Must-Read: Ezra Klein: Republicans Think America Is Doing Terribly, but It Isn’t

Journalist, columnist, and blogger Ezra Klein. (AP Photo/Charles Dharapak)

Must-Read: America looks bright today primarily from the perspective of the rich, the techie, and those who have benefitted from ObamaCare’s coverage expansion. That is not most Republicans. The lived experience of most non-poor–and many poor–Republicans in the Bush 43 and Obama years is not of participating in the second tech bubble, or even benefitting greatly from ObamaCare because their local political rulers and masters have not implemented it. And they couldn’t care less that Greece and Italy and France and Britain are doing even worse:

Ezra Klein: Republicans Think America Is Doing Terribly, but It Isn’t: “Anyone watching the fourth Republican debate would be excused…

…for thinking America is mired in a deep recession–that the economy is shrinking, foreign competitors are outpacing us, more Americans are uninsured, and innovators can’t bring their ideas to market…. They would be surprised to find that unemployment is at 5 percent, America’s recovery from the financial crisis has outpaced that of other developed nations, the percentage of uninsured Americans has been plummeting even as Obamacare has cost less than expected, and there’s so much money flowing into new ideas and firms in the tech industry that observers are worried about a second tech bubble.

This beats even the markers the Republican Party established. In 2011, for instance, Mitt Romney made headlines when he promised that ‘after a period of four years, by virtue of the policies we’d put in place, we’d get the unemployment rate down to 6 percent–perhaps a little lower.’ We’re now quite a bit lower than 6 percent, and in less than four years…. The economy simply isn’t as bad as they’re making it out to be….

[And] Republicans are increasingly focused on economic problems they don’t really know how to solve, and don’t have much credibility to say they will solve…. Republican tax plans will sharply increase after-tax inequality, and they will do so in the most obvious and mechanical of fashions…. Republicans have entered into a disastrous arms race of ever more expensive tax plans that they have no way to pay for…. Republicans are stuck between a description of the economy that seems increasingly detached from the reality of the recovery and a set of economic plans that actually worsen many of the problems Republicans say they want to solve. It’s a pickle.

Must-Read: Andrew Gelman: Asking the Question Is the Most Important Step

Must-Read: Something very, very peculiar is going on with middle-aged American whites in the Bush 43 and Obama years–much more so for women–and it is distinctly odd:

Andrew Gelman: Andrew Gelman: Asking the Question Is the Most Important Step: “I worked super-hard to make the graph… that helped me understand what was going on…

Asking the question is the most important step Statistical Modeling Causal Inference and Social Science

…But, from the social science perspective, what’s far more important is asking the question in the first place, which is what Case and Deaton…. That’s what got the ball rolling. (And, to be fair, they also rolled the ball most of the way.) I’m happy to have refined their analyses and, as noted yesterday, I wasn’t so thrilled by one of Case’s offhand remarks, but let me emphasize that all this discussion is predicated on their effort, on their knowing what to look at, which in turn derives from their justly well-respected research on public health and economic development. That’s the big picture….

Statisticians such as myself have our place in the research ecosystem, but all the bias correction and modeling and clever graphics in the world won’t help you if you don’t know what to look at. And in this particular example, I had no idea of looking at any of this until I was pointed to Case and Deaton’s work…. None of our contributions could’ve happened without the work by the original authors. It’s not Us vs. Them. It’s never Us vs. Them. It’s Us and Them. Or, perhaps more accurately, THEM followed by a little bit of us. And that’s one reason I want them to respect and understand us, not to fear us and be defensive”

Weekend reading

This is a weekly post we publish on Fridays with links to articles that touch on economic inequality and growth. The first section is a round-up of what Equitable Growth has published this week and the second is work we’re highlighting from elsewhere. We won’t be the first to share these articles, but we hope by taking a look back at the whole week, we can put them in context.

Equitable Growth round-up

Although the number of hours that people work has declined in most countries since 1979, that hasn’t been the case for most Americans. What’s worse, new research shows that Americans are working more “strange hours,” or nights and weekends. Bridget Ansel explains how these unorthodox schedules hurt workers’ individual and familial well-being.

Two weeks ago, the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission formally adopted a significant reform in the Jumpstart Our Business Startups (JOBS) Act that allows companies to crowdsource their funding through the internet. Nick Bunker, however, is a bit skeptical of whether this is a good idea.

J.W. Mason, a John Jay College economist and Roosevelt Institute fellow, made the case earlier this year that the U.S. financial system has become more focused on getting cash out of firms instead of channeling money to companies that invest it. Nick Bunker points out that this practice of “disgorging the cash” can undermine economic growth.

Links from around the web

In the ‘80s and ‘90s, a number of economists thought that monetary union would encourage cross-border investment and trade, resulting in slower inflation, faster productivity growth, dampened business cycles, and converging living standards. Matt Klein argues, however, that this didn’t work in the case of the Euro, and that the single currency was flawed to begin with. [ft alphaville]

Twenty-nine percent of the U.S. workforce has a required state license for their profession—up from just 5 percent in the 1950s. The President’s Council of Economic Advisers thinks the expansion of these licenses is hurting the economy by making it harder for people to start their own businesses, but Lydia DePillis explains why pushing back against occupational licensing isn’t so easy. [wa post]

A number of economists have long suggested an association between full employment and higher pay—their thinking being that employers have to offer higher pay if they want to get and retain the employees they need. With that said, Jared Bernstein projects what wage growth might look like once we hit full employment. [jared bernstein blog]

Recent research from Princeton University economists Anne Case and Angus Deaton shows that the mortality rate for white Americans ages 45 to 54 has been on the rise since 1999. But is economic instability really the reason for this increasing mortality rate, as many have speculated? Lane Kenworthy isn’t so sure. [lane kenworthy]

Many Americans still like to misrepresent the French as lazy and unemployed, but that simply isn’t true. In fact, as Paul Krugman points out, France actually has a higher share of prime-age workers (ages 25 to 54) with jobs than the United States. [ny times]

Why Not the Gold Standard? Hoisted from the Archives from 1996

Witwatersrand mines Google Search

From 1996: Why Not the Gold Standard? Talking Points on the Likely Consequences of Re-Establishment of a Gold Standard:

Consequences for the Magnitude of Business Cycles:

Loss of control over economic policy: If the U.S. and a substantial number of other industrial economies adopted a gold standard, the U.S. would lose the ability to tune its economic policies to fit domestic conditions.

  • For example, in the spring of 1995 the dollar weakened against the yen. Under a gold standard, such a decline in the dollar would not have been allowed: instead the Federal Reserve would have raised interest rates considerably in order to keep the value of the dollar fixed at its gold parity, and a recession would probably have followed.

Recessionary bias: Under a gold standard, the burden of adjustment is always placed on the ‘weak currency’ country.

  • Countries seeing downward market pressure on the values of their currencies are forced to contract their economies and raise unemployment.
  • The gold standard imposes no equivalent adjustment burden on countries seeing upward market pressure on currency values.
  • Hence a deflationary bias, which makes it likely that a gold standard regime will see a higher average unemployment rate than an alternative managed regime.

The gold standard and the Great Depression: The current judgment of economic historians (see, for example, Barry J. Eichengreen, Golden Fetters is that attachment to the gold standard played a major part in keeping governments from fighting the Great Depression, and was a major factor turning the recession of 1929-1931 into the Great Depression of 1931-1941.

  • Countries that were not on the gold standard in 1929–or that quickly abandoned the gold standard–by and large escaped the Great Depression
  • Countries that abandoned the gold standard in 1930 and 1931 suffered from the Great Depression, but escaped its worst ravages.
  • Countries that held to the gold standard through 1933 (like the United States) or 1936 (like France) suffered the worst from the Great Depression
  • Commitment to the gold standard prevented Federal Reserve action to expand the money supply in 1930 and 1931–and forced President Hoover into destructive attempts at budget-balancing in order to avoid a gold standard-generated run on the dollar.
  • Commitment to the gold standard left countries vulnerable to ‘runs’ on their currencies–Mexico in January of 1995 writ very, very large. Such a run, and even the fear that there might be a future run, boosted unemployment and amplified business cycles during the gold standard era.
  • The standard interpretation of the Depression, dating back to Milton Friedman and Anna Schwartz’s Monetary History of the United States, is that the Federal Reserve could have, but for some mysterious reason did not, boost the money supply to cure the Depression; but Friedman and Schwartz do not stress the role played by the gold standard in tieing the Federal Reserve’s hands–the ‘golden fetters’ of Eichengreen.
  • Friedman was and is aware of the role played by the gold standard–hence his long time advocacy of floating exchange rates, the antithesis of the gold standard.

Consequences for the Long-Run Average Rate of Inflation:

Average inflation determined by gold mining: Under a gold standard, the long-run trajectory of the price level is determined by the pace at which gold is mined in South Africa and Russia.

  • For example, the discovery and exploitation of large gold reserves near present-day Johannesburg at the end of the nineteenth century was responsible for a four percentage point per year shift in the worldwide rate of inflation–from a deflation of roughly two percent per year before 1896 to an inflation of roughly two percent per year after 1896. In the election of 1896, William Jennings Bryan’s Democrats called for free coinage of silver as a way to end the then-current deflation and stop the transfer of wealth away from indebted farmers. The concurrent gold discoveries in South Africa changed the rate of drift of the price level, and accomplished more than the writers of the Democratic platform could have dreamed, without any change in the U.S. coinage.
  • Thus any political factors that interrupted the pace of gold mining would have major effects on the long-run trend of the price level–send us into an era of slow deflation, with high unemployment. Conversely, significant advances in gold mining technology could provide a significant boost to the average rate of inflation over decades. Under the gold standard, the average rate of inflation or deflation over decades ceases to be under the control of the government or the central bank, and becomes the result of the balance between growing world production and the pace of gold mining.

Why Do Some Still Advocate a Gold Standard?

  • A belief that governments and central banks should not control the average rate of inflation over decades, and that the world will be better off if the long-run drift of the price level is determined ‘automatically.’
  • A belief that bondholders and investors will be reassured by a government committed to a gold standard, will be confident that inflation rates will be low, and so will bid down nominal interest rates.
  • Of course, if you do not trust a central bank to keep inflation low, why should you trust it to remain on the gold standard for generations? This large hole in the supposed case for a gold standard is not addressed.
  • Failure to recognize the role played by the gold standard in amplifying and propagating the Great Depression.
  • Failure to recognize that the international monetary system functions best when the burden-of-adjustment is spread between balance-of-payments ‘surplus’ and ‘deficit’ countries, rather than being loaded exclusively onto ‘deficit’ countries.
  • Failure to recognize how gold convertibility increases the likelihood of a run on the currency, and thus amplifies recessions.

Must-Read: Paul Krugman: Being An Inflation Hawk Means Never Having To Say You’re Sorry

Paul Krugman talks to journalists during a news conference. (AP Photo/Francisco Seco)

Must-Read: As long as reporters–even good reporters–act as stenographers, and thus neither make readers aware of their sources’ track records nor ask sources to justify why one should place confidence in their assessments, our public intellectual sphere and our dialogue will continue to be broken.

Paul Krugman: Being An Inflation Hawk Means Never Having To Say You’re Sorry: “Jeffrey Lacker…

…Here’s what he just said: “If we hope to keep inflation in check, we cannot be paralyzed by patches of lingering weakness.” Oh, wait: That’s what he said six years ago. It is, however, pretty much indistinguishable from what he is saying now. It seems to me that this is a bit of much-needed context.

Jeffrey Lacker (2009): Charlotte Chamber of Commerce: “The perception of inflation risk could be particularly pertinent to the current recovery…

…given the massive and unprecedented expansion in bank reserves that has occurred, and the widespread market commentary expressing uncertainty over whether the Federal Reserve is willing and able to promptly reverse that expansion…. If we hope to keep inflation in check, we cannot be paralyzed by patches of lingering weakness, which could persist well into the recovery. In assessing when we will need to begin taking monetary stimulus out, I will be looking for the time at which economic growth is strong enough and well-enough established, even if it is not yet especially vigorous…

Noted for the Morning of November 13, 2015

  • Erik Brynjolfsson and Andrew McAfee: Labor in the Second Machine Age: “People, unlike horses, can choose to prevent themselves from becoming economically irrelevant…” :: B&M see human sociability, extraordinary human brain reach, and the fact that we humans control our politics as forces that will prevent any robotic dystopia
  • Felix Schönbrodt: The False Discovery Rate (FDR) and the Positive Predictive Value (PPV): “The False Discovery Rate (FDR) and the Positive Predictive Value (PPV): Together with Michael Zehetleitner I developed an interactive app that computes and visualizes these numbers…” :: Everybody reading (or writing) statistical work should use this tool–it is the best quick way to understand how to assess any study given its ex-ante plausibility and its statistical power.
  • Bridget Ansel: Daniel Hamermesh… and Elena Stancanelli… [on] the tendency to work what the authors call ‘strange hours’… nights and weekends…” :: part-time, flex-time, unusual-time, and on-call work make Americans’ labor significantly more laborious than work schedules in other countries (except, I believe, Britain)
  • Ben Thompson: TensorFlow and Monetizing Intellectual Property: “Monetizing infinitely reproducible intellectual property [is] akin to selling ice to an Eskimo: it can be done, but it better be some really darn incredible ice…” :: how Alphabet’s (Google’s) strategy may suggest that our current intellectual property system and defaults may not even be to the advantage of those who hold the rights to the crown jewels of technology

Must-Read: Erik Brynjolfsson and Andrew McAfee: Labor in the Second Machine Age

Erik Brynjolfsson and Andrew McAfee: Labor in the Second Machine Age: “In 1983, the Nobel Prize–winning economist Wassily Leontief brought the debate into sharp relief…

…through a clever comparison of humans and horses. For many decades, horse labor appeared impervious to technological change. Even as the telegraph supplanted the Pony Express and railroads replaced the stagecoach and the Conestoga wagon, the U.S. equine population grew seemingly without end, increasing sixfold between 1840 and 1900 to more than 21 million horses and mules…. But then, with the introduction and spread of the internal combustion engine, the trend rapidly reversed. As engines found their way into automobiles in the city and tractors in the countryside, horses became largely irrelevant. By 1960, the United States counted just three million horses…. Once the right technology came along, most horses were doomed as labor. Is a similar tipping point possible for human labor?…

For Leontief, the answer was yes…. But… Leontief missed a number of important differences…. We humans are a deeply social species, and the desire for human connection carries over to our economic lives… human interaction is central to the economic transaction, not incidental to it…. Recent technological progress, while moving surprisingly fast, is still not on track to allow robots and artificial intelligence to do everything better than humans can within the next few years…. A quote attributed to a 1965 NASA report: “Man is the lowest-cost, 150-pound, nonlinear, all-purpose computer system which can be mass-produced by unskilled labor.”…

The story doesn’t end there, however. Having valuable labor to offer is not the only way to remain economically important; having capital to invest or spend also ensures continued relevance. A critical difference between people and horses is that humans can own capital, whereas horses cannot…. The challenge here is that capital ownership appears to have always been highly uneven and has become increasingly skewed recently…. People, unlike horses, can choose to prevent themselves from becoming economically irrelevant…. It’s not unreasonable to expect people to vote for policies that will help them avoid the economic fate of the horse…

Must-Read: Felix Schönbrodt: The False Discovery Rate (FDR) and the Positive Predictive Value (PPV)

Must-Read: Felix Schönbrodt: The False Discovery Rate (FDR) and the Positive Predictive Value (PPV): “To answer the question ‘What’s the probability that a significant p-value indicates a true effect?’…

…we are interested in a conditional probability Prob(effect is real | p-value is significant). Inspired by Colquhoun (2014)… a tree-diagram….

You re probably thinking of p values all wrong p 0 05 The Incidental Economist

[For a population in which 30% of investigated effects are real and statistical power is 35%,] the false discovery rate (FDR): 35 of (35+105) = 140 significant p-values actually come from a null effect… much more than… 5%…. Together with Michael Zehetleitner I developed an interactive app that computes and visualizes these numbers…. Run the App

More Americans are working “strange” hours

Photo of illuminated neon 24 hours sign by Sam2172, veer.com

It’s no secret that Americans are working harder than ever. But newly updated research by Daniel Hamermesh of the Royal Holloway, University of London (and a professor emeritus at the University of Texas at Austin) and Elena Stancanelli of the Paris School of Economics examines another aspect of our work-devoted culture: the tendency to work what the authors call “strange hours,” or nights and weekends.

The authors compare work hours between the United States and four other European countries—the United Kingdom, France, Germany, and the Netherlands. Unsurprisingly, American workers win the prize for the longest average workweek among these countries, clocking an average of 41 hours a week from 2003-2011 (a number that is much higher for a increasing portion of workers in the United States). And the disparity is even wider when looking at average annual hours. The typical American employee now puts in 1,800 hours a year, more than any other wealthy country—including Japan, a country whose killer work ethic even has its own term: Karoshi, or “death by overwork.”

In most other countries, work hours have declined since 1979. But for most Americans, this is not the case. Stagnant wages propelled many of us to work even harder to stay afloat. Combined with the United States’ lack of paid vacation or holiday time requirements (unlike other developed countries), the typical work-life balance began to skew more and more toward work.

To make matters worse, Hamermesh and Stancanelli find that one in three Americans spend time on paid work during the weekend. And more than a quarter of U.S. workers work during night-time hours, which the authors define as between 10 PM and 6 AM. The fraction for both weekend and night hours is much lower in France, Germany, Spain, and the Netherlands. Even in the United Kingdom, which is catching up to the United States in terms of overall hours worked, only 19 percent of workers are burning the midnight oil.

It seems that these two phenomena would be connected—doing at least some work during nights or weekends seems inevitable for those employees with extreme work hours. But while Americans’ long work hours do play a role in the incidence of strange hours, the connection is not as strong as common sense would have us believe. Hamermesh and Stancanelli found that even if all Americans working more than 45 hours per week were to cut back their hours, U.S. workers would still be logging strange hours at a higher rate than the other countries. Rather, the way that work is structured seems to be the major factor driving differences between the United States and the other four countries’ strange-hours incidence.

While most European countries regulate working time (including provisions that limit the total number of work hours and laws pertaining to when people work), the United States’ policy is limited to paying certain workers overtime if they work more than 40 hours per week. The relatively lax regulations may be one reason why it is much more common to find 24-hour restaurants, gyms, or stores, in the United States than it is in other rich economies. But our convenience comes at a cost.

In the United States, those working strange hours are more likely to be low-skilled and minority workers, and sometimes turn to these jobs because of a lack of other options, or because of higher wages. But even if workers receive higher pay to work at these times (which most do not), they still face consequences for their individual and familial health and well-being.

Parents working strange hours have to figure out child care when most centers are closed, and commute when public transportation is not readily available. The stress and sleep deprivation associated with these strange hours put workers’ health at risk. And the time away from home during these periods have been shown to put a major strain on relationships and marriages. What’s more, children of those working these schedules are more prone to behavioral problems and perform lower on cognitive skills tests compared to the kids of those who work more traditional schedules.

Hamermesh and Stancanelli conclude that more research is needed to better investigate the rising incidence of night and weekend work in the United States. But what is clear is that, despite the increasing prevalence of strange work hours, our society continues to revolve around the traditional 9-to-5 work schedule. Considering policy reforms such as paid leave, increased access to child care at odd hours, and a wage premium for night and weekend hours could help these disproportionately low-income workers more successfully balance their work and family responsibilities.

Must-Read: Ben Thompson: TensorFlow and Monetizing Intellectual Property

Must-Read: Ben Thompson: TensorFlow and Monetizing Intellectual Property: “Ten years ago Bill Gates suggested that open source software…

…was the province of “modern-day sort of communists” whose views on intellectual property were hopelessly outdated…. “We’ve had the best intellectual property system…. Intellectual property is the incentive system for the products of the future.” Gates’ perspective was understandable…. Microsoft is still a big company… but an even bigger company today is Alphabet…. Its Google subsidiary announced it was open-sourcing TensorFlow, its formerly proprietary machine learning system…. Machine learning is super important to Google…. At a superficial level, this doesn’t make sense: if machine learning is core to Google’s future, then what is the point of giving it away?…

There’s a parallel to be drawn to my piece last week about Grantland and the (Surprising) Future of Publishing. The fundamental nature of the Internet makes monetizing infinitely reproducible intellectual property akin to selling ice to an Eskimo: it can be done, but it better be some really darn incredible ice, and even then the market is limited. A far more attainable and sustainable strategy is to instead focus on monetizing complements to said intellectual property, resulting in an outcome where everyone wins: intellectual property consumers, intellectual property copiers, and above all intellectual property creators.”