Piketty versus Hassett: a primer on after-tax income and inequality

The Director of Economic Policy Studies at the American Enterprise Institute, Kevin Hassett, asserts that Thomas Piketty—the author of “Capital in the 21st Century”—is mistaken to focus on pre-tax and transfer income inequality because it obscures the countervailing increase in the generosity of the welfare state since 1979. According to this view, the political system has a natural way of dealing with a rise in the inequality of market-based income: transfer more income to the disadvantaged.

Is he correct? Well, according to the data Piketty and his coauthors compiled at the World Top Incomes Database, the evolution of market (pre-tax-and pre-transfer) income since 1979 looks like this:

052914-hassettpost-blog

But Hassett says that this view of pre-tax, pre-transfer income ignores the vast increase in government transfer payments—paid for by a progressive income tax—that is generously timed to counteract the “market” trend. Here’s a data series that shows the increase in gross transfer payments:

fred-chart[1]

Hassett’s praise for the potential for income redistribution to rectify injustice in market outcomes is notable, but in fact there have been many comparisons of pre- and post-tax-and-transfer income distributions, starting with this one from the Congressional Budget Office. Spoiler alert: they’re not very different from Piketty’s analysis. The reason? While transfer payments have increased (mostly thanks to an aging population), effective tax rates at the top of the income distribution have fallen sharply since 1980 (and we have the government debt to prove it). The CBO writes:

“The equalizing effect of transfers and taxes on household income was smaller in 2007 than it had been in 1979. The equalizing effect of transfers depends on their size relative to market income and their distribution across the income scale. The size of transfer payments—as measured in this study—rose by a small amount between 1979 and 2007. The distribution of transfers shifted, however, moving away from households in the lower part of the income scale. In 1979, households in the bottom quintile received more than 50 percent of transfer payments. In 2007, similar households received about 35 percent of transfers. That shift reflects the growth in spending for programs focused on the elderly population (such as Social Security and Medicare), in which benefits are not limited to low-income households. As a result, government transfers reduced the dispersion of household income by less in 2007 than in 1979.

Likewise, the equalizing effect of federal taxes depends on both the amount of federal taxes relative to income (the average tax rate) and the distribution of taxes among households at different income levels. Over the 1979–2007 period, the overall average federal tax rate fell by a small amount, the composition of federal revenues shifted away from progressive income taxes to less progressive payroll taxes, and income taxes became slightly more concentrated at the higher end of the income scale. The effect of the first two factors outweighed the effect of the third, reducing the extent to which taxes lessened the dispersion of household income.”

In short, income-redistribution policies failed to counteract growing income stratification over the past four decades. What’s more, these policies did less to equalize post-tax income now than it did in percentage terms in 1979, directly contradicting Hassett’s contention. Indeed, all the studies that have been done confirm the magnitude of income inequality as it has evolved whether you’re looking at pre- or post-tax-and-transfer income. Hassett should go back to defending inequality as economically efficient—at least that argument isn’t refutable with a swift look at the data.

The dangers of debt

The two authors of the newly released book “House of Debt,” Princeton University economist Atif Mian and University of Chicago economist Amir Sufi, will discuss their findings at an event today in downtown DC. Much of the attention to the book has been due to Mian and Sufi’s argument that the failure to sufficiently help underwater homeowners was a large reason for the severity of the Great Recession and the slow recovery from it. The argument, powerful on its own, has been given even more attention as “House of Debt” was released just two weeks after the publication of former Secretary Treasury Tim Geithner’s memoirs, in which Geithner defends the policy response to the financial crisis.

The debate about the proper response is a vital one, but focusing solely on that aspect of the book sells “House of Debt” short. Mian and Sufi present a powerful argument against debt and our economy’s overreliance on it. As the economists point out, debt is the anti-insurance. Debt amplifies economic shocks, making households, countries, and firms more economically fragile.

Throughout the book, Mian and Sufi give examples of ways we use debt that could be made more like equity and rely less on debt. Student debt, a topic of frequent conversation these days, is one example. The authors argue that student loans could be replaced by agreements to repay the investor with a fixed share of the student’s income every year. This repayment system would insure that students who fall on hard times wouldn’t be overwhelmed with debt payments.

The authors even speculate that sovereign debt could be amended so that repayment is based on a country’s gross domestic product. Given the connection between sovereign borrowing and declines in consumption in the Eurozone, Mian and Sufi may well be onto something.

Other work has shown how our banking sector is too reliant on debt financing. “The Bankers’ New Clothes” by economists Anat Admati of Stanford University and Martin Hellwig of the Max Planck Institute is a powerful argument for requiring financial firms to use more financing from their earnings or the stock market than through borrowing. The banks of the pre-crisis era were so fragile and toppled so easily because they were highly leveraged.

Of course, debt shouldn’t be abolished. Lending is a necessary and important part of our economy. But overreliance on debt threatens economic stability and prosperity. How and where we pull back on debt is a question we need to answer soon.

Estimates of World GDP, One Million B.C.-Present [1998]: My View as of 1998: The Honest Broker for the Week of May 24, 2014

Time to update this, as my thinking on a bunch of issues has changed over the past sixteen years. But first, as I think about how to so, let me reprint it…


I construct estimates of world GDP over the very long run by combining estimates of total human populations with largely-Malthusian estimates of levels of real GDP per capita.

Population

I take my estimates of human population from Kremer (1993), but it would not matter if I had chosen some other authority. All long-run estimates of human population that I have found are quite close together (with the exception of estimates of population around 5000 BC, where Blaxter (1986) estimates a population some eight times that of other authorities). Note that
this does not mean that the estimates are correct—just that they are roughly the same.

Continue reading “Estimates of World GDP, One Million B.C.-Present [1998]: My View as of 1998: The Honest Broker for the Week of May 24, 2014”

We Have a New Front Page at Equitable Growth!: Wednesday Focus: May 28, 2014

It is here: Homepage

It has lots of new stuff on it. Let me especially recommend:

Jesse Rothstein: Extended unemployment insurance remains critical: “New analyses of recent data covering unemployed workers during the Great Recession…

…and its aftermath indicate that the impact of unprecedented extensions of Unemployment Insurance on job uptake were smaller than previously thought while the benefits were extremely important to maintaining family incomes. The program helped sustain families and communities during an unusually long period of weak labor demand, helping to promote long-term labor market resiliency and higher future prosperity by helping the long-term unemployed remain out of poverty and attached to the labor market. Extended Unemployment Insurance benefits expired at the end of 2013, and Congress is now considering whether and how to reinstate them. The new data and analysis detailed in this issue brief—based on the roll-out of extended benefits in 2008-2010 and the roll-back that began in late 2011—indicate that… the downsides of UI extensions are smaller than in past economic downturns, and there are some previously unanticipated upsides…

Extending UI benefits for the long-term unemployed is one of the largest, ripest pieces of low-hanging economic-policy fruit that we are not picking right now.

And let me especially recommend, from my step-second-cousin:

Ariel Kalil: Economic inequality and the parenting time divide: “Researchers have not until recently thought about parents’ time investments in children…

…as a mechanism for the intergenerational transmission of economic status…. Jonathan Guryan and his colleagues used data from national time diaries to show that mothers with a college education or greater spend roughly 4.5 hours more per week directly interacting with their children than mothers with a high school degree or less…. My own national time use research, with… Rebecca Ryan and… Michael Corey, finds… [that] highly educated parents not only spend more time… they spend that time differently… shift the composition of their time as the child grows in ways that adapt to children’s development at different developmental stages… preschool… reading and problem solving… middle school… management of children’s life outside the home…. We still don’t know precisely why these patterns have emerged…


And we have even more stuff on it:

Research:

Understanding how raising the federal minimum wage affects income inequality and economic growth
* A Video of an Event with Thomas Piketty, Author of “Capital in the 21st Century””
* Taxes as policy: A Review of “Capital in the 21st Century:
* “Expanding Economic Opportunity for Women and Families”
* Thomas Piketty’s big book: What do you really need to know?
* Extended unemployment insurance remains critical
* Piketty’s data deserve better analysis
* The aftermath of wage collusion in Silicon Valley
* Economic inequality and the parenting time divide
* Can letting kids watch TV make them better students?

Value Added:

Separate and unequal mobility
* Holding inequality in reserve
* Heather Boushey reviews “House of Debt”
* Tax cuts for the kids
* Unequal higher education
* The evidence on the minimum wage
* Senator Marco Rubio’s retirement plan
* Bailouts for bankers or homeowners?

Things to Read on the Morning of May 29, 2014

Should-Reads:

  1. Michael Spence: Digitally enabled supply chains…. Economic activity… moved to any accessible country or region that had relatively inexpensive labor… complexity became manageable…. Many services related to intermediate and final demand require knowledge, expertise, information, and communication for their delivery. What they do not require is geographical nearness or the physical movement of goods…. Now comes a second, potentially even more powerful, wave of digital technology that is replacing labor in increasingly complex tasks. This process of labor substitution and disintermediation has been underway for some time in service sectors–think of ATMs, online banking, enterprise resource planning, customer relationship management, mobile payment systems, and much more…. With a huge potential global market to amortize the upfront fixed costs of design and testing, the incentives to invest are compelling…. Unlike the preceding wave of digital technology, which motivated firms to gain access to and deploy underutilized pools of valuable labor around the world, the driving force in this round is cost reduction via the replacement of labor…. Meanwhile, the impact of robotics… is not confined to production… the impact on logistics is no less transformative…”

  2. Albert Wenger: Computers and Wages: “There is good reason to believe that computers are substitutes for labor in general. Their apparent complementarity with skilled labor was the result of substituting skilled labor for unskilled labor rather than being based on a fundamental technological complementarity…. Let’s look instead at the type of skilled work that to date has been boosted by the use of computers…. As we have used computers to substitute for unskilled labor we have created massive additional profits. Skilled labor has been given some share of that but that share is limited to roughly the marginal product by competition between engineers. That leaves a large pool to be split between top management and capital. And in that bargaining situation it turns out that top management is surprisingly well positioned. Why? Because there is a large principal-agent problem between board members and the capital that they represent…. We should not expect the benefits for skilled labor to last forever. Instead, we will gradually see computers substituting for those as well and only top management (and capital) continuing to benefit. And so the current idea that we can somehow educate our way out of this divergence without the need for more profound changes in how we think about income is likely deeply flawed…”

Should Be Aware of:

And:

Continue reading “Things to Read on the Morning of May 29, 2014”

Afternoon Must-Read: Alicia Munnell: Is RomneyCare Working in Massachusetts?

Alicia Munnell: Is health reform working in Massachusetts?: “One fear following the Massachusetts health reform…

…and reiterated on the national stage, was decreased labor supply–making it easier to get health insurance not tied to employment might cause some individuals to stop working. It was also feared that employers would cut back on employees or hours to avoid the requirement to offer health insurance, which is based on the number of full-time equivalent workers…. Compar[ing] Massachusetts to four other states and found that the… employment rate followed a generally similar pattern…. Massachusetts did not see relative increases in the share of workers working part-time…. Another concern was that employer-sponsored insurance would be crowded out by public insurance, as employers simply dropped coverage and paid the $295 fine per employee. In fact, the percentage of employers offering coverage actually increased after the reform…. Insurance coverage and access to health care have increased, that health outcomes appear to be improving, and that the worst fears about employment have not come to pass in Massachusetts. Costs, however, remain an issue…

This Is Not a Macroeconomy That Marginal Investors Think Will Be at Full Employment Anytime in the Next Five Years

Graph 10 Year Treasury Constant Maturity Rate FRED St Louis Fed

That is all…

Rob Wile: 10-Year Treasury Yield Tumbles: “The yield on the 10-year U.S. Treasury note has tumbled to 2.4413%, a new low for 2014, per Bloomberg data.

There are a variety of factors fueling the rally, some of which we’ve previously discussed. The main ones are ongoing uncertainty about the recovery and constrained inflation. “Long-dated Treasuries outperformed because of the perception that the U.S. is going to have moderate growth without inflationary pressure,” Salman Ahmed, a London-based global strategist at Lombard Odier Asset Management, told Bloomberg. “Or at least, that’s what the Fed is saying.” Other factors include fears that the European Central Bank will lower interest rates, making Europe’s bonds relatively less appealing; overseas demand for U.S. debt; and short covering among those who thought yields would rise.

CEO pay, equity and efficiency

The Associated Press and the executive compensation data analysis firm Equilar on May 27 released new data showing a new high for executive pay. The median Chief Executive Officer, or the CEO exactly in the middle of the income distribution, made $10.5 million in 2013, an almost 9 percent increase from the year before according to their data.

For most Americans that level of pay and such a sizeable increase in annual pay is outside the realm of everyday comprehension.  But is this rising pay for executives a major contributor to rising inequality? And if so, is it necessary for a well-functioning company?

The level of CEO pay reported by the AP and Equilar would certainly put most CEOs in the top 0.1 percent of earners. Looking at 2012, the most recent year for which comparable data are available, we can compare CEO pay to the overall income distribution compiled by economists Emmanuel Saez at the University of California-Berkeley and Thomas Piketty of the Paris School of Economics. The median CEO pay of $9.6 million a year would have put these top earners well above the threshold for the top 0.01 percent, $7.2 million.

CEO pay may put them among the ranks of the top 0.1 percent, but are they a significant share of that group? Research by economists Jon Bakija of Williams College, Adam Cole of the tax analysis division of the U.S. Treasury Department, and Bradley Heim of Indiana University uses tax data to map out the occupations of the top 1 percent and the top 0.1 percent of earners. They find that executives are a large portion of these top groups. In 2005, the most recent year they analyze, executives, managers, and supervisors were 30 percent of the top 1 percent and 42.5 percent of the top 0.1 percent. That occupation group doesn’t include managers from the financial sector. Professions from the financial sector, including managers, were another 13.2 percent of the 1 percent and 18 percent of the top 0.1 percent.

The data are quite clear that executives are highly paid, but how much of this pay reflects superior talent and skills? If CEOs, for lack of a better word, deserve this pay then the high salaries are the results of an efficient system. Saying how much a CEO is worth, however, is a tricky business. There is evidence that CEOs as a class are overpaid in one particular industry. Economists Marianne Bertrand of the University of Chicago and Sendhil Mullainathan of Harvard University show that CEO pay in the oil-and-gas industry is just as responsive to upticks in business fortunes due to luck or to random rises in oil prices, as to upticks in fortunes due to skill.

If CEOs are being rewarded for events they are not responsible for, then there must be a process outside of rewards for productivity going on. Betrand and Mullainathan argue that their result is evidence of the capture of the pay-setting process by CEOs.

If CEO pay is indeed the result of an inefficient captured-compensation system then a more open system could be more efficient. Calls for reforming executive compensation may be grounded in concerns about equity but they may end up boosting the efficiency of our economy as well.

Things to Read on the Morning of May 28, 2014

Should-Reads:

  1. Tim Duy: Policy Induced Mediocrity?: “It seems that monetary policy over the past year can be summarized as a missed opportunity to supercharge the recovery, thereby locking the US economy into a suboptimal growth path…. The Federal Reserve could have chosen to lean into this generally upbeat forecast.  Yet instead they chose to lean against it by turning to tapering and setting the stage for interest rate hikes. And the data so far suggests that once again the turn toward policy normalization was premature…. What is remarkable is that the Federal Reserve understood that their forecasts have tended toward optimism…. The Federal Reserve has set reasonably clear expectations that rates will remain low for a long time.  That path, however, seems to be a consequence of doing too little now to ensure a stronger recovery.  In other words, the Fed seems to be taking a lower-rate future as a given rather than as a result of insufficient policy.  Instead of acting to ensure a stronger forecast, they seem more interesting in acting to lock-in the lower path of activity.  And that in turn will tend to lock in a low level of long-term rates.  This, I think, is the best explanation for the inability of markets to sustain higher rates. It is simply reasonable to expect that the conditions which justify higher long rates will be met with tighter policy sufficient to contain growth to something closer to the current path of output than to current estimates of potential output…”

  2. Henry Farrell: On Chris Giles of the Financial Times: Political Economy is Political: “The best explanation of the current Piketty-Financial Times brouhaha was written by Mike Konczal a few weeks before it actually happened…. ‘Understanding how the elite become what they are, and how their wealth perpetuates itself, is now a hot topic of scientific inquiry. Many have tried to figure out why the rich are freaking out…. Perhaps they are noticing that the dominant narratives about their role in society—avatars of success, job creators for the common good, innovators for social betterment, problem-solving philanthropists—are being replaced with a social science narrative in which they are a problem to be studied. They are still in control, but they are right to be worried.’ Political economy is political…. I would guess that one can explain the immediate reaction of 85% of economists and public writers to the book by looking to their priors on this question–whether they like to emphasize efficiency questions over distributional concerns, or vice versa (another 10% can be explained by whether the writer in question is miffed because he/she and his/her mates do or don’t get sufficient citations and respect). People who might have found the book interesting had it been an academic exercise, and perhaps even agreed with large parts of it, are freaking out because they worry that it has serious implications for political debate…. Even if the actual reason why people are casting around for Devastating Critiques is because they don’t like the book’s political implications, they may actually find good criticisms, and uncover real mistakes. Motivated reasoning, if properly harnessed, can be epistemologically very valuable…. Argument about politically divisive topics is only disinterested in rare and isolated instances–yet it still can have great benefits…. Plausibly, it’s the people who are least willing to acknowledge the political aspects of the debate who are most completely captured by them. Practical economists, who believe themselves to be quite exempt from any political influences, are usually slaves of some defunct political philosopher.”

  3. Doug Henwood: The Top of the World: “[Piketty’s] core message… can be delivered in a few lines: Left to its own devices, wealth inevitably tends to concentrate in capitalist economies. There is no ‘natural’ mechanism… for inhibiting, much less reversing, that tendency. Only crises like war and depression, or political interventions like taxation (which, to the upper classes, would be a crisis), can do the trick…. It was once believed, during the decades immediately following the Great Depression and World War II, that vast disparities in wealth were features of youthful capitalism that had been left behind now that the thing was reaching maturity…. Economics as a discipline loves stories about equilibrium and convergence. Vast inequities should, in theory, be ‘competed away’, as neoclassical economics likes to say. But mostly they’re not. Globally, poorer countries should gain on richer ones as technology and education spread and mobile capital’s search for higher returns makes the poor less poor…. In the case of personal wealth, old fortunes should decline and be replaced by new ones…. The major frustration of the book is political…. Hs political thinking is hardly a model of complexity or effort. He mostly aspires to contribute to rational democratic deliberation about ‘the best way to organize society’…”

Should Be Aware of:

And:

Continue reading “Things to Read on the Morning of May 28, 2014”

We Have a New Front Page at Equitable Growth!: Wednesday Focus: May 28, 2014

It is here: Homepage

It has lots of new stuff on it. Let me especially recommend:

Jesse Rothstein: Extended unemployment insurance remains critical: “New analyses of recent data covering unemployed workers during the Great Recession…

…and its aftermath indicate that the impact of unprecedented extensions of Unemployment Insurance on job uptake were smaller than previously thought while the benefits were extremely important to maintaining family incomes. The program helped sustain families and communities during an unusually long period of weak labor demand, helping to promote long-term labor market resiliency and higher future prosperity by helping the long-term unemployed remain out of poverty and attached to the labor market. Extended Unemployment Insurance benefits expired at the end of 2013, and Congress is now considering whether and how to reinstate them. The new data and analysis detailed in this issue brief—based on the roll-out of extended benefits in 2008-2010 and the roll-back that began in late 2011—indicate that… the downsides of UI extensions are smaller than in past economic downturns, and there are some previously unanticipated upsides…

Extending UI benefits for the long-term unemployed is one of the largest, ripest pieces of low-hanging economic-policy fruit that we are not picking right now.

And let me especially recommend, from my step-second-cousin:

Ariel Kalil: Economic inequality and the parenting time divide: “Researchers have not until recently thought about parents’ time investments in children…

…as a mechanism for the intergenerational transmission of economic status…. Jonathan Guryan and his colleagues used data from national time diaries to show that mothers with a college education or greater spend roughly 4.5 hours more per week directly interacting with their children than mothers with a high school degree or less…. My own national time use research, with… Rebecca Ryan and… Michael Corey, finds… [that] highly educated parents not only spend more time… they spend that time differently… shift the composition of their time as the child grows in ways that adapt to children’s development at different developmental stages… preschool… reading and problem solving… middle school… management of children’s life outside the home…. We still don’t know precisely why these patterns have emerged…


And we have even more stuff on it:

Research:

Understanding how raising the federal minimum wage affects income inequality and economic growth
* A Video of an Event with Thomas Piketty, Author of “Capital in the 21st Century””
* Taxes as policy: A Review of “Capital in the 21st Century:
* “Expanding Economic Opportunity for Women and Families”
* Thomas Piketty’s big book: What do you really need to know?
* Extended unemployment insurance remains critical
* Piketty’s data deserve better analysis
* The aftermath of wage collusion in Silicon Valley
* Economic inequality and the parenting time divide
* Can letting kids watch TV make them better students?

Value Added:

Separate and unequal mobility
* Holding inequality in reserve
* Heather Boushey reviews “House of Debt”
* Tax cuts for the kids
* Unequal higher education
* The evidence on the minimum wage
* Senator Marco Rubio’s retirement plan
* Bailouts for bankers or homeowners?