Morning Must-Read: Robert Reich: How to Shrink Inequality

Bob Reich: Robert Reich (How to Shrink Inequality): “Some inequality of income and wealth is inevitable…

…if not necessary. If an economy is to function well, people need incentives to work hard and innovate. The pertinent question is… at what point do these inequalities… pose a serious threat to our economy… equal opportunity and our democracy. We are near or have already reached that tipping point…. But a return to the Gilded Age is not inevitable. It is incumbent on us to dedicate ourselves to reversing this diabolical trend…. 1) Make work pay…. 2) Unionize low-wage workers…. 3) Invest in education…. 4) Invest in infrastructure…. 5) Pay for these investments with higher taxes on the wealthy…. 6) Make the payroll tax progressive…. 7) Raise the estate tax and eliminate the “stepped-up basis” for determining capital gains at death…. 8) Constrain Wall Street…. 9) Give all Americans a share in future economic gains…. 10) Get big money out of politics…. We need a movement for shared prosperity—a movement on a scale similar to the Progressive movement at the turn of the last century…. Time and again, when the situation demands it, America has saved capitalism from its own excesses. We put ideology aside and do what’s necessary. No other nation is as fundamentally pragmatic…. But we must organize and mobilize…

Morning Must-Read: Paul Krugman: Inflation Targets Reconsidered

Paul Krugman: : Inflation Targets Reconsidered “For a time 2 percent seemed to make both economic and political sense…

…high enough to render concerns about hitting the zero lower bound mostly moot… was low enough to satisfy most of those worried about the distortionary effects of inflation… [and] those who wanted true price stability… could be deflected with the argument that official price statistics understated quality change…. The 2 percent target also, of course, acquired the great advantage of conventionality…. More recently, however, the 2 percent target has come under much more scrutiny… advanced economies are far more likely to hit the zero lower bound than previously believed…. In response, a number of respected macroeconomists, notably Blanchard (2010) and, much more forcefully, Ball (2013), have argued for a sharply higher target, say 4 percent. But do even these critics go far enough? In this paper I will argue that they don’t–that the case for a higher inflation target is in fact even stronger than the critics have argued, for at least three reasons…. Secular stagnation…. [The] two zeroes [of] downward nominal wage rigidity… [and] the interest rate ZLB…. [A]n economic and political trap… [of] a self-perpetuating feedback loop between economic weakness and low inflation…

Things to Read on the Evening of May 12, 2014

Should-Reads:

  1. Ed Luce: Review of Stress Test by Timothy Geithner: “Long after Rahm Emanuel, Lawrence Summers, Robert Gates, Peter Orszag and even Hillary Clinton had left the scene, Geithner was still at the president’s side. ‘Thanks for navigating us through a terrible storm’, wrote Mr Obama. ‘[Alexander] Hamilton would be proud!’… Geithner faced down the ‘Old Testament populists and moral hazard fundamentalists’ who would have preferred to burn the house down, in his view, than bail out rich bankers. ‘Nothing we did was out of sympathy for the bankers’, says Geithner. They were merely ‘collateral beneficiaries’. He repeatedly had to dissuade Mr Obama from the ‘showy, populist head fakes’ thrust on him by his political advisers. These included proposals to fire the chiefs of the bailed-out banks, nationalise the banks, impose strict pay limits and claw back generous bonuses…. Will history see Geithner as a great Treasury secretary? That is uncertain. He was certainly effective. But too much of this otherwise self-deprecating memoir is self-defence…. He is stung by the charge that he served Wall Street at the expense of Main Street. Yet he admits, ‘I wish we had expanded our housing programs earlier, to relieve more pain for homeowners’…”

  2. Barry Eichengreen: The Eurozone Crisis Is Not Over: “If we have learned one thing from the last four years, it is that the European Union lacks the capacity to act decisively…. The patient is far from cured. Ireland, Portugal, Spain, and Greece have made considerable progress in lowering their unit labor costs to 1999 levels relative to Germany. The problem is that 1999 levels are not enough…. Italy and France… have made considerably less progress…. Nor is it clear where the crisis countries will find the demand that they need…. The ECB… continues to do too little to support demand… has been behind the curve since 2011…. Valls and Renzi also plan to cut spending to prevent their budget deficits from rising, which means that their initiatives will not boost demand…. Europe’s banking crisis is unresolved…. And everyone knows that Europe’s much vaunted banking union is deeply flawed…. Finally, there is that pesky matter of public debt…. All of this has the makings of a dismal prognosis. But it is how Europe progresses…”

Should Be Aware of:

Continue reading “Things to Read on the Evening of May 12, 2014”

Bailouts for bankers or homeowners?

Two books on the twin housing and financial crises of the late 2000s debut this month, one by former Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner and the other by economists Atif Mian and Amir Sufi. The two books offer decidedly different takes on whether the nearly insolvent financial system or embattled homeowners should have been the focus of policymakers responding to the crises. Our interest in both books is for the thinking behind the policy decisions that were made at the time or could have been made differently—not least because of the possibility of future crises in housing and finance.

Geithner’s book, Stress Test, released today, reprises his role as Treasury Secretary during the spring of 2009 as well as the President of the New York Federal Reserve Bank during the most intense days of the crisis in the fall of 2008. The book furthers the argument made by Geithner— now president and managing director of leveraged buyout firm Warburg Pincus—that saving the U.S. financial sector was the best policy response to the panic.

Geithner’s book and his view may be best read in context with another book to be released later this month. House of Debt by Princeton University economist Atif Mian and University of Chicago economist Amir Sufi is the result of their years of research into the role of household debt and its role in the Great Recession of 2007-2009. The two economists agree that some form of financial sector rescue was needed, but their recommended response to the Great Recession is quite different from Geithner’s. For the former Treasury secretary, the banking system was the source of the crisis and where it would be solved. For the economists, the problem was the high debt loads of households.

Matt Klein of Bloomberg View points out on Twitter that the publication of these books at almost the same time is an act of synchronicity. Indeed, the dueling-at-a-distance authors disagree on many fronts, but the role of the distribution of debt is a prominent one. Geithner’s view—Mian and Sufi call it the “banking view”—really doesn’t consider the distributional consequences in the government’s response to the twin crises. In Geithner’s view, if the banking system can be rescued and credit starts to flow again then the economy as a whole will be rescued. For Mian and Sufi, the distribution of household debt is front and center.

In their view, the distribution of losses in the housing was the cause of the crises because the mostly low- and middle-income homeowners who suddenly faced foreclosure ceased spending money, throwing the economy into recession and dragging the broader housing market. The proper policy response, they argue, would have reduced the mortgage debt for “underwater” households and therefore the most likely to spend and get consumption going again.

The importance of distribution in Mian and Sufi’s viewpoint can be seen in how they explain why the bursting of the housing bubble caused the Great Recession but why the popping tech bubble resulted in a much lesser one. The key difference: really only the rich owned the stocks that plummeted in price during the dotcom recession in the early 2000s, whereas a large swath of the U.S. population owned homes that lost value during the Great Recession

Arguments about the best response to the bursting of the housing bubble and the financial crisis will go on long after Geithner, Mian and Sufi stop writing. But as this debate continues, both sides need to recognize that the distribution of gains and losses in future crises will be perhaps vitally important.

Afternoon Must-Read: John Timmer: Glaciers Draining Antarctic Basin Destabilized, Big Sea Level Rise All But Certain

John Timmer: Glaciers draining Antarctic basin destabilized, big sea level rise all but certain: “Researchers at UC Irvine and the Jet Propulsion Laboratory have announced results…

…indicating that glaciers across a large area of West Antarctica have been destabilized…. These glaciers are all that stand between the ocean and a massive basin of ice that sits below sea level…. Even in the short term, the new findings should increase our estimates for sea level rise by the end of the century, the scientists suggest. But the ongoing process of retreat and destabilization will mean that the area will contribute to rising oceans for centuries…. The glaciers… drain into the Amundsen Sea. On the coastal side, the ends of the glacier are actually floating on ocean water. Closer to the coast, there’s what’s called a “grounding line,” where the weight of the ice above sea level pushes the bottom of the glacier down against the sea bed. From there on, back to the interior of Antarctica, all of the ice is directly in contact with the Earth. That’s a rather significant fact, given that, just behind a range of coastal hills, all of the ice is sitting in a huge basin that’s significantly below sea level. In total, the basin contains enough ice to raise sea levels approximately four meters….

Continue reading “Afternoon Must-Read: John Timmer: Glaciers Draining Antarctic Basin Destabilized, Big Sea Level Rise All But Certain”

Glenn Hubbard: Geithner Blocked Mortgage Refinancing

Glenn Hubbard: “I saw some of the excerpts about housing [in Geithner’s Stress Test]…

and I must say I split my side in laughter because Tim Geithner personally and actively opposed mortgage refinancing, constantly. And now he’s claiming this would have been a great idea in the country. I don’t know how much more ingenuous that is in the book, but that was just a real laugher.”

I am with Glenn Hubbard on this. Periodically starting in 2008, I would ask people at the Treasury: “Why are we not offering every household in America a conforming-rate ReFi with equity kickers attached for those that breach the 80% loan-to-current-market-value ratio?” And I never got what I could regard as a reasonable answer. It would have done a lot of good. It would still do a lot of good now…

Morning Must-Read: Heather Boushey: I Like Jane Austen… But I Don’t Want to Live Like That

Heather Boushey: I like Jane Austen’s novels, but I certainly don’t want to live like that: “One thing haunting me throughout the book was a question about what his findings meant for women and…

…so, inspired by Piketty, I picked up my Jane Austen anthology…. I very quickly found myself immersed in the tale of Elizabeth Bennet…. Austen’s heroines… know that a good income is not the only factor in her future happiness, but she also knows that there’s no happiness without it…. Miss Bennet was smart, capable, and someone who I could imagine as my friend. But, the world she lived in was terrifying. She is constrained by the reality that her life will be defined by her choice of spouse. Feminists laud Jane Austen for elevating the interior lives of women and the economics of marriage markets in the 18th century and for making clear these enormous constraints on women’s choices….

The economic inefficiency of an economy where success depends on inheritance not on developing one’s own skills and productivity. This is what Piketty means when he says that the ‘past devours the future’…. The 20th century saw enormous forward momentum towards equality…. As the Piketty mania took hold—it actually hit number one on Amazon.com in the first few weeks after its release–there was only one other woman, besides myself, that I knew of, Kathleen Geier, who published a review of the book. While scores of men debated r, g, and the substitution of labor for capital, women were strangely absent…. I would like to encourage more women, and especially more feminists, to pick up Piketty’s tome…

More on Glenn Hubbard’s Attempt to Split Hairs Incredibly Finely on Simpson and Bowles

  • Tim Geithner says that Glenn Hubbard said in 2012: “Well of course we [i.e., America] have to raise taxes, we [i.e., Mitt Romney and his campaign apparatus] just can’t say that now…”

  • Glenn Hubbard says: “Geithner is making it up. It’s pretty simple. It’s not true…”

  • Jenni LeCompte (who does not appear to have been there) says: “Mr Geithner’s memory on this exchange is crystal clear…”

  • Matthew Yglesias says: “The entire dispute is taking place as if fuzzy recollections of years-old private conversations are the only way to gain insight into this matter, when in reality Hubbard’s views on this question are a clear matter of public record — Hubbard favors low taxes, but thinks conservatives should be willing to embrace tax hikes as part of an overall budget compromise…”

But making it about years-ago conversations is Hubbard’s entire strategy

Continue reading “More on Glenn Hubbard’s Attempt to Split Hairs Incredibly Finely on Simpson and Bowles”

Things to Read on the Morning of May 12, 2014

Should-Reads:

  1. Amir Sufi and Atif Mian: Why the Housing Bubble Tanked the Economy And the Tech Bubble Didn’t: “Despite seeing similar nominal dollar losses, the housing crash led to the Great Recession, while the dot-com crash led to a mild recession. Part of this difference can be seen in consumer spending. The housing crash killed retail spending…. The bursting of the tech bubble, on the other hand, had almost no effect at all…. What explains these different outcomes?…. We argue that it was the distribution of losses that made the housing crash so much more severe than the dot-com crash. The sharp decline in home prices starting in 2007 concentrated losses on people with the least capacity to bear them, disproportionately affecting poor homeowners who then stopped spending. What about the tech crash? In 2001, stocks were held almost exclusively by the rich. The tech crash concentrated losses on the rich, but the rich had almost no debt and didn’t need to cut back their spending…”

  2. Timothy Snyder: Fascism Returns to Ukraine: “We easily forget how fascism works: as a bright and shining alternative to the mundane duties of everyday life, as a celebration of the obviously and totally irrational against good sense and experience. Fascism features armed forces that do not look like armed forces, indifference to the laws of war in theirapplication to people deemed inferior, the celebration of “empire” after counterproductive land grabs. Fascism means the celebration of the nude male form, the obsession with homosexuality, simultaneously criminalized and imitated. Fascism rejects liberalism and democracy as sham forms of individualism, insists on the collective will over the individual choice, and fetishizes the glorious deed. Because the deed is everything and the word is nothing, words are only there to make deeds possible, and then to make myths of them. Truth cannot exist, and so history is nothing more than a political resource. Hitler could speak of St. Paul as his enemy, Mussolini could summon the Roman emperors. Seventy years after the end of World War II, we forgot how appealing all this once was to Europeans, and indeed that only defeat in war discredited it. Today these ideas are on the rise in Russia, a country that organizes its historical politics around the Soviet victory in that war, and the Russian siren song has a strange appeal in Germany, the defeated country that was supposed to have learned from it…”

  3. Paul Krugman: Desperately Seeking Irrelevance: “I think it’s important to highlight the self-destructiveness of [Tony Yates’s] attitude…. Economists who understood and took seriously simple macro models… [vs] people who did macroeconomics not by models but via slogans and gut feelings. The lay side of this debate looked at budget deficits and “money printing” (the expansion of the central bank balance sheet) and issued dire warnings about soaring interest rates and inflation. The other side said no, we’re at the zero lower bound…. And these predictions – which the non-economists considered completely implausible and absurd – proved correct. If economics were an ordinary field of scholarly inquiry, this outcome would have been celebrated as proof that we really do know something useful…. But… a significant number of economists refuse to take “yes” for an answer; they seek out reasons to insist that things are more complicated than that… [and] the field isn’t ready to offer useful advice…. If your view is that after three generations of macroeconomics, the field had nothing helpful to say… why should anyone believe that your research program will ever produce anything useful?…”

Should Be Aware of:

Continue reading “Things to Read on the Morning of May 12, 2014”