coins Against Crazies

                                                            Republican threats over the debt-ceiling can and should be defused:

                                                            Coins Against Crazies, by Paul Krugman, Commentary, NY Times: So, have you heard the one about the trillion-dollar coin? It may sound like a joke. But if we aren’t ready to mint that coin or take some equivalent action, the joke will be on us — and a very sick joke it will be, too.
                                                            Let’s talk ... about the ... debt-ceiling confrontation. ... It’s crucial to understand ... the vileness of that G.O.P. threat. If we were to hit the debt ceiling, the U.S. government would end up defaulting on many of its obligations. This would have disastrous effects on financial markets, the economy, and our standing in the world. Yet Republicans are threatening to trigger this disaster unless they get spending cuts that they weren’t able to enact through normal, Constitutional means. ...
                                                            This is exactly like someone walking into a crowded room, announcing that he has a bomb strapped to his chest, and threatening to set that bomb off unless his demands are met.
                                                            Which brings us to the coin.
                                                            As it happens, an obscure legal clause grants the secretary of the Treasury the right to mint and issue platinum coins in any quantity or denomination... — and it offers a simple if strange way out of the crisis.
                                                            Here’s how it would work: The Treasury would mint a platinum coin with a face value of $1 trillion... This coin would immediately be deposited at the Federal Reserve, which would credit the sum to the government’s account. And the government could then write checks against that account, continuing normal operations without issuing new debt. ...
                                                            But wouldn’t the coin trick be undignified? Yes, it would — but better to look slightly silly than to let a financial and Constitutional crisis explode.
                                                            Now, the platinum coin may not be the only option. Maybe the president can simply declare that as he understands the Constitution, his duty to carry out Congressional mandates on taxes and spending takes priority over the debt ceiling. Or he might be able to finance government operations by issuing coupons that look like debt ... but that, he insists, aren’t debt and, therefore, don’t count against the ceiling.
                                                            Or, best of all, there might be enough sane Republicans that the party will blink and stop making destructive threats.
                                                            Unless this last possibility materializes, however, it’s the president’s duty to do whatever it takes, no matter how offbeat or silly it may sound, to defuse this hostage situation. Mint that coin!

                                                              Posted by on Friday, January 11, 2013 at 12:42 AM in Budget Deficit, Economics, Politics | Permalink  Comments (85)


                                                              Fed Watch: More on Central Bank Independence

                                                              Tim Duy:

                                                              More on Central Bank Independence, by Tim Duy: Central bank independence is a hot topic right now. Two obvious themes are in play. First, should central banks always be independent? Second, are the supposed threats to independence widespread?

                                                              On the first topic, Izabella Kaminska offers this:

                                                              Nowadays, the idea of not having an independent central bank is seen as being a bit backward. One could even say that central bank independence is widely accepted as the optimum set-up for any country’s monetary system, a reflection of its developmental status.

                                                              “Independent central bank? Check.”

                                                              “This country must be civilised. ”

                                                              Yet, can we really be so absolute about the matter?

                                                              In Raiders of the QE surplus — a post that challenged the controversy regarding the UK Treasury’s so-called raid of Bank of England surpluses — David and myself proposed that central bank independence must not be treated so resolutely. We argued, in fact, that any central bank’s status should be determined by the economic context it finds itself in.

                                                              I tend to agree. I don't recall there being an Eleventh Commandment to the effect of "Thou shalt always grant independence to the monetary authority." Ultimately, the central bank serves the public, and the latter only grants independence if the former is adequately meeting the needs of the public. In other words, central bank independence is ultimately tied to job performance.

                                                              With this in mind, note this Reuters piece by Leika Kihara:

                                                              Abe had run his campaign with a relentless focus on economic policy and had called on the Bank of Japan (BOJ) to take drastic steps to end the nation's long bout of deflation, or else face a radical makeover at the hands of parliament.

                                                              The vote had become an unexpected referendum on the BOJ itself, and the bank had lost.

                                                              Senior officials concluded that to preserve the BOJ's scope to act in a future crisis, it needed to move quickly to show it recognized reality, according to people familiar with the hurried deliberations. Abe had won a mandate for more forceful monetary easing, and Japanese taxpayers were frustrated with an economy slipping back into its third recession in five years.

                                                              Kihara suggests that what many perceive as the loss of independence is the Bank of Japan's response to the will of the people:

                                                              "The LDP's win was just too big, and it won an election calling for a 2 percent inflation target. If that's the will of the people, the BOJ must respect that," said a source familiar with the central bank's thinking. "Otherwise, the BOJ could lose everything, including its independence."

                                                              The counterargument is that the Bank of Japan is fooling itself; a response to political pressure, by the fiscal authority or the electorate, is simply a loss of independence. More accurate, in my opinion, is that the Bank of Japan is choosing the avenue of least restraint - either willingly acquiesce to political pressure and retain some modicum of self-respect, or suffer the humiliation of have their independence seized from them by legal decree. Can't blame them for taking the first option.

                                                              Gavyn Davies responds to charges that other central banks are losing their independence, coming to the opposite conclusion:

                                                              It seems to me that this is a very premature conclusion. While there is no denying that this is indeed the objective in Japan, the direct opposite seems to be happening in the rest of the developed world.

                                                              Davies' first point is:

                                                              First, it is argued that the central banks are now operating far outside the realms of traditional monetary policy, and have crossed the border into territory that has always been deemed to be clearly “political” in western democracies....I would point out that none of the recent actions of the central banks, including the 2008 bank rescues and the subsequent credit easing, have been contrary to the wishes of elected officials, such as the US Treasury secretary, the UK chancellor, or a clear majority in Congress. As a result, there are very few signs that the political process sees any urgent need to re-assert any control over central bankers in these areas. Obviously, this could change if central bankers were to become more hawkish in ways that could prove politically unpopular, but to date there is little sign of that happening either.

                                                              Indeed, one can argue that, aside from the Bank of Japan, the last few years have strengthened the notion of an independent central bank (I made an argument to that effect here regarding the European Central Bank). And notice were Davies ends up - in the current environment, the lose of independence is most likely to come from being excessively hawkish. With inflation low, some elements of Congress might publicly lament about runaway monetary policy, but few would actually take the chance of derailing what recovery we have by undercutting the central bank in the pursuit of tighter policy.

                                                              Davies' second point:

                                                              The second reason given for the inevitability of political control over the central banks concerns the relationship between fiscal and monetary policy....politicians will “order” the central bank to expand the monetary base to finance the budget deficits. This will hold down the public debt ratio, and if it causes inflation to rise, that might be a welcome side effect....This has now happened in Japan, but it has taken a full two decades of failing economic activity to get there. And while the outcome in Japan will presumably have powerful effects on opinion elsewhere in the world, the current situation is a long way from fiscal dominance over the central bankers.

                                                              Again, the key is "failing economic activity." If central bankers can't or won't due their jobs, they will lose their independence, period. Davies then points out something that is often missed:

                                                              In the US, for example, the Fed has, entirely voluntarily, announced an open-ended programme of bond purchases, which will be continued until unemployment falls substantially. Furthermore, the Fed chairman has hinted that he thinks that, for a while, fiscal policy should be more supportive of economic activity.

                                                              I made similar comments to Pedro DaCosta at Reuters, although I think more forcefully. Congress and the President are remarkably tone deaf with regards to the message from the Federal Reserve, which is essentially "issue as much debt as you want; we won't stand in the way as long as inflation is under control." Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke has opened the door to implicit cooperation, but fiscal authorities remain afraid to enter.

                                                              Which brings me to Greg Ip, who argues against the platinum coin because it would infringe upon the Fed's independence (and I thought I was going to make it through the year without writing something on the platnium coin). How he gets there is interesting. Ip first argues that the platinum coin and the subsequent (although not immediate) increase in the monetary base need not lead to an increase in inflation as long as the Fed has the ability to control interest rates:

                                                              ...in 2008, Congress gave the Fed authority to pay interest on reserves. Because banks should not lend reserves to each other for less than they can get from the Fed, this restores the Fed’s control over interest rates regardless of the size of its balance sheet, and thus over inflation...What this means is that while the platinum coin option expands the Fed’s balance sheet and, ultimately, the monetary base, it has no implications for inflation, even if the Treasury never buys back the coin.

                                                              So the platinum coin does not cause inflation because the Fed has a tool to control interest rates. Ip continues:

                                                              But while the economic consequences for the Fed are benign, the political consequences are not. As I noted earlier, the Fed buys coins in response to demand from commercial banks (the process is explained here). Banks won’t want a $1 trillion platinum coin, so the Fed will only buy the coin if Treasury forces it to. The Treasury, in “depositing” its coin at the Fed, is in reality ordering the Fed to print money. And if Treasury doesn't take the coin back, the money stays printed.

                                                              The economics may be the same as QE; as Mr Krugman notes, coins, like bonds, are liabilities of the central government. But the politics are utterly different. We have a central bank to separate fiscal from monetary policy. The Fed implements QE when it has decided that’s the best way to carry out its monetary policy objectives. Buying a coin solely to finance the deficit is monetizing the debt, precisely the sort of thing central bank independence was meant to prevent. How could any Federal Reserve chairman justify cooperating in such a scheme, in particular since the Fed would be taking the White House’s side in a fight with Congress over a matter of dubious legality?

                                                              Ip initially claims that the platinum coin does not cause inflation, which is good, but it is monetizing the debt, which is bad. But how can both of these things be true? I think there is a logical error here. Because if, as Ip claims, the platinum coin does not lead to inflation, why should the Fed care about how government spending is financed? In Ip's analysis, whether government spending is financed by debt or platinum coins is irrelevant. Indeed, it is strongly irrelevant in Ip's analysis - he doesn't just say that there is no difference at the zero bound, he says there is always no difference (..."no implications for inflation") as long as the Fed can pay interest on reserves (..."regardless of the size of the balance sheet").

                                                              If the Fed has control over interest rates, and thus control over inflation, then how can the platinum coin infringe on the Fed's independence? The Fed is not charged with stopping monetization. It is charged with price stability. We don't care about monetization itself; we care about monetization because it has the potential to generate hyperinflation, which Ip says we don't have to worry about because the Fed can control interest rates. Thus there is no threat to Fed independence. In short, no one is ordering the Fed to raise the inflation target; it remains free to conduct monetary policy with the objective of 2% inflation.

                                                              Furthermore, turn the situation on its head and say that what if push came to shove and the Administration was forced to choose between issuing the platinum coin or defaulting on the debt? What would be the consequences of the Fed asserting its independence by not accepting the coin? Financial chaos as the world's safest asset becomes unsafe leading to a massive deflationary shock? For this the Fed would lay claim to its independence? Indeed, this is exactly the sort of thing that gets a central bank stripped of its independence. See Davies above. Either retain its independence by willingly accepting the coin, or be complicit in triggering a global recession which, in the process, would cost it its independence eventually. Ultimately, the Fed would have no choice to accept the coin.

                                                              Simply put, at some level lofty ideas about strict central bank independence are like those of moral hazard, largely talk around the water cooler. When the economy is on the line, moral hazard concerns will pale in comparison to the need to saving the financial system, as too would the idea of independent central banks. The old adage is true: There are no atheists in foxholes.

                                                              Bottom Line: The idea of central bank independence has always been more of an illusion than reality. Ultimately, the monetary authority is a creation of the electorate. It retains the illusion of independence so long as its actions are consistent with the conventional wisdom of the public. At this point, only the Bank of Japan is threatened with such a loss of independence. Otherwise, fears are as of yet unfounded.

                                                                Posted by on Friday, January 11, 2013 at 12:33 AM in Economics, Fed Watch, Monetary Policy | Permalink  Comments (19)


                                                                Visualizing Labor Market Improvement

                                                                David Altig at Macroblog on "summarizing the general state of the labor market":

                                                                ... the employment half of the Fed's dual mandate from Congress ... has been heightened since the Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC) announced, first in September, that it will continue its asset-purchase programs as long as "the labor market does not improve substantially." But what constitutes substantial improvement is a matter of some art...

                                                                A terrific gallery that includes "a range of labor market indicators" is available at the Calculated Risk blog—you might also check out the Cooley-Rupert Economic Snapshot—but here at the Atlanta Fed, we have been experimenting with our own method for summarizing the general state of the labor market. Though this project is very much a work in progress, the idea is to highlight variables that look at employer behavior, signals of employer and employee confidence, measures of labor resource utilization, and leading indicators of labor market conditions.

                                                                As a first pass, we've organized a collection of variables we find interesting, grouped in the categories I just described. ...

                                                                We've based one prototype for how all of this information might be visualized at once on the following "spider chart" ... Here's how to read this chart: Think of each point on the inner orange circle as representing the value of each of our labor-conditions variables in the fourth quarter of 2009. ... (We've chosen 2009:IVQ as a benchmark because that's the last time we experienced two consecutive quarters of negative employment growth. You can thus think of 2009:IVQ as the quarter just before the beginning of the current "jobs recovery.")

                                                                The chart's outer dark-red circle represents the value of each of the labor-conditions variables in the first quarter of 2007—the beginning of the last recession... Moving out from the inner orange circle to outer dark-red circle tracks the progress each variable makes from its value at the end of the recession (i.e. 2009:IVQ) toward its prerecession (i.e. 2007:IVQ) level. ...

                                                                As of the December 2012 employment report, here's where we stand:

                                                                Spider1

                                                                The chart tells a familiar, but not too happy, story. Only one of the variables in the collection of employer behavior, employee and employer confidence, and labor resource utilization categories has recovered even half the gap from its prerecession benchmark. The labor resource utilization variables look particularly bad, with one variable—marginally attached workers—actually getting worse over the recovery as a whole. On the brighter side, our leading-indicator variables are looking relatively strong, perhaps portending improvement ahead.

                                                                The interpretation of these spider charts comes with several caveats. First, a variable such as the level of payroll employment will eventually exceed its pre-recession level, and grow consistently over time as the population grows. A variable like "hiring plans"—which is the net percentage of firms in the National Federation of Independent Business survey expecting to hire employees in the next three months—cannot grow without bound. Thus, the charts by construction are about visualizing the transition to some fixed benchmark, not a device for monitoring labor markets over the long run.

                                                                Second, it is not obvious that 2007:IVQ levels are necessarily the best benchmarks for all (or even any) of the variables we are monitoring. ...

                                                                Finally, signs of labor market improvement sufficient to alter the pace of FOMC asset purchases may be more about momentum or steady progress than about the return to a specific target or threshold. In fact, this chart depicts signs of such progress over the past three years...:

                                                                Spider2

                                                                ...but that progress has been very modest in some cases, notably along labor utilization dimensions.

                                                                  Posted by on Friday, January 11, 2013 at 12:24 AM in Economics, Unemployment | Permalink  Comments (5)


                                                                  Links for 01-11-2013

                                                                    Posted by on Friday, January 11, 2013 at 12:06 AM in Economics, Links | Permalink  Comments (54)


                                                                    Thursday, January 10, 2013

                                                                    'Talk of Shirkers Echoes Victorian Past'

                                                                    What causes poverty?:

                                                                    Talk of ‘shirkers’ echoes Victorian past, by Tristram Hunt: ...the debate about how to cut back Britain’s spiraling social security system is ... replete with echoes of the past. The language of “workers” versus “shirkers” is a straight lift from the mid-Victorian moralism of deserving and undeserving poor. Yet the most unfortunate rhetoric involves the return of “character” as the critical determinant of poverty. ...
                                                                    This was the prejudice that first spurred Charles Booth, the Liverpool shipping magnate, to investigate the causes of poverty in 1880s London. Dismissive of socialist claims of mass unemployment, he established a network of researchers to pick over the lives of the poor.
                                                                    It was a pioneering sociological investigation designed to prove Booth right: that poverty was limited and the poor were poor because of their alcoholism, lust or dislike of work. ... In fact, Booth’s study revealed that circumstance not character dictated poverty. ...
                                                                    Booth’s study formed an important part of that New Liberal moment when Victorian laisser faire was exchanged for an interventionist state. In its wake came national insurance and the old-age pension. ...

                                                                    From a post in November, 2007 on this topic:

                                                                     ...During 1817 ... a group of prominent New York merchants and professionals (many of them having formerly been the principle supports of such institutions as the New York Hospital and a variety of other worthy causes) officially and quite publicly began to rethink their habit of giving. Such previously generous philanthropists as DeWitt Clinton, Thomas Eddy, and John Griscom took their cue in this from British reactionaries. In so doing, they succumbed to the rhetoric of several hard-nosed British social thinkers, most notably Thomas Robert Malthus, Jeremy Bentham, and the Scottish conservative Patrick Colquhoun.

                                                                    Twenty years earlier, all three of those gentleman had been instrumental in the founding of the London Society for Bettering the Condition and Increasing the Comforts of the Poor. Despite the burden of its long-winded name, the London Society specialized in the cutting off of funds for social welfare rather than the distribution of charity. Men like Malthus, Bentham and Colquhoun believed that a distinct line must be drawn between the "deserving poor" (those hit with hard times resulting from unfortunate histories) and "undeserving paupers," the latter being the drunk, lazy and whorish of society, to whom the provision of any form of aid was a reprehensible act of facilitation.

                                                                    Another key concept underpinning the logic of the London Society was the presumption (for lack of a more accurate term) that paupers outnumbered the deserving poor by a factor of about 9 to 1. In reform meetings and from church pulpits, politicians and clerics again and again cited this astonishing though unverifiable statistic, which soon became accepted as fact. In time, the public mind became convinced that a mere ten percent of London's poor were the crippled and the orphaned, while 90 percent were degenerates. For every one individual in London's slums who genuinely needed aid, popular wisdom held that there were nine who required something else entirely: intolerance, punishment and correction. As a corollary to this line of thinking, logic dictated that 90% of the charitable aid previously offered was superfluous. In turn, wallets closed, and checks stopped being written.

                                                                    The London Society remained a venerable body and dominant force in British life for decades: influential in the development of such institutions as workhouses and debtors prisons. It was likewise influential, through its example, in New York and other American cities. By the end of 1817, Clinton, Eddy, and Griscom, joined by hundreds of other New Yorkers, had formed a clone organization on the banks of the Hudson: the Society for the Prevention of Pauperism (SPP).

                                                                    Several months before the founding of the SPP, New York's Humane Society (which at that time specialized in helping humans rather than dogs and cats) announced rather forlornly the result of recent research revealing a startling fact: no less than 15,000 men, women and children - the equivalent of one-seventh of the city's total population - had been "supported by public or private bounty and munificence" the previous winter.

                                                                    In their book Gotham, historians Edwin Burrows and Mike Wallace have eloquently described the SPP's point of view, expressed in response to the above data. In the grand tradition of the London Society, the SPP said it believed that "willy-nilly benevolence" only made things worse. "Giving alms to the undeserving poor not only undermined their independence but also drove up taxes and sapped the prosperity of the entire community." Thus, "for their good as well as everyone else's … the SPP recommended that all paupers in the city be cut off from all public assistance forthwith." Soon the Humane Society itself announced its intention to disband, in the wake of its realization that the very act of giving charity had "a direct tendency to beget, among [the citizenry] habits of imprudence, indolence, dissipation and consequent pauperism."

                                                                    "Tough love" was in. Cruelty equaled kindness. Frugality equality generosity. And all three were not only cheap, but easy. A few ministers sang out against the reverse-logic of the SPP, but far more praised the organization than damned it. God himself, it seemed was on the side of self-reliance. A generation later, Social Darwinists would express a similar point of view: that the strong must be allowed to flourish, and not be hamstrung by the needs of the clawing weak. Charles Darwin's The Origin of Species would not see print until 1859. Indeed, Darwin himself was but eight years old in 1817, and would not depart on the voyage of HMS Beagle until 1831. Nevertheless, the seeds of what was to become the philosophy of Herbert Spencer (born 1820), not to mention the nearly identical philosophy of the 20th century's Objectivist saint of selfishness, Ayn Rand, were quite evident in the grand pronouncements of the London Society and its New York equivalent, the SPP. ...

                                                                    I'm always amazed at how little the debate, generated in large part by ideology and the belief in false facts about the poor, has changed since the 1800s.

                                                                    This is from a post in June, 2007. It's an earlier history the deserving/undeserving distinction:

                                                                    ... In the early mercantilist period there was an ideological continuity between the intellectual defenses of mercantilist policies and the earlier ideologies that supported the medieval economic order. The latter relied on a Christian paternalist ethic that justified extreme inequalities of wealth on the assumption that God had selected the wealthy to be the benevolent stewards of the material welfare of the masses.[4] The Catholic church had been the institution through which this paternalism was effectuated. As capitalism developed, the church grew weaker and the governments of the emerging nation-states grew stronger. In the early mercantilist period, economic writers increasingly came to substitute the state for the medieval church as the institution that should oversee the public welfare. ...

                                                                    The people could no longer look to the Catholic church for relief from widespread unemployment and poverty. Destruction of the power of the church had eliminated the organized system of charity, and the state attempted to assume responsibility for the general welfare of society. ...

                                                                    Poor laws passed in 1531 and 1536 attempted to deal with the problems of unemployment, poverty, and misery then widespread in England. The first sought to distinguish between "deserving" and "undeserving" poor; only the deserving poor were allowed to beg. The second decreed that each individual parish throughout England was responsible for its poor and that the parish should, through voluntary contributions, maintain a poor fund. This proved completely inadequate, and the pauper problem grew increasingly severe.

                                                                    Finally, in 1572 the state accepted the principle that the poor would have to be supported by tax funds and enacted a compulsory "poor rate." And in 1576 "houses of correction" for "incorrigible vagrants" were authorized and provisions made for the parish to purchase raw materials to be processed by the more tractable paupers and vagrants. Between that time and the close of the sixteenth century, several other poor-law statutes were passed.

                                                                    The Poor Law of 1601 was the Tudor attempt to integrate these laws into one consistent framework. Its main provisions included formal recognition of the right of the poor to receive relief, imposition of compulsory poor rates at the parish level, and provision for differential treatment for various classes of the poor. The aged and the sick could receive help in their homes; pauper children who were too young to be apprenticed in a trade were to be boarded out; the deserving poor and unemployed were to be given work as provided for in the act of 1576; and incorrigible vagrants were to be sent to houses of correction and prisons.[8]

                                                                    From the preceding discussion it is possible to conclude that the period of English mercantilism was characterized by acceptance, in the spirit of the Christian paternalist ethic, of the idea that "the state had an obligation to serve society by accepting and discharging the responsibility for the general welfare.”[9] The various statutes passed during this period "were predicated upon the idea that poverty, instead of being a personal sin, was a function of the economic system.[10] They acknowledged that those who were the victims of the deficiencies of the economic system should be cared for by those who benefited from it. ...

                                                                    However, as noted above, the view that the poor "were the victims of the deficiencies of the economic system" died out, and was replaced by the idea the character problems are the main reason people are poor. This variation in attitudes about the poor -- it's the system, it's the individual -- goes back and forth over time, and we are currently seeing an attempt from the right to re-impose older Victorian attitudes -- and with some success (I recently wrote about the blame the individual versus blame the system distinction and how it has changed during the recession, see the end of this post).

                                                                      Posted by on Thursday, January 10, 2013 at 03:25 PM in Economics, Politics, Social Insurance | Permalink  Comments (27)


                                                                      Projected Medicare Spending

                                                                      Via an email from Austin Frakt with the subject "should we worry a lot about Medicare growth?," and the answer in the text "It doesn't seem like it. Massively demographically driven. A bit more revenue and it's fixed for a long time." [Remember that projected health care cost growth is the main source of worry about future debt problems, and hence the driving force behind the push from deficit hawks for spending cuts and tax increases, well spending cuts anyway, the so-called deficit hawks are not so fond of tax increases which betrays their true motives.]:

                                                                      Medicare growth

                                                                      Chart of the day: Projected Medicare spending, by Austin Frakt: The vertical axis is percent of GDP. “Excess cost growth” means in excess of the rate of GDP growth. The chart is from a new ASPE report by Richard Kronick and Rosa Po. Description of OACT’s alternative scenario is here, beginning on page 12 (PDF). Note that in addition to assuming a perpetual doc fix, it also assumes “a gradual phase-down of the productivity adjustments [about which, see Figure 1 here] and the elimination of the IPAB requirements.” Given these, is an excess cost growth totaling three-quarters of a percentage point of GDP over two decades a lot?
                                                                      UPDATE: Link to and quote from the OACT’s alternative scenario

                                                                      Update: Austin adds a clarification:

                                                                      I'm not sure I buy my own statement that we only need a bit more revenue. The demographics are costly. The real message is that there is nothing much we can do about it. Cutting beneficiaries or benefits amounts to a cost shift, and is probably net cost increasing, system-wide. So, we must spend the demographically-driven amount. We then just need a bit more to deal with health care cost inflation. One would like to reduce that to zero, but a modest increase won't kill us, and certainly not quickly.

                                                                        Posted by on Thursday, January 10, 2013 at 10:24 AM in Budget Deficit, Economics, Health Care | Permalink  Comments (35)


                                                                        'The Debt Reduction That's Already Happened'

                                                                        Something to remember:

                                                                        The debt reduction that's already happened, by Steve Benen: When it comes to most of the major political disputes in Washington, congressional Republicans insist Democrats focus on reducing the debt Republicans built up during the Bush/Cheney era. It underpins everything from the budget fight to the debt ceiling to efforts to expand public investments.
                                                                        What the debate tends to ignore is the debt reduction that's already happened. Michael Linden and Michael Ettlinger reported yesterday that since the start of 2011 fiscal year, President Barack Obama "has signed into law approximately $2.4 trillion of deficit reduction" over the next decade. ...
                                                                        Roughly three-quarters of the deficit reduction has come is in the form of spending cuts, which should further make Republicans happy. ... To be sure, it would be my strong preference that policymakers not make this a priority at all. What the nation needs is jobs and economic growth, and the most sensible course of action would be to delay fiscal concerns for a later day. ...
                                                                        But... The conventional wisdom suggests nothing is being done to address a perceived debt "crisis," and that somehow Republicans have the high ground in demanding more and more cuts. It seems spectacularly insane to me to think the GOP has credibility on the subject given that it was Republicans who created the budget shortfall in the first place, but establishment assumptions are hard to shake.
                                                                        But that's what makes the Linden/Ettlinger report so worthwhile: something is being done, whether this deserves to be a priority or not. ... What's more, let's also not forget cost-saving measures Obama proposed -- cap and trade, Dream Act -- and the GOP killed. ...
                                                                        Postscript: Just as an aside, let's also take a moment to compare administrations. Obama, in just the last two years, has accepted $2.4 trillion in debt reduction through multiple proposals. How many debt-reduction proposals did Republicans approve during the Bush/Cheney era? None. Even when there was a Republican-led House, Republican-led Senate, and Republican-led White House? Yep, even then.

                                                                          Posted by on Thursday, January 10, 2013 at 08:29 AM in Budget Deficit, Economics, Fiscal Policy, Politics | Permalink  Comments (52)


                                                                          Links for 01-10-2013

                                                                            Posted by on Thursday, January 10, 2013 at 12:06 AM in Economics, Links | Permalink  Comments (60)


                                                                            Wednesday, January 09, 2013

                                                                            'During Periods of Extreme Growth and Decline, Human Behavior is Not the Same

                                                                            From an interview of MIT's Andrew Lo:

                                                                            Q: Many people believe that the financial crisis revealed major shortcomings in the discipline of economics, and one of the goals of your book is to consider what economic theory tells us about the links between finance and the rest of the economy. Do you feel that economists understand enough about the nature of financial instability or liquidity crises?
                                                                            A: I think that the financial crisis was an important wake-up call to all economists that we need to change the way we approach our discipline. While economics has made great strides in modeling liquidity risk, financial contagion, and market bubbles and crashes, we haven't done a very good job of integrating these models into broader macroeconomic policy tools. That's the focus of a lot of recent activity in macro and financial economics and the hope is that we'll be able to do better in the near future.
                                                                            Q: Let me continue briefly on this thread. One topic has been particularly controversial concerns the efficient-market hypothesis (EMH). Burton Malkiel discusses the issue in his chapter in Rethinking the Financial Crisis, but I wanted to ask your opinion of this idea that EMH fed a hands-off regulatory approach that ignored concerns about faulty asset pricing.
                                                                            A: There's no doubt that EMH and its macroeconomic cousin, Rational Expectations, played a significant role in how regulators approached their responsibilities. However, we should keep in mind that market efficiency isn't wrong; it's just incomplete. Market participants do behave rationally under normal economic conditions, hence the current regulatory framework does serve a useful purpose during these periods. But during periods of extreme growth and decline, human behavior is not the same, and much of economic theory and regulatory policy does not yet reflect this new perspective of "Adaptive Markets."

                                                                              Posted by on Wednesday, January 9, 2013 at 01:54 PM in Economics, Financial System, Macroeconomics, Methodology | Permalink  Comments (33)


                                                                              The FTC and Google

                                                                              Shane Greenstein:

                                                                              The FTC and Google: What did Larry Learn?, by Shane Greenstein: The FTC and Google settled their differences last week, putting the final touches on an agreement. Commentators began carping from all sides as soon as the announcement came. The most biting criticisms have accused the FTC of going too easy on Google. Frankly, I think the commentators are only half right. Yes, it appears as if Google got off easy, but, IMHO, the FTC settled at about the right place.
                                                                              More to the point, it is too soon to throw a harsh judgment at Google. This settlement might work just fine, and if it does, then society is better off than it would have been had some grandstanding prosecutor decided to go to trial.
                                                                              Why? First, public confrontation is often a BIG expense for society. Second, as an organization Google is young and it occupies a market that also is young. The first big antitrust case for such a company in such a situation should substitute education for severe judgment.
                                                                              Ah, this will take an explanation. ...

                                                                                Posted by on Wednesday, January 9, 2013 at 12:25 PM in Economics, Market Failure, Regulation | Permalink  Comments (12)


                                                                                What can Washington do to Boost the Recovery?

                                                                                The editors at MoneyWatch asked me to answer the question:

                                                                                What can Washington do to Boost the Recovery?: As we enter the new year, the nation's most pressing economic problem remains the slow recovery, particularly the job market. Unemployment is still far too high and the rate at which we are creating new jobs is far too low. At the present rate of job growth, we are still several years away from full employment.
                                                                                Monetary and fiscal policymakers could accelerate the return to full employment through tax cuts, increases in government spending -- particularly in areas that tend to create lots of jobs -- and further monetary easing. However, the ability of monetary and fiscal policymakers to combat the slow recovery is constrained by three things: fear that aggressive monetary policy will drive up inflation to an unacceptable level; fear that tax cuts or increases in spending will worsen our long-run debt problem; and political disputes over taxes and the size and role of government. ...[continue reading]...

                                                                                Policymakers are unlikely to do more to help the economy recover, the question is whether fear of deficits and fear of inflation will cause them to adopt policies that make it worse.

                                                                                  Posted by on Wednesday, January 9, 2013 at 09:10 AM in Economics, Fiscal Policy, Monetary Policy, Politics | Permalink  Comments (49)


                                                                                  Fed Watch: What's Good For the Goose...?

                                                                                  Tim Duy:

                                                                                  What's Good For the Goose...?, by Tim Duy: Via a tweet from Edward Harrison, Germany is preparing secret plans - not so secret anymore - to implement a wide-ranging austerity program after the elections. From Spiegel:

                                                                                  The government in Berlin is living in a dual reality. Strategists in the center-right coaliton parties are planning to enhance benefits for families, pensioners and the long-term unemployed in a bid to woo voters in the upcoming elections.

                                                                                  By contrast, due to the economic slowdown, experts in Schäuble's ministry are anticipating an entirely different scenario: The next government -- no matter who will be chancellor and which parties will be in power -- won't be able to boost spending. Instead, it will have to impose rigorous spending restraint.

                                                                                  According to the recommendations made by Schäuble's team...Germany will have to drastically increase taxes and make painful cuts in social services over the coming years.

                                                                                  These ideas don't fit with the current political climate in Germany...Schäuble nevertheless feels that his experts' forecasts are realistic. He has expressly approved their proposals and ordered them to continue to work on the cost-cutting program. At the same time, he has ordered strict secrecy to avoid any adverse effects on his party's campaigns for the upcoming state election in Lower Saxony in January and the general election in the fall of 2013.

                                                                                  Speigel describes Schäuble's plan as:

                                                                                  ...nothing less than the most comprehensive austerity program in postwar German history.

                                                                                  But most amazing is the appeal to pro-cyclical fiscal policies:

                                                                                  The proposals from Schäuble's ministry serve to tighten a regulation that has only been enshrined in the German constitution for the past few years: the so-called debt brake, which calls for the German federal government to "maintain a nearly balanced budget" starting in 2016.

                                                                                  The government will still be able to take out loans to some extent. In 2016, for instance, it will be allowed to borrow some €10 billion. However, Schäuble and his staff say that Germany should not completely exhaust this scope for borrowing. They want a safety buffer...

                                                                                  One of the examples that they cite is "a sharp economic downturn." If the economy collapses, as it did in the wake of the financial crisis in 2009, experience has shown that public coffers come under considerable pressure...

                                                                                  This can have a devastating impact on state finances. Following the most recent recession, government debt soared from 65 to nearly 83 percent of gross domestic product (GDP). Schäuble's experts say that the country cannot withstand another similar increase in public debt and conclude that it's time to take appropriate countermeasures.

                                                                                  Attempting to control, or even reduce, a fiscal deficit as an economy slips into recession is economic suicide, yet that appears to be the only path European policymakers know. Indeed, part of the "need" for this austerity plan is the theory that what is good for the goose is good for the gander:

                                                                                  The paper by the Finance Ministry officials contains a further admission. The next finance minister will have to make up for what Schäuble has failed to accomplish. Merkel's most important minister forced half of Europe to submit to austerity measures while the Germans were spending money hand over fist at home.

                                                                                  In short, Germany looks set to further entrench the Continent's move toward an "austerity union," not a fiscal union, condemning the people of Europe to weak growth and high unemployment. And, as a reminder, the path of interest rates in Germany:

                                                                                  Germrates

                                                                                  Absolutely no reason to think that a massive austerity plan is necessary. Completely opposite of the spike in rates that followed the 1990 reunification. Then spending control was needed in the wake of increased expenses to combine the East and the West. But interest rates are clearly indicating that completely opposite policies are now in order. Apparently policymakers only listen to the signals of the currently nonexistent bond market vigilantes.
                                                                                  Bottom Line: German plans for further austerity indicate that fiscal policy remains a downside risk for the European economy.

                                                                                    Posted by on Wednesday, January 9, 2013 at 08:57 AM in Economics, Fed Watch, Monetary Policy | Permalink  Comments (12)


                                                                                    Links for 01-09-2013

                                                                                      Posted by on Wednesday, January 9, 2013 at 12:06 AM in Economics, Links | Permalink  Comments (64)