The Federal Reserve Needs to Fulfill Its Global Role: Tuesday Focus for July 1, 2014

Over at Project Syndicate: The Federal Reserve Needs to Fulfill Its Global Role: The Federal Reserve these days is focusing well-nigh completely on the state of the US economy. It is broadly happy with its policies. I am not happy with its policies, not even from a narrow domestic demand-management perspective. Since mid 2007 policy has been and remains insufficiently expansionary: behind the curve. The policy most likely to succeed right now would be one of a shift in régime–analogous to what was carried out by Paul Volker in the U.S. 1979, by Franklin Delano Roosevelt in the U.S. in 1933, by Neville Chamberlain in Great Britain in 1931, and is being carried out by Shinzo Abe today.

But those of us who hold to my position and fear that the Federal Reserve’s failure to match the curve has not just greatly deepened the Lesser Depression but is also turning our cyclical unemployment into permanent long-term structural non-employment have lost the domestic monetary policy argument.

However, there is another policy argument that needs to be joined. The Federal Reserve is not just the central bank of the United States: it is the central bank for the world.

The United States is not just another large open economy in a world of flexible exchange rates capable of following its own monetary policy. The United States is a global hegemon. The Federal Reserve is thus a global central bank: the central bank for the world as well as the United States. It has a responsibility not just to stabilize output, employment, and inflation and ensure financial stability in the United States. It has a responsibility to successfully manage the world economy in its entirety: that means crafting policy in the interest of the world as a whole, and that means that its policy should take into account and compensate for market, institutional, governance, and policy failures elsewhere. One such ares of concern is the health and stability of growth in emerging markets as they attempt to (a) gain the benefits of capital inflows for development, (b) satisfy North Atlantic demands for open financial markets, and yet (c) manage the resulting instability created by “hot money”, the carry trade, irrational exuberance, and overshooting.

The most extraordinary problem facing the global economy today is the crisis of Europe, and of euros. Europe cannot resolve this crisis. It lacks the institutions of global governments to do so. What needs to happen is the northern and southern Europe need to rebalance their costs this is best done through insulation in the north rather than through deflation in the south. The problem is that European institutions within the euro zone cannot at least as presently constituted, deliver that outcome.

But leave that, too, to one side. Focus on the greatest institutional vulnerability in the world today and its devastating macroeconomic consequences: the manner in which the scope and governance of the eurozone was designed. That is the principal source of microeconomic distress and risk in the world today. That is a mammoth failure–in labor market flexibility, in the construction of the institution of a single currency that far exceeds what is justifiable on optimal currency-area principles, in what groups and interests are represented to what degree in the governing councils, and in the policies adopted–that it is the Federal Reserve’s duty to craft global monetary policy to attempt to offset and neutralize, to the limited degree that it can.

We all know what happened: The creation of the euro without an appropriate banking union or sufficient coordination between national-level banking regulators encouraged massive capital flows to southern Europe without proper risk calibration. Once the risks became clear, the money dried up, imposing an enormous deflationary shock on the south. The creation of the euro without an appropriate fiscal union meant that transfers from surplus to deficit regions would not rebalance or even cushion the maladjustments in demand. The fact that the eurozone lacked the labor market flexibility that would make it an optimal currency area meant that adjustment via the regional reallocation of economic activity would be glacial. The fact that the eurozone was a fixed currency zone ruled out adjustment via nominal depreciation.

There were only two roads to recovery: reflation in northern Europe to push up relative costs and boost the north’s demand for exports from the south to allow it to pay off its debts and deleverage, or deflation in southern Europe to push down its relative costs–at the price of deep depression and lost decades. And the way the institutions had been built, the voices of the interests in the governing councils pushed for the destructive policies that set Europe on the deflationary road, thus all but guaranteeing a failure of the European Union to deliver prosperity and growth for a period that will exceed a decade.

We have an example from the early twentieth century of what such a period of economic depression and stagnation does in politics, in Europe at least. The lesson from eighty years ago is that if parliamentary democracy does not deliver prosperity and growth, voters turn away from parliamentary democracy and toward nationalism, authoritarianism, and fascism. The interest group corruption, the corrupt corruption, and the near-gridlock of incremental parliamentary politics turns people off if the parliamentary régime does not deliver rough justice, prosperity, and growth. The reaction to what used to be called the cretinism of parliaments is the rise of movements that seek, instead, a leader: someone to tell people what to do. Such leaders soon learn that they have little better real solutions than anybody else. They decide that the best way to remain in the seats of power–because –is distraction. Identify the leaders with the group and the group with the leaders and so define critics of the leaders’ as deviant aliens outside the group who are not to be listened to. Silence outsiders and dissenters as deviant from the group. They decide that the best people to blame for the defects of the situation are those who cannot vote in national-level plebiscites: foreigners. Thus they turn to busying giddy minds with foreign quarrels, and making exaltation of the nation in what is at best a series of zero-sum nation-vs.-nation contests the focus of politics–one of the standard tools of power since the Lancastrian Dynasty.

It is in the strong medium- and long-run interest of United States not to have to deal with a Europe swirling with political currents that at the least flirt with nationalism, authoritarianism, and fascism. A prosperous parliamentary-democratic world is a much better and safer world for the United States to be in. And a world in which the United States has a proven record of fulfilling the trust it has taken on by assuming the role of global economic hegemon–and thus in which the United States is trusted to manage the global economy for the collective common good–is a much better world for the United States then one in which it is not trusted, and in which global macroeconomic management becomes the emergent result of nation-level race to the bottom policy struggles that at best zero-sum.

Right now is thus one of those moments in which the medium- and long-run national interest of the United States–political, security, and, yes, economic–requires the Federal Reserve to note that its proper policy mission is not to focus narrowly on attempting to achieve and maintain internal balance but rather to actively take on and successfully achieve its mandate as global central bank of balancing aggregate demand to potential supply for the world as a whole.

Afternoon Must-Read: Yifan Cao and Adam Shapiro: Will Inflation Remain Low?

Federal Reserve Bank San Francisco Will Inflation Remain Low

Yifan Cao and Adam Shapiro:Will Inflation Remain Low?: “The well-known Phillips curve suggests that future inflation depends…

…on current and past inflation and a measure of economic slack or resource utilization. Using the unemployment gap to measure slack, a simple Phillips curve currently predicts that inflation will remain quite low through 2015. Two variations of the model, which impose a higher anchor for inflation expectations or focus only on a short-term unemployment gap, still predict that inflation will remain low, albeit higher than implied by the basic model.

Afternoon Must-Read: Unlearning Economics: Capital in Pikettys Capital

Unlearning Economics: Capital in Pikettys Capital: “Although Piketty relates his framework back to the neoclassical production function…

…it plays only a supporting role (he refers to Cobb-Douglas somewhat disparagingly as a ‘simple story’), and his conception of ‘capital’, as defined above, is far more general than a literal interpretation of the production function might suggest…. Rognlie’s argument takes the estimates of the elasticity as central…. Piketty only references elasticity estimates for support, and actually stakes most of his claim that diminishing returns will not become a problem on historical observation: ‘On the basis of historical data, one can estimate an elasticity between 1.3 and 1.6. But not only is this estimate uncertain and imprecise. More than that, there is no reason why the technologies of the future should exhibit the same elasticity as those of the past. The only thing that appears to be relatively well established is that the tendency for the capital/income ratio β to rise…. To be sure, it is likely that the return on capital, r, will decrease as β increases. But on the basis of historical experience, the most likely outcome is that the volume effect will outweigh the price effect, which means that the accumulation effect will outweigh the decrease in the return on capital.’ This is not to say that Rognlie’s arguments are not worth considering, and he makes some good points… that the returns to new, IT-based technologies are not especially high… that, absent housing housing bubbles, capital’s share of income has declined in many countries over the past few decades…”

Afternoon Must-Read: Ryan Avent: Monetary Policy: Dead Economies Blow No Bubbles

Ryan Avent: Monetary policy: Dead economies blow no bubbles: “The stopped clock that is the Bank for International Settlements…

…is showing the same face…. In 2011… the BIS argued that global growth needed to slow in order to reduce inflationary pressure. In 2012 it warned that central banks shouldn’t do any more to boost growth lest they create financial instability and discourage structural reform…. In its latest annual report, it argues that what the world needs now is higher interest rates. One of these days the BIS may just turn out to be right. Not this year…. Low rates are not doing much to help the real economy, BIS says, but are contributing to another worrying credit boom…. Because it knows the result it wants (higher interest rates) it misreads the particular risks of the moment…. It was until very recently taken for granted that loose money meant policy that allows for excessively fast demand growth…. Rich economies currently suffer from none of those ailments. One could conclude then that policy is not too loose. Instead, the BIS, which is pretty sure that it is, finds a different measure of policy looseness with which to justify its call for higher rates: the financial cycle…. Raising rates now would almost certainly be counterproductive…. As markets priced in a perpetual slump (and lower inflation or deflation) long-term interest rates would edge even lower. Weak demand would also reduce the growth boost to structural forms, making them a harder sell, and would lead to still more deterioration in public balance sheets…

The decline of unions in America abetted more by Supreme Court

Unions, once civil and economic institutions that loomed large in our society and economy, have been under attack and on the decline for decades. Today, the Supreme Court could have delivered another body blow to unions, specifically public-sector unions, but instead the damage, while significant, wasn’t fatal. The decision won’t help reverse growing income inequality in the United States, but it probably won’t accelerate the trend significantly.

Here’s what the court decided today. Justice Samuel Alito, writing for a five-justice majority, found that some public-sector workers cannot be compelled to pay certain fees to unions. The case before the Supreme Court, known as Harris v. Quinn, centered on the ability of unions to require workers covered by collective bargaining agreements to pay fees to the union.

Traditionally, unions would have workers in unionized workplaces pay one fee that covered both the operations of collective bargaining as well as union membership dues. But after an earlier Supreme Court decision, Communication Workers of America v. Beck, workers covered by collective bargaining agreements can’t be compelled to pay membership fees. But they must pay agency fees to cover the union’s collective bargaining efforts.

What was at stake in today’s Harris v. Quinn decision was the ability of public-sector unions to compel workers to pay the agency fee. Without the agency fees, unions would have to raise membership fees that might well drive out some members and probably result in a larger fee increase, which in turn might push even more members out of unions. If that dynamic sounds familiar, it’s because that’s what happened at the state level when legislators enacted so called right-to-work laws, which actually did cause the membership death spiral described above.

A combination of existing and newly enacted right-to-work laws at the state level, deteriorating support at the federal level for union organizing in the workplace, and the decline of once highly unionized industrial firms in our nation have resulted in a sharp decline in union membership rates. In 1973, 24 percent of all U.S. workers were unionized. By 2013, only 11.2 percent were unionized.

Importantly for the relevance of Harris v. Quinn, the trends in unionization have been quite different for public-sector workers compared to their private-sector counterparts. Private-sector unionization rates have dropped significantly from 24.2 percent in 1973 to 6.7 percent in 2013 while public sector rates have actually increased from 23 percent to 35.3 percent over the same period.

The decline of private-sector union membership is a major contributor to the rise in income inequality over the past 30 plus years. This decline is responsible for between 15 percent to 20 percent of the rise in wage inequality for male workers between 1973 and 1993, according to research by University of California-Berkeley economist David Card. A more recent study by sociologists Bruce Western of Harvard University and Jake Rosenfeld of the University of Washington finds that unions not only help lift wages directly but also indirectly by setting pay norms within industries and across sectors. Once those factors were considered, the two authors estimate that 20 percent to 33 percent of the rise in wage inequality from 1973 to 2007 can be contributed to declining unionization.

Today’s ruling was not the death knell that many observers expected. Yet unions are still an institution on the decline. The slow and steady decay of unions has many consequences for the U.S. economy and our society writ large. A fatal blow wasn’t struck today.  But that day may not be far off if present trends continue.

Morning Must-Read; Ralph Nader: October 20, 2000

Ralph Nader: October 20, 2000: “The only difference between Al Gore and George W. Bush…

…is the velocity with which their knees hit the floor when corporations knock…. George W. Bush we can dismiss with a summary comment: nothing more than a corporation disguised as a human being. There’s no end to [Gore’s] betrayal…. All I can see is this Pinocchio nose coming…. He exudes a lack of credibility…. If it were a choice between a provocateur and an ‘anesthetizer’, I’d rather have a provocateur. It would mobilize us…

Monday DeLong Smackdown Watch: Cosma Shalizi Has Serious Doubts About How Well We in Berkeley Economics Are Doing at Our Broad Educational Mission…

Cosma Shalizi Has Serious Doubts About How Well We in Berkeley Economics Are Doing at Our Broad Educational Mission…: The eminent Cosma Shalizi writes:

Cosma Shalizi: “Respectfully, I just looked over the requirements for the Berkeley econ. major https://www.econ.berkeley.edu/undergrad/current/major-requirements, and it seems like it’s entirely possible to get through it with nothing but the core econ courses, finance and econometrics. Of course the mere course titles don’t give a lot of insight into their content–maybe UGBA 180 “Real Estate and Urban Land Economics” incorporates all the history and moral philosophy one could hope for (no sarcasm intended!)–there’d certainly be scope for it. But how well do you know what your students are actually being taught? How well do you know what they are learning?…

Touché…

Things to Read on the Morning of June 30, 2014

Should-Reads:

  1. Joe Stiglitz: Inequality Is Not Inevitable: “why has America chosen these inequality-enhancing policies? Part of the answer is that as World War II faded into memory, so too did the solidarity it had engendered. As America triumphed in the Cold War, there didn’t seem to be a viable competitor to our economic model. Without this international competition, we no longer had to show that our system could deliver for most of our citizens. Ideology and interests combined nefariously…. But this ideology was hypocritical…. The American political system is overrun by money. Economic inequality translates into political inequality, and political inequality yields increasing economic inequality. In fact, as he recognizes, Mr. Piketty’s argument rests on the ability of wealth-holders to keep their after-tax rate of return high relative to economic growth. How do they do this? By designing the rules of the game to ensure this outcome; that is, through politics…”

  2. Gary King and Margaret E. Roberts: How Robust Standard Errors Expose Methodological Problems They Do Not Fix, and What to Do About It: “‘Robust standard errors’ are used in a vast array of scholarship to correct standard errors for model misspecification. However, when misspecification is bad enough to make classical and robust standard errors diverge, assuming that it is nevertheless not so bad as to bias everything else requires considerable optimism. And even if the optimism is warranted, settling for a misspecified model, with or without robust standard errors, will still bias estimators of all but a few quantities of interest. Even though this message is well known to methodologists, it has failed to reach most applied researchers. The resulting cavernous gap between theory and practice suggests that considerable gains in applied statistics may be possible. We seek to help applied researchers realize these gains via an alternative perspective that offers a productive way to use robust standard errors; a new general and easier-to-use ‘generalized information matrix test’ statistic; and practical illustrations via simulations and real examples from published research. Instead of jettisoning this extremely popular tool, as some suggest, we show how robust and classical standard error differences can provide effective clues about model misspecification, likely biases, and a guide to more reliable inferences…”

Should Be Aware of:

And:

  1. Odran Bonnet et al.: Housing capital and Piketty’s analysis: “Capital is not back: A comment on Thomas Piketty’s ‘Capital in the 21st Century’: Thomas Piketty’s claim that the ratio of capital to national income is approaching 19th-century levels has fuelled the debate over inequality. This column argues that Piketty’s claim rests on the recent increase in the price of housing. Other forms of capital are, relative to income, at much lower levels than they were a century ago. Moreover, it is rents – not house prices – that should matter for the dynamics of wealth inequality, and rents have been stable as a proportion of national income in many countries…”

  2. Charlie Stross: The Rhesus Chart: Chapter One: “‘Don’t be silly, Bob’, said Mo, ‘everybody knows vampires don’t exist’.”

Already-Noted Must-Reads:

  1. Lee Sandlin: Book Review: ‘Robert A. Heinlein’ by William H. Patterson Jr.: “Heinlein was the best sci-fi writer of all time and then mysteriously he became the worst:… Conviction… an intensely persuasive optimism… a radiantly hopeful vision of human prospects…. The novels for adults that followed were just as emotionally compelling…. ‘Starship Troopers’… hurls the reader into its midst with such imaginative force that its rationale seems not only inevitable but somehow desirable. Many readers have been deeply moved… others have felt that they’re being bullied by a brilliant piece of fascist propaganda… the most bitterly divisive book in the history of sci-fi…. ‘The Moon Is a Harsh Mistress’ is a visionary epic of a lunar colony breaking free… and establishing an anarchist-libertarian utopia…. ‘Stranger in a Strange Land’. Heinlein… was both amused and appalled when the hippies took it up, enchanted by his luxuriantly sybaritic portrait of a Martian free-love commune…. The novels he wrote in the 1970s and 1980s wholly lack his old persuasiveness. Nothing in them is real, nothing is at stake and nobody takes anything seriously… adolescent ribaldry and reams of metafictional banter, for which Heinlein has approximately zero gift…. The overall effect is so low-energy and stupefying that it’s hard to believe it isn’t somehow deliberate—as though Heinlein is out to… make sure no reader is inspired to take any action whatever…”

  2. Jacob Rose et al.: Will Disclosure of Friendship Ties Between Directors and CEOs Yield Perverse Effects?: “We conduct an experiment involving 56 active and experienced corporate directors… and a second experiment with MBA students…. Friendship ties caused directors to be more willing to approve reductions to research and development (R&D) expenses… to meet the CEO’s minimum bonus target more often than when the directors and CEO were not friends. However, disclosing friendship ties resulted in even greater reductions in R&D expenses and higher CEO bonuses…. Friendship ties between the CEO and board members can impair the directors’ independence and objectivity, and… disclosure of the relationships can worsen this effect.”

  3. Nick Hanauer: The Pitchforks Are Coming… For Us Plutocrats: “The most ironic thing about rising inequality is how completely unnecessary and self-defeating it is. If we do something about it, if we adjust our policies in the way that, say, Franklin D. Roosevelt did during the Great Depression—so that we help the 99 percent and preempt the revolutionaries and crazies, the ones with the pitchforks—that will be the best thing possible for us rich folks, too. It’s not just that we’ll escape with our lives; it’s that we’ll most certainly get even richer…”

  4. Annie Lowrey: What’s the Matter With Eastern Kentucky?: “Clay County… median household income there is barely above the poverty line at $22,296, and is just over half the nationwide median…. The disability rate is… 11.7 percent. (Nationwide, that figure is 1.3 percent.) Life expectancy is six years shorter than average…. It’s coal country… in name only… just 54 people [are] employed in coal mining in Clay County, a precipitous drop from its coal-production peak in 1980. That year, about 2.5 million tons of coal were taken out of the ground in Clay; this year… 38,000…. What has happened in the smudge of the country between New Orleans and Pittsburgh–the Deep South and Appalachia–is in many ways as remarkable as what has happened in affluent cities…”

  5. Joe Stiglitz: The Myth of America’s Golden Age: “I hadn’t realized when I was growing up in Gary, Indiana that I was living in the golden era…. Smokestacks poured poisons into the air. Periodic layoffs left many families living hand to mouth. Even as a kid, it seemed clear to me that the free market as we knew it was hardly a formula for sustaining a prosperous, happy and healthy society…. The standard economic texts… seemed to be unrelated to the reality I had witnessed growing up in Gary. They said that unemployment shouldn’t exist and that the market led to the best of all possible worlds…. I focused a lot of my work on why markets fail, and I devoted much of my Ph.D. thesis at MIT to understanding the causes of inequality…. Most disturbing is the realization that the American dream—the notion that we are living in the land of opportunity—is a myth…. During the period from World War II to 1980… the fortunes of the wealthy and the middle class rose together. But the evidence of the last third of a century suggests this period was an aberration…. a time of war-induced solidarity when the government kept the playing field level, and the GI Bill of Rights and subsequent civil rights advances meant that there was something to the American dream….
     
    Geithner’s attempts to justify what the administration did only reinforce my belief that the system is rigged. If those who are in charge of making the critical decisions are so ‘cognitively captured’ by the 1 percent, by the bankers, that they see that the only alternative is to give those who caused the crisis hundreds of billions of dollars while leaving workers and homeowners in the lurch, the system is unfair…. Inequality commands a high price: a weaker economy, marked by lower growth and more instability. It is not very complicated. None of this is the outcome of inexorable economic forces, either; it’s the result of policies and politics—what we did and didn’t do…”

  6. Scott Westerfeld: Twitter: “Just realized how far in the future we are: The first day of World War 2 is now closer to the Civil War than to the present…”

  7. James s Kindle for Mac 3 The Deluge The Great War and the Remaking of Global Order 1916 1931Adam Tooze: The Deluge: The Great War, America and the Remaking of the Global Order, 1916-1931

  8. James Surowiecki: Why Are the Super-Rich So Angry?: “The past few years have been very good to Stephen Schwarzman, the chairman and C.E.O. of… Blackstone…. Schwarzman is now worth more than ten billion dollars. You wouldn’t think he’d have much to complain about. But, to hear him tell it, he’s beset by a meddlesome, tax-happy government and a whiny, envious populace. He recently grumbled that the U.S. middle class has taken to ‘blaming wealthy people’ for its problems. Previously, he has said that it might be good to raise income taxes on the poor so they had ‘skin in the game’, and that proposals to repeal the carried-interest tax loophole—from which he personally benefits—were akin to the German invasion of Poland….
     
    “That’s not how it’s always been. A century ago, industrial magnates played a central role in the Progressive movement, working with unions, supporting workmen’s compensation laws and laws against child labor, and often pushing for more government regulation… to co-opt public pressure…. Still, they materially improved the lives of ordinary workers…. If today’s corporate kvetchers are more concerned with the state of their egos than with the state of the nation, it’s in part because their own fortunes aren’t tied to those of the nation the way they once were…. Today, by contrast, corporate chieftains have little to fear, other than mildly higher taxes and the complaints of people who have read Thomas Piketty. Moguls complain about their feelings because that’s all anyone can really threaten.”

James Surowiecki: Why Are the Super-Rich So Angry? : The New Yorker

James Surowiecki: Why Are the Super-Rich So Angry?: “The past few years have been very good to Stephen Schwarzman…

…the chairman and C.E.O. of… Blackstone…. Schwarzman is now worth more than ten billion dollars. You wouldn’t think he’d have much to complain about. But, to hear him tell it, he’s beset by a meddlesome, tax-happy government and a whiny, envious populace. He recently grumbled that the U.S. middle class has taken to ‘blaming wealthy people’ for its problems. Previously, he has said that it might be good to raise income taxes on the poor so they had ‘skin in the game’, and that proposals to repeal the carried-interest tax loophole—from which he personally benefits—were akin to the German invasion of Poland….

That’s not how it’s always been. A century ago, industrial magnates played a central role in the Progressive movement, working with unions, supporting workmen’s compensation laws and laws against child labor, and often pushing for more government regulation… to co-opt public pressure…. Still, they materially improved the lives of ordinary workers…. If today’s corporate kvetchers are more concerned with the state of their egos than with the state of the nation, it’s in part because their own fortunes aren’t tied to those of the nation the way they once were…. Today, by contrast, corporate chieftains have little to fear, other than mildly higher taxes and the complaints of people who have read Thomas Piketty. Moguls complain about their feelings because that’s all anyone can really threaten.

What’s Really Going On with American Politics and Governance?: Monday Focus for June 30, 2014

Attention Conservation:

  • 1/4 I find myself frustrated with usually-reliable Gerald Seib. Our political disruption problems today are driven by 3 factors: the
  • 2/4 Reagan-Thatcher bet on inequality in 1990, the Gingrich bet on obstructionism in 1993 (and doubling-down on it in 2009), and the Obama
  • 3/4 bet in late 2009 that the macroeconomic dog would go to sleep and should be let to lie as a strong recovery took hold. Our political
  • 4/4 disruption problems not driven by “globalization, alienation, populism”. That framing doesn’t tell us what needs to be and can be done.

I find myself very frustrated with the usually-reliable Gerald Seib:

Gerald Seib: Three Forces Are Disrupting the Political Order: “Crazy things are happening…. Americans agree with… Obama on… Iraq and Afghanistan, climate change, immigration, but his approval… slumps…. [Cantor] outspends an unknown primary opponent 40 to 1 and loses…. Just 27% of Americans think the economy will get better…. Globalization, alienation and populism. Each… disrupts…. The reactions… are an attraction to isolationism and protectionism… feeling increasingly alienated from traditional institutions…. Even while the job-approval rating of the Democratic president fell to 41% in the new Journal/NBC poll, sentiments toward Republicans were lower. In fact, voters said that by a small margin, they wanted Democrats to win control of Congress in this November’s election. It isn’t logical—-but logic isn’t the order of the day…

In my view, three things are going on:

  1. The Failure of the Reagan-Thatcher Bet: The (domestic) neoconservative diagnosis of the inflation, energy shock, and social unrest problems of the 1970s was that social democracy had become sclerotic, and that we needed to shrink the public sphere and–more than everything else–widen inequality in order to provide the enterprising with the incentive to enterprise. This bet failed. But it set in motion processes that have led to an enormous increase in income and a still more enormous future increase in wealth inequality. This has meant that those who aren’t in the top 5% are living little if any better than their predecessors. They have more cheap electronic toys. But they must buy more expensive houses, endure more difficult commutes, face (until ObamaCare is implemented) the likelihood of medical bankruptcy or non-treatment if something went seriously wrong, and feel–correctly–that the avenues of upward mobility open to their children are closing off. And this has meant that those who are in the top 5% but not in the top 0.1% now feel envious: a generation ago they could see themselves as being as upper-class as America ever got save for Newport’s 400; now they know that there are 130,000 households out there who really do live in a very different and upper-class world. This is the first defining process of our age.

  2. The Doubling-Down on the Gingrich Bet: Back at the start of 1993 republicans thought that their presidency had been stolen. It was, they thought, their presidency–if the election was legitimate. Nobody was happy that Jimmy Carter had been president and he had been elected only because Richard Nixon had disgraced himself. Kennedy and Johnson had gotten in only by stealing both the Negro vote by promising civil rights and the racist white southern vote by reminding them that a Republican–Lincoln–had freed the slaves. Roosevelt had gotten in only because of the Great Depression and then maintained himself and Truman via Hopkins’s corrupt political machine. Woodrow Wilson had gotten in only because that madman Theodore Roosevelt had split the party in a fit of pique. The last legitimate, fair victory by a Democratic non-incumbent had come with that triangulating bastard Grover Cleveland’s election in 1892. And now, the Republicans thought back in 1993, Ross Perot had just done a TR and Slick Willie, the Hick from Arkansas who if he had had an ounce of shame would have quit the race once Gennifer Flowers opened her mouth, had squeaked in.
     
    since Clinton was not a legitimate president the right strategy, Newt Gingrich convinced the Republican Party, was to wage all-out ideological war against all Democratic priorities, demonstrate that Clinton could not govern and was the second coming of Jimmy Carter, take back the congress in 1994, demonstrate again that Clinton could not govern, and take back the presidency in 1996.
     
    When 2009 came along, the Republican leaders–Boehner, McConnell, and company–decided that Gingrich’s mistake had been that he had limited all-out opposition to Democratic priorities. Slick Willie had managed to sign both NAFTA and welfare reform, and so that triangulating bastard could portray himself as a reasonable bipartisan or non-partisan statesman rather than a Democratic Party ideologue. They had to keep voters from thinking that, so whatever Obama was for, they were against: Mitt Romney’s health-care policy? They were against it! John McCain’s climate policy? They were against it!! Ronald Reagan’s Grand Coalition foreign policy? They were against it!!! George H.W. Bush’s long-run budget policy? They were against it!!!! And, they correctly calculated, the supine Washington professional press corps would not highlight the fact that what was Kenyan Muslim Socialism this year had been the announced policies of pre-2009 Republican standard bearers: Republicans could say “We have always been at war with Eurasia!” and the most the supine journamalists would say was “opinions of who we have been at war with differ”.
     
    What Boehner, McConnell, and company failed to realize was that in the eyes of their base they were “Washington” as much as–nay, more than, Barack Obama was. Barack Obama had only gotten to Washington in 2009, after all. To promote the narrative that “Washington” had failed and the bums should be thrown out would give their base a very good reason to throw them out as well.

  3. The Do-Too-Little Economic Policy of Obama: One extremely well-informed observer describes the attitude of the highest levels of the Obama administration in late 2009 as this: We have stopped the downturn and saved the financial system, and now the economy will recover on its own. We don’t need to do anything else to boost the economy. We don’t need to do anything to preserve our levers of power to boost the economy in the future. We should put the economy on autopilot, turn to other things, and simply declare that “green shoots” are coming for as long as it takes. That was a crucial, decisive, unforced, and profoundly stupid policy error. Housing, change in monetary regime, extra rounds of fiscal stimulus using Reconciliation and other tools, leveraged use of residual TARP funds–all not just left on the table, but actively pushed aside. And the Obama administration has been unable to admit even to itself that it was an error because that would have required and would require too many immediate personnel changes.

Globalization has been proceeding steadily since 1945: remember the days when it was first Japan and Germany, and then Korea and Taiwan that were the low-wage exporters? Alienation is readily understandable as a consequence of (1) and (3) in the eyes of the first generation of Americans ever not to live materially better than their parents’ generation. And populism is a natural consequence of all three: people tell you Washington is broken, you live no better than your parents’ generation, and the past seven years have been extremely and unusually rough for you or at least for a lot of people you know. Why should that make you trust institutions?

Yet Seib does not connect the dots…