Wednesday, April 27, 2011

A not-unexpected reaction


Unfortunately, there's nothing surprising about the fact that Republicans have now convinced the nation that the deficit, and not the lack of jobs, which is in turn due to lack of consumer demand, which is in turn due to the collapse of the housing bubble, is the real problem and that it must be fixed NOW!!!


 


The suggested solution, of course, is to cut government spending. Never mind that the government spends money because it is trying to meet real and serious needs. The battle cry is “We must cut spending!” The British elected a new Parliament recently, which set about “hammer and tongs” to cut Britain's budget. How did that work out for them? Not well at all. Britain's GDP showed a 0.5% contraction as opposed to any sort of growth.


 


 


“The Chancellor needs to get his head out of the sand. He doesn't seem to understand that without jobs and growth you can't get the deficit down. The slower growth, higher unemployment and higher inflation we now see under George Osborne means he is now set to borrow £46 billion more than he was planning to. That's a vicious circle and makes no economic sense at all.


 


“Families know that cutting too far and too fast is hurting, but now we know it’s not working either. George Osborne can't keep making excuses – it's not the wrong kind of snow that's to blame, it's the wrong kind of policies. He needs to think again before it's too late.”


Is it a good idea to reduce the deficit in any event? Actually, it isn't. The US is seriously behind in getting our infrastructure fixed and up-to-date. Missouri just had to evacuate 1000 people from threatened areas because the levees in the town of Poplar Bluffs failed in four separate places. Nothing surprising about this failure. The levees were rated as “unacceptable” back in 2008 by the US Army Corps of Engineers. Why did this particular levee fail? The community simply couldn't afford to keep it up. The US as a whole needs to spend about $50 billion in order to get all the levees back into shape (The US has 881 counties or 28% of the total number of all counties, that have flood control systems). Of course, people have been moving into areas that are protected by levees, so the longer levees go unmaintained, the more US citizens that are put at risk. In all, the US needs to spend about $2.2 trillion in order to meet all of our infrastructure needs. Curing the deficit by getting spending down is a very bad idea as our infrastructure will then be permitted to deteriorate still further.

Can the Democrats make the case for more federal spending? Well yes, but President Obama's support for the “Cat Food Commission” (i.e., the Deficit Commission) directly contradicts the idea that the deficit is meaningless compared to getting Americans back to work. Essentially, Democrats would have to contradict pretty much everything that the party has been saying about the deficit for the past two years in order to convince Americans that jobs should be our number one priority.

Update: From Daily Kos Pundit Round-up
"Note in the [Stafford Act chart] that it's the Governor, who asks FEMA, who asks the President to declare a Federal disaster or emergency so as to free up funds and relief that through the National Response Framework can be delivered to the states. ..."

The federal response is intiiated by the state, and complexity and speed are inversely related. The wider the area affected, the slower the response will be (because supplies and infrastructure needs to come from farther away.) So let's talk about cutting the budget, shall we? Especially for FEMA. (see GOP's Continuing Resolution Cuts Funding for National Weather Service, FEMA.)  Brilliant idea.

Thursday, April 7, 2011

A review of “Path to Prosperity”

Representative Paul Ryan's (R-WI) economic agenda


 


 


Only recently, millions of American families saw their dreams destroyed in a


financial disaster caused by misguided policies, perverse incentives, and irresponsible leadership. This crisis squandered the nation’s savings and crippled its economy.


 


Path to Prosperity PDF p. 10


 


 


Ryan makes it clear in the next paragraph that he blames “the last Congress ” for America's economic problems. Nevertheless, he's right. America's economic problems have everything to do with “misguided” government policies. The government under President George W. Bush was informed by liberal economists as early as 2002 that there was a housing bubble and that the collapse of that bubble would have bad effects on the economy. Both of the Chairmen of the Federal Reserve, Alan Greenspan and Ben Bernanke, were looked up to as economic authorities and both of them miserably failed to even take notice of the housing bubble until after it had burst in late 2007, costing the economy several trillion dollars in lost consumer demand.


 


 


At a time when the free-market foundations of the American economy were in desperate need of


restoration and repair, the last Congress took actions that further undermined them. The President and his party’s leaders embarked on a stimulus spending spree that added hundreds of billions of dollars to the debt, yet failed to deliver on its promises to create jobs.


 


 


Hmm, well, first off, the “free market foundations” of America's economy were and are in perfectly good shape. It was consumer demand that had fallen off a cliff due to there being so many people losing value in their homes (For most of them, that was their main investment that they were going to sell off in order to retire in comfort), in addition, millions of Americans were thrown out of work. The “stimulus spending spree” was an absolutely critical necessity in order to get consumer demand back up. It only fell short on that goal because President Obama wanted to get his stimulus bill through without annoying and aggravating Congresspeople and Senators too much and therefore, he didn't force a good bill through. One of his economic advisers wanted a $1.2 trillion stimulus, but by “negotiating with himself,” Obama finally settled for only $787 billion and far too much of that was in the form of tax breaks as opposed to straight-out spending.


 


 


Acute economic hardship was exploited to enact unprecedented expansions of government power.


 


This did not sit well with the American people. Citizens stood up and demanded that their leaders reacquaint themselves with America’s founding ideals of liberty, limited government, and equality under the rule of law.


 


 


Government influence on the economy certainly expanded greatly, but it's far from clear that President Obama “exploited” economic hardship in order to expand the government. No one has shown that Obama took any power that wasn't needed in order to get the economy back on track. The “Tea Party” that citizens were allegedly spontaneously joining in order to protest the actions that the allegedly greedy, grasping government was taking, was and is an astroturf organization bankrolled by billionaires (Notably, the Koch brothers) in order to protect the economic interests of the top 1% of income-earners.


 


 


In recent years, both political parties have squandered the public’s trust.


 


 


I certainly agree that the Republican Party has done so. Not sure how Democrats have done so except by giving in too often and by surrendering the initiative in the war of ideas to the other side. We've seen a spontaneous uprising in Wisconsin due to the overreach of the Governor there, but the Obama Administration, although they've quietly helped Wisconsin citizens, has generally kept a low profile and has not vigorously exploited the situation there at all.


 


 


The American people ended a unified Republican majority in 2006, just as they ended a unified Democratic majority last fall. Americans reject leaders who focus on the pursuit of power at the expense of principle.


 


 


Not sure I agree as to why either Republicans lost power or as to why Democrats did. Seems to me in both cases that voters were punishing parties that failed to fulfill their mandates. Republicans led America into two grinding, inconclusive wars and chalked up a disastrous economic performance, Democrats failed to either end those wars or to get America's economy back on track. I don't see much evidence that voters were reacting to a failure to follow “principles.”


 


 


But a government that loses its sovereignty to its bondholders cannot long guarantee its people’s prosperity – or secure their freedom.


 


 


Ah yes, Paul Krugman refers to this theory as the “bond vigilantes,” suggesting dark figures waiting in the alley with switchblades and baseball bats, ready to pounce on Presidents who fail to follow sound economic principles. As the US trades with the world in its own currency and does not carry on trade in Rubles or Euros or the Yuan, there is absolutely zero danger that bondholders will someday take over the government or force it to take any action the government does not wish to take. The US is not Greece and is not subject to the pressures that the Greeks are subject to.


 


 


A government that buries the next generation under an avalanche of debt cannot claim the moral high ground in the world.


 


 


Having lots of debt is certainly not a good thing and America was certainly on the right path when President Clinton left office, as the national debt was lower and diminishing. Has that national debt become unreasonable or unsustainable? If it were, one would think that bondholders would be insisting on high interest rates or they wouldn't buy our bonds. They aren't, interest rates are low by historical standards, so it's not at all clear what the problem is. Does debt have anything to do with the “moral high ground”? With the national debt being entirely sustainable, it's hard to see much of a connection between debt and morality.


 


 


This Path to Prosperity draws upon solutions from across the political spectrum and builds upon the important work of the President’s bipartisan Commission on Fiscal Responsibility and Reform.


 


 


%$#@&!!! The damned “Cat Food Commission” is what Ryan's referring to. The Commission that failed to fulfill its mandate and issued a report anyway, despite not having the appropriate number of votes in favor of its recommendations. Senator Dick Durbin (D-IL) disgraced himself by voting in favor of its recommendations, even though he knew full well that the proposed plan was an awful one. He piteously mewled that he needed to maintain some credibility in order to be “part of the conversation.” Representative Jan Schakowsky (D-IL) distinguished herself by refusing to vote for its recommendations because she recognized what an awful mess those recommendations were. Interestingly, Ryan was also part of the Cat Food Commission (It was called that because the Commission would obviously like to see grandma and grandpa living in a four-story walk-up with broken windows and no heat, eating cat food for their dinner) and refused to vote for its recommendations because the Commission wanted to raise taxes as part of its approach to “fixing” the economy.


 


 


While American families have been tightening their belts, these agencies have been the beneficiaries of a major spending spree over the last two years. Since January of 2009, there has been a 24 percent increase in this slice of the pie – a number that jumps to 84 percent when stimulus funds are included.


 


 


Here's a familiar conservative/Republican/right-wing complaint. Why can't government be run like a family and stay within its budget? Well, one reason is that modern families don't stay within their budgets, either. When a family wished to have a carriage for their horses to pull, that was a sufficiently cheap investment that the family could afford to wait until they had the full cost in hand and then go to the carriage-maker to custom-manufacture a carriage just for them. When the automobile arrived on the scene, they quickly became too expensive to pay for outright and so, consumer credit was born. When homes were hand-built using local materials, there was no need for consumer credit. When small city houses and especially when suburbs, were born and families didn't have the money to purchase them outright, again, consumer credit was developed to meet that need. Governments run debt/deficits for precisely the same reason. If the US wants to fight a war overseas, say in Afghanistan or Iraq or wants to establish, say, Medicare Part D or wants to give tax breaks to millionaires and billionaires and corporations, it sells bonds and covers the cost that way. Yes, it would be nice to cover everything via taxes and during several years under President Clinton, everything was. But when the country has a severe economic problem, such as with the collapse of the housing bubble, it's entirely sensible for the government to run an even bigger deficit to cover all of the things (Schools, hospitals, transportation infrastructure, etc) that would otherwise have to stop working.


 


 


As illustrated in Figure 1, autopilot spending accounted for around 60 percent of all federal spending in 2010. Congress does not regularly debate, annually appropriate or properly scrutinize this category of spending. If an individual meets legal eligibility requirements for these government programs, he or she automatically receives – or “is legally entitled” – to the benefit. This category includes food stamps, unemployment benefits, and farm subsidies – programs that are frequently referred to as “entitlement programs.”


 


 


It's not at all clear why, if a recipient of an entitlement program is legally entitled (I don't put that phrase in scare quotes because it's not clear why Ryan uses quote marks in the first place) to a government benefit, that the program under which the benefit is distributed is not also “properly scrutinized.” Why would a benefit that a citizen was legally entitled to not be considered properly awarded to the citizen? If Congress has written the eligibility requirements so that citizens have too easy a time getting benefits, then that's a problem to be tackled in the legislative process. That's a fight over details, not over principles.


 


 


But Americans will not be able to rely on these programs for much longer unless Congress repairs and reforms them. Social Security, Medicare and Medicaid all face structural problems that are driving them – and the country – into bankruptcy.


 


 


Well, Medicare and Medicaid face great problems because of four of what the Kaiser Family Foundation calls “cost drivers.” They include Technology and Prescription drugs, Chronic disease (Longer life spans means more diseases in total), Aging of the population and the Administrative costs that come along with the extensive use of private industry in health matters. All of these drivers are outside of the design of the programs. There are no problems that are traceable solely to the way in which these programs are designed. As Ryan's own chart on p. 16 shows, Social Security is not a problem at all and should not be included on this list.


 


 


Ryan's chart on page 14 is correct. There are far fewer workers today supporting far many more retirees than when the Social Security program was enacted. But what has also increased is worker productivity. The average worker of today produces far more value than the worker of yesterday did. There is no “massive shift of earnings away from younger families ” that Ryan asserts there is.


 


 


Ryan considers it a major problem that the Affordable Care Act puts “even more of the health sector under government control. ” This isn't a problem at all because the private, capitalist sector does a very poor job of managing health care in the first place. That's because buying a car is essentially different from buying an operation to fix a heart valve. Say a woman decides to get her breasts enlarged. That's a straight, capitalist, comparison-shopping experience. She looks at the different models, decides what it is she can afford and arranges for the operation. Now, say that her enlarged breasts start leaking into her chest and putting her health at risk. It wasn't her choice to have to deal with that kind of problem, so she doesn't necessarily have the money to pay to fix the problem. She can't engage in any comparison-shopping because she needs the problem fixed right away. It's wildly unrealistic to expect her to focus on details like the expertise of the different doctors when her health is deteriorating. In the first instance, our hypothetical person is a customer. She had plenty of time to research the various issues connected to her purchase and collected all the money needed before she contacted the doctor who would do the operation. In the second, she's a patient who's dealing with a problem she had no reason to expect and that she hasn't prepared for in any way. It's simply not valid to compare fixing health problems to any sort of shopping experience as the two experiences are not at all alike. Regardless of how much money Medicare/Medicaid may or may not waste, forcing citizens to use a comparison-shopping model is not an answer and never will be.


 


 


This next sentence is from p. 24, where Ryan discusses his Reform Agenda.


 


 


Government spending on domestic departments and agencies has grown too much, too fast over the past decade, with much of the money going to programs and projects the nation can do without.


 


 


This is a problem that goes all the way back (At least as far as I can remember, I was In college when Ronald Reagan won the Presidency) to Reagan's 1980 campaign. He put out the general proposition that government spending should be cut. Okay, fine. He got general agreement on that score. Then came the hard question. What, exactly, to cut? On that, he managed to find lots of small cuts during his first year in office, then he had picked all the “low-hanging fruit” and then had to start really looking. For the past 30 years, conservatives have been looking and they've found very little that 1. Americans can agree on and that 2. Would make a serious difference. It's like saying “Let's establish a toxic waste dump.” Okay, fine, people can easily agree on the need to do that. Where do y'all wanna put it? Ah, there's where decision-making gets difficult and complicated. If any program were one that “ the nation [could] do without,” then it's difficult to see how that program was established in the first place. Obviously, any program that's been running for awhile and that disburses money or things of monetary value to constituents is going to be considered vital and irreplaceable, if only to the constituents that directly benefit from it. Those constituents are likely to be generously distributing campaign money to politicians, which makes their desires very important for those politicians to keep in mind.


 


 


Ending corporate welfare:


 


 


Y'know what? I'll believe it when I see it. Don't get me wrong, I think ending corporate welfare is a great idea, but when a Republican actually does any such thing, I'll be happy to stand up and cheer. I just don't foresee ever having to do any such thing.


 


 


Boosting American energy resources:


 


 


The Continental United States reached “Peak Oil” back during the 1970s. That means we already extracted half of all the oil that we'll ever extract around 40 years ago. When does the world as a whole hit Peak Oil? Many sources say we're already there. No, if the US is going to become self-sufficient in energy, it'll have to be through the development of alternative, renewable energy. “Drill, baby, drill” was a cute campaign slogan, but it's not a realistic answer for America's energy needs.


 


 


Sorry, but the highly respected economist Paul Krugman weighed in on Ryan's proposals and has found them severely wanting. Also, as Media Matters points out here, Ryan is not exactly some sort of guru or expert that we should expect anything amazing out of. He went along with every budget-busting, unworkable, worthless economic program that President G.W. Bush proposed. There's absolutely no reason to think that anything he produces is going to be worth examining, let alone enacting.

Thursday, March 24, 2011

Are conservatives really good for business?

Really? 'Cause you sure couldn't prove it by looking at Governor Scott Walker's record in Wisconsin. Since Walker was inaugurated, 19 plants have closed and 2,207 factory workers in Wisconsin have lost their jobs. No, this isn't any sort of coincidence. The country as a whole has been gaining jobs. Slowly, but the employment picture has been modestly improving. In Wisconsin, it's been getting worse and Governor Walker's decisions have very clearly been responsible for that.
Simply put, is Wisconsin now “open for business?”

No. Right from the beginning, Walker’s cancellation of a high speed rail link between Madison and Milwaukee sent a rail car business out of Milwaukee, abandoning a large factory. The removal of collective bargaining rights from public employees may lead to a serious catastrophe for the state’s forestry industry, as they are likely to lose their third-party “certified market” status.

Now, his policies have sent other businesses throughout the state scurrying. A wind power project near Green Bay will be shuttered.

How anyone could possibly look at G.W. Bush's economic record and say "We need a businessman to run our government!" is just beyond me. Keep in mind that Bush earned an MBA from the Harvard Business School. But despite, or perhaps because of that, Bush had the lowest number of jobs created per year of any president since the US began keeping records on employment just before World War II. President Eisenhower had a somewhat similar record (438,000 per year compared to Bush's 375,000), but the US population in 1952 (Ike's first year) was 158 million. In 2001, it was 285 million, nearly twice as much. Also, payroll expansion under Eisenhower was 7% compared to Bush's 2.3% (The same as Gerald Ford's and the elder George Bush's).

On a similar note, the Cat Food Commission tries yet again to drag up old, debunked arguments in order to convince Democrats that they'd better hack and slash away at Social Security or they'd suffer politically. Major problem with this argument is that the American public prefers that politicians work on jobs as opposed to cutting the budget by a margin of 63% to 26%, an almost three-to-one margin.

The thing that's truly amazing about this piece is that the Washington Post categorizes it as "left-leaning" (They also consider Richard Cohen as being "left-leaning," a description that renders the term completely meaningless).

Update: Very good piece that makes the extremely important point that businesses are not governments. They're run on a different basis with different priorities. No, we shouldn't seek to make governments run more like businesses. There's nothing in businesses that government has any need to copy.

Monday, March 7, 2011

Koch editorial

Crooks & Liars writes a response to a Charles Koch editorial. Koch tries to defend his actions of manipulating politics with his hundreds of millions of dollars in order to profit himself. Like other DFH bloggers, the C&L guy uses  lots of indelicate language.

And I completely agree with the C&L guy, both the term and the concept of "economic freedom" means absolutely nothing. I can't understand what it means for an average citizen as the list of countries they give runs the gamut in terms of citizen freedoms.

FDL has a page for keeping track of the conflict up in Wisconsin. A local writer warns that Philadelphia could be next.

And also, a very highly interesting look at New Jersey's  economic troubles and the state administration of Christine Todd Whitman back around 15 years ago and the troubles that were predicted to come up...well... right about now. The truly sad part of the story is to see  just how blind the press corps is to the recent past. It just seems that no one can be bothered to go back through the archives.

Monday, February 28, 2011

How sad is our economic debate these days?

Pretty darned sad.
I'm having a hard time wrapping my head around the state of the debate on this. We now have three separate independent analyses of the Republican proposal, all of which say the same thing: if approved, the GOP plan would hurt the economy and make unemployment worse. We now have two prominent Republican -- one is currently the nation's most powerful GOP official, the other hopes to be -- conceding publicly that the party's spending-cut priorities would force more Americans out of work.

Oh, and the House Majority Leader, Eric Cantor, is convinced, convinced I tell you!, that the stimulus didn't work.
We have Americans demanding action on job creation; we have congressional Republicans deliberately trying to make unemployment worse; and we have a media that prefers to pretend that the deficit matters more than the economy.

Tuesday, February 22, 2011

Who to blame for housing bubble

Right-wing radio host Heidi Harris claims that the housing bubble was caused by people trying to engage in "social engineering." That is, the "engineers" put everybody in houses even though not everyone could afford to keep paying their mortgages.

First, that suggests that the "social engineers" were incredibly incompetent as there was quite obviously no back-up plan if the homeowners couldn't keep up their payments.

Also, the causes of the housing bubble were pretty clearly more complex than that. Most importantly, the major banks did pretty well out of the collapse of that  bubble. If the bubble was the result of a plot by a particular group of people, it stands to reason that those who benefited by the bubble were most likely the ones behind it.
All of the big four U.S. megabanks—Bank of America, Citigroup, Chase, and Wells Fargo—reported either decreases or very modest increases in their massive profitability during 2010. But this surprisingly weak performance would have been even more disappointing without a pair of accounting maneuvers.

[...]

...traders’ pay is also rebounding into the $200,000-to-$500,000 range, while tens of millions of Americans struggle to keep food on the table.

[...]

... compensation has rocketed back into seven figures in spite of these circumstances.

As another piece puts it:
The Bush and Obama administrations have made an already critically flawed financial system even worse. The result is that the banking industry’s future is bad for banking, terrible for the real economy, horrific for the public—and wonderful for the top executives at the largest banks. This is significantly insane, especially given that over the past 30 years, the savings-and-loan fiasco and other crises provided ample opportunity to learn about those flaws.

If one is looking for villains in the housing bubble, I'd suggest that former homeowners who were foreclosed upon are most likely not the problem.

Friday, February 18, 2011

There is no crisis

Congressman Paul Ryan (R-WI), Chairman of the House Budget Committee, says here that (paraphrasing) "Gee, if we don't get our national debt and entitlements under control, it'll be a disaster and grandma and grandpa and your kids will all starve!" He made similar statements for NPR on February 14th:

You know, that's the thing is this budget is so out of control on spending and taxing that I'm really disappointed in it. I was really hoping that the president would show some reforms that can get our debt under control. Instead, what we have is 1.6 trillion in new tax increases, 8.7 trillion in new spending. He's going to be adding 13 trillion to the debt over the course of his budget. And that to me is very dangerous, because this is accelerating our trajectory toward a debt crisis versus taking on the issue.


The president even appointed a fiscal commission last year to deal with these issues, yet he rejected any of the major reforms recommended in the fiscal commission.


Now keep in mind that just a few months ago, the President agreed to keep the Bush tax cuts in place for those making over $200,000 a year. If there really was some sort of crisis, why are the wealthy being permitted to keep their 2001 windfall? Sorry, but I just don't buy all this talk of crisis. As a liberal Keynesian economist puts it:

Investors are willing to lend the United States trillions of dollars at historically low interest rates. This means that the government is not broke. There is no evidence that it is coming up against any serious spending or borrowing limitation.


It's also worth keeping in mind that Congressman Ryan voted for Medicare Part D and TARP, major budget-busting programs that the Congresses at the time saw no need to make any sort of plan to pay for, so it's obvious that his fiscal sobriety and seriousness is a new-found thing.Oh, and Ryan's attitude towards the protests in his home state over the Governor's draconian plans to deprive state workers of their ability to collectively bargain?

“It’s like Cairo has moved to Madison these days,” he said, adding that “people should be able to express their way, but we’ve got to get this deficit and debt under control in Madison, if we want to have a good business climate and job creation in Wisconsin.”


Natcherly, when I hear that Wisconsin has become like Cairo, I tend to think of that as a good thing! And yes, the "crisis" in Wisconsin was "ginned up." There is no crisis nationally and there's no crisis in Wisconsin, either. Problem is, in terms of tactics, Republicans are just plain running circles around the hapless President and his team and Congressional Democrats.

The problem is that the Republicans want to lay this off on the president so they can have it both ways by saying he didn't do enough [to cut spending] while their shadowy corporate supporters under Citizens United demagogue the cuts to senior citizens, thus insuring they will come out to vote against Obama in huge numbers. The president, on the other hand, needs the GOP to jump off the cliff with him so they can share the blame. What do you suppose the odds of the latter happening are?


Obama seems to be preparing the way for a Grand Bargain, which seems a pretty sure bet to end up being a lose-lose situation, where the President gets hammered no matter what he does.