The Folly of Paul Krugman

 

In yesterday’s New York Times Paul Krugman has a column “Fight the Future” in which he says that “fiscal contraction” is “undermining what might otherwise have been a fairly vigorous recovery” and that  focusing on long run fiscal sustainability “isn’t a way of being responsible”.  He compares our fiscal problems with global warming and says that the “uncertainty about the impact of greenhouse gases on global temperatures actually strengthens the case for action, to head off the risk of catastrophe”.  But “delaying action on entitlement reform has no comparable cost”.  He even says that seeking a “grand bargain” that links reduced austerity now to longer-run fiscal changes is harmful because it would involve negotiating with untrustworthy Republicans!
First of all, there has been no real fiscal austerity in the past five years.  Federal expenditures took a huge jump from 2008 to 2009 and have increased each year since, in spite of huge deficits.  The sequester will not cut spending in 2013 compared with 2012 but only slow down the rate of increase.  There is little, if any, uncertainty about how fast the costs of healthcare in general, and Medicare in particular, will increase in the years ahead.  The current slowdown in healthcare costs in the last few years still leaves it growing at twice the rate of increase of GDP.  Demographics alone clearly show that the cost of Medicare will start increasing even more rapidly in just a few years from now.
Mr. Krugman concludes by saying that “influential people should stop using the future as an excuse for inaction.  The clear and present danger is mass unemployment, and we should deal with it, now.”  I basically agree with him!  The question is how!  Should we deal with it by artificial stimulation (bigger deficits and more debt) or rather by boosting the private sector with tax reform and strategic deregulation?  It takes two to tango and Mr. Krugman doesn’t help by constantly ridiculing the Republicans!

Fiscal Fixes for the Jobless Recovery

 

The economist Alan Blinder has a column in yesterday’s Wall Street Journal entitled “Fiscal Fixes for the Jobless Recovery” where he deplores the apparent complacency about our stubbornly high unemployment rate of 7.6% after four years now of recovery from the Great Recession.  His solutions: 1) boost government employment with greater deficit spending, 2) offer businesses a tax credit equal to 10% of the increase of their wage bills over the previous year, and 3) offset the high 35% corporate tax rate by taxing a company’s repatriated profits at a super low rate, based on the increase of its wage payroll.
What Mr. Blinder describes as complacency about the high unemployment rate is rather just huge frustration about the likelihood of a divided Congress being able to reach agreement on any fundamental reforms which would be able to boost economic growth.  His proposals illustrate why the philosophical chasm between the two political parties is so great.  In the first place, boosting government employment by increasing deficit spending is a total nonstarter.  Our enormous and rapidly increasing national debt is a major part of the problem.  We need to decrease government spending, not increase it.
We need to simplify the tax code, not make it more complicated with a new 10% tax credit.  Lowering tax rates overall, offset by eliminating special tax preferences for the well connected, is the type of fundamental reform which will truly boost the economy, by giving everyone the same greater opportunity to create wealth.
Since Republicans think that a 35% corporate tax rate is too high and Democrats think that too many companies are able to shelter their profits abroad, then why can’t we just lower the rate and change the rules to the point where multinational corporations will want to bring their profits home, pay taxes and reinvest in America.  A new tax credit just makes things more complicated!
What is needed to break the log-jam is leadership from our elected representatives, not more ideological name calling.  There are practical solutions to our economic and fiscal problems if we simply had more leaders who are focused on finding solutions rather than scoring points on the opposition!

CBO Analysis of the President’s 2014 Budget

The Congressional Budget Office has just released “An Analysis of the President’s
2014 Budget”.  News reports highlight that the Obama plan will decrease the deficit over the next ten years by $1.1 trillion compared with the CBO baseline and that the
deficit in 2023 will be only 2% of GDP as opposed to 4.2% of GDP in 2013.  Federal debt held by the public (on which we pay interest) would grow from 73% of GDP ($11.3 trillion) at the end of 2012, to 77% of GDP ($12.8 trillion) at the end of 2014, and then shrink to 70% of GDP ($18.1 trillion) in 2023.
It may sound good to say that the deficit will be “only” 2% of GDP in 2023.  But this still represents about $600 billion being added every year to the national debt even 10 years from now.  Right now, with very low interest rates, we are paying $223 billion per year (8% of revenue) in interest on the debt.  When interest rates return to normal at 5% or so, interest on the debt will skyrocket, reaching $900 billion by 2023, representing 18% of the estimated $5.1 trillion in revenue for that year.  Just paying interest on the debt
will become a bigger and bigger burden for American society, continuing indefinitely into the future.
Here’s another problem with the President’s budget.  Almost half of the ten year deficit reduction ($493 billion) is achieved by limiting tax deductions to 28% of income (the tax
rate on income up to $183,000).  Using a limitation of tax deductions to shrink the deficit will make fundamental tax reform that much harder.  There is a strong bipartisan consensus for broadening and simplifying the tax code which means lowering, if not completely eliminating, many deductions in return for lower tax rates.  This should be the primary focus of tax reform in order to stimulate the economy by encouraging
more investment.
What we need is a credible plan to completely eliminate deficit spending in the
short term, and to do this together with pro-growth tax and regulatory reform.  It will be a huge challenge to get this accomplished but our future liberty and prosperity depend on it!

Updated Budget Projections from the Congressional Budget Office

 

The Congressional Budget Office has just released an update to its February 2013 Budget Projections.  The deficit for 2013 is now projected to be $642 billion, down from the previous $845 billion.  This is good news but its main effect will only be to delay by several months until fall serious negotiations about raising the debt limit again.  The long term outlook has changed very little.  New debt for 2014-2023 is now projected at $6.3 trillion.  The total debt this year will be 76% of GDP and in 2023 it is projected to be at 74% of GDP and rising.  Over the past 40 years total debt has averaged 39% of GDP.
Such a large debt level now and for the indefinite future obviously has very serious negative consequences.  As soon as interest rates return to more typical higher levels, interest payments will rise by hundreds of billions of dollars per year, crowding out much other spending.  We can be sure that a new crisis will occur sooner or later leaving national leaders at that time in a precarious position, unless the debt level shrinks significantly in the meantime.
This means that significant additional deficit reduction is still needed at the present time.  Realistically, it should come from reforming entitlement spending which is becoming an even bigger driver of our continuing debt explosion.  Any national leader who denies the seriousness and urgency of our current frightful fiscal condition should be considered irresponsible and held to account for this failing.
The presently high unemployment rate of 7.5% is no excuse for inaction.  The way to boost the economy, and thereby reduce unemployment, is to encourage more business investment with tax and regulatory reform.  Economic stimulation and deficit reduction are not in opposition to each other.  They can and should be addressed together at the same time.

Is Faster Growth Under Our Control?

 

In today’s Wall Street Journal, columnist David Wessel declares that “Faster growth relies on a bump free road”.  Mr. Wessel cites a new forecast from the International Monetary Fund that sees a “three speed recovery” with the U.S. lagging behind emerging markets and developing economies but doing much better than the no-growth Euro zone.  According to Mr. Wessel our own economic growth is so closely tied in with the rest of the world, and especially Europe’s floundering economy, that the best we can do is to avoid “overly strong deficit reduction” and hope that there are no major bumps in the road.
It is pessimistic indeed to assume that there is little if anything we can do to boost economic output.  We can lower both individual and corporate tax rates, offset by eliminating deductions and closing loopholes, in order to stimulate more private investment.  We can help small businesses grow by removing the huge burden of having to provide health insurance to their employees (this can be accomplished by changing the tax treatment of health care insurance).  We can encourage more entrepreneurial activity with targeted (but temporary) tax exemptions. Immigration reform, hopefully now in the works, will boost the productivity of our 11,000,000 illegal immigrants by giving them more economic freedom.
Twenty million U.S. citizens are either unemployed or underemployed.  Our national leaders should consider it to be their moral duty to adopt measures to put more of them back to productive employment.  In addition, as the strongest economy in the world by far, we will boost the entire world economy if we can speed up our own growth.  The benefits of faster growth are so obvious that it should be the first priority of Congress and the President to work together to get this done!

The President’s Budget

The Administration has now released its own budget, “Obama Makes Budget Gamble”  as reported by the Wall Street Journal on Thursday, April 11, 2013.  We now have three budgets to compare with each other, from the House Republicans and the Senate Democrats as well as from the President.  Not surprisingly the President’s budget is very close to the Senate’s for the entire ten year period ahead, both in year-by-year spending totals as well as revenue projections.
The President’s budget shrinks the deficit from 5.3% of GDP for 2013 to 4.4% for 2014 and down to 1.7% in 2023.  But just retaining the sequester level of spending for next year, as the Republicans propose to do, with no other cuts, would lower the deficit level to 3.7% of GDP for next year.  And, of course, the Republicans propose to entirely eliminate the deficit by 2023.  Shrinking the deficit to 1.7% of GDP by 2023, as the Democrats propose to do, sounds good on the face of it, but it means a deficit of over $400 billion still remains ten years out.  Bottom line: both the Administration and Senate budgets increase the debt by about $5 trillion over the next ten years, making no attempt to eliminate the deficit, compared with a Republican increase of $1 trillion in debt by 2023 while finally ending our awful slide into deeper debt.
The President’s budget does have some good features such as changing the way the Consumer Price Index is computed, to make it more accurate, which could save $339 billion over ten years.  The administration suggests additional means testing for Medicare recipients so that the more affluent would pay higher premiums than at present (significant but unknown savings).  Limiting tax deductions for the top 3% of taxpayers to 28% of income would generate $529 billion over ten years.  Taxing all incomes over $1 million at the minimum rate of 30% (The Buffett Rule) would raise an additional $53 billion over ten years.
The problem is that all of these spending cuts and tax increases in the President’s budget would go to new spending rather than deficit reduction.  Tax reform, with a tradeoff between lower rates and fewer deductions, would give a big boost to the economy.  But just raising taxes in order to increase spending neither helps the economy nor lowers the deficit.  The President is again failing to provide leadership on our most critical problems.
The job of providing national leadership on economic and fiscal issues thereby goes by default to the Republican majority in the House.  This is a very big responsibility for John Boehner and company.  But they’re doing a remarkably good job so far under very trying circumstances!

The Spending Crunch

 

In the March 26, 2013 edition of the Wall Street Journal, the nonpartisan columnist Gerald Seib makes a very astute observation, namely that “Liberals Face Spending Dilemma”.  The Republicans are beating the drums for a balanced budget, the economy is growing at the anemic rate of 2% per year and entitlement spending is growing much more rapidly than this.  So what is going to happen?  Discretionary spending is going to have to shrink!   This means a big hit for both defense and nondefense discretionary spending, meaning most of the traditional programs funded by the federal government.
How do we get out of this predicament?  The best way would be to make the economy grow faster but this is unlikely to happen while the Democrats control the executive branch and are unwilling to implement pro-growth policies such as tax reform, deregulation and stepped-up international trade.
But even with more business friendly pro-growth policies, entitlement spending is growing way too fast and eating up a larger and larger piece of tax revenues.  The Republicans want to control the costs of Social Security, Medicare and Medicaid but simply cannot get this done without Democratic cooperation and support.  Either Democrats help figure out how to make significant cost cutting changes to entitlements or else steep cuts in discretionary social spending will have to be made.
The Republican drive to rapidly shrink deficit spending down to zero is for real and will not be denied.  The sooner the big spending liberals figure this out and adjust their behavior, the better off will be the whole country.

The Connection between Business Investment and Unemployment, Revisited

In my previous post I discussed the very close inverse relationship between business investment and unemployment pointed out by John Taylor in his February 4, 2013 blog entryPaul Krugman pointed out that that investment can be subdivided into residential and nonresidential components and that residential investment shrunk dramatically during the Great Recession.  According to Krugman, this invalidates Taylor’s conclusion that the best way to boost the economy is to boost business investment.

But Taylor has done further analysis which shows that it is the nonresidential component of total fixed investment which has the very close inverse relationship with unemployment, not the residential component.

In other words, the best way to boost the economy, and thereby increase employment, is to stop giving excuses for our slow recovery because of low housing prices and to motivate businesses in general to increase investment.  There are various ways to do this, as pointed out by many commentators including myself and, the important thing, is to increase movement in this direction.

The Connection between Business Investment and Unemployment

The Stanford economist, John Taylor, has pointed out in the February 4, 2013 entry of his blog, Economics One, the strikingly close correlation between business investment and the national unemployment rate. His graph shows that since 1990, whenever business investment increases, then the unemployment rate starts to fall with only a short time lag.  And, vice-versa, when business investment starts to fall, then the unemployment rate starts to increase.

It seems like plain common sense, then, that a very good way to boost the economy and thereby create more jobs, is to figure out how to motivate businesses to increase their rates of investment.  One way to accomplish this is to let businesses speed up their tax deductions for capital investment.  Of course, the best way of all would be to completely eliminate the corporate income tax.

Approximately 10% of federal tax revenue comes from the corporate income tax.  This amounts to roughly $250 billion per year.  Such a loss of federal revenue could easily be balanced by closing loopholes and deductions for high income taxpayers.  Such a shift in federal taxation would provide an enormous boost to the economy.

Making our economy grow faster is the key to solving both our very serious economic (putting people back to work) and fiscal (shrinking our federal deficit) problems.  Any and all ways to get this done should be the top priority of our national political leaders.

The Great Reset

 

The Great Recession ended almost four years ago, in June 2009, and growth in the US economy has been an anemic 2% annually since then.  The unemployment rate, now 7.8% is dropping only very slowly and millions of workers are still unemployed or underemployed.  If this isn’t bad enough already, knowledgeable experts are now predicting (see the Friday January 25 Omaha World Herald)  that many mid-skill, mid-pay jobs will never return largely because of the rapidly accelerating use of technology in all aspects of our lives.
Faster economic growth would not only provide more jobs but would also increase tax revenue and therefore shrink the deficit.  If such traditional measures as lower tax rates, deregulation and aggressively promoting foreign trade won’t fly politically which, of course, is very disappointing, then we need to consider other measures which could gain political support.  A good place to start is to enact The Startup Act of 2011 proposed by the Kauffman Foundation.
The Startup Act proposes: 1) more visas for entrepreneurs and Green cards given out with STEM degrees, 2) tax incentives for startup investments, 3) speeding up the patent process for entrepreneurs and 4) relaxing the regulatory burden on startup businesses.  Such measures as these need not be expensive to undertake and could give our economy a big boost.
Our leadership role in world affairs depends on our economic, military and cultural dominance.  First and foremost is our economic strength.  It is vital to speed up the growth of our economy.  Any and all means to accomplish this should be considered.  The status quo is not acceptable!