Should-Read: Josh Barro: Something very stupid is happening in the Senate right now

Should-Read: And now the frat boys who haven’t done the reading for their Model Budget Simulation course are are winging it have decided to fix things by pulling all-nighters: Josh Barro: Something very stupid is happening in the Senate right now : “The Joint Committee on Taxation’s report on the Senate Republican tax bill was unsurprising…

…Tax cuts outlined in the bill come nowhere close to paying for themselves. Sen. Bob Corker’s proposed solution—a trigger that would roll back some of the tax cuts if economic projections were not met after several years—is fundamentally flawed. If the bill is adjusted to win Corker’s vote, it may actually discourage business investment over the next few years.

Nobody should have been surprised about the Joint Committee on Taxation’s analysis of the Senate Republican tax bill, which was released Thursday…. Sen. James Lankford of Oklahoma, for one, noted that the report says what he was expecting it to say…. Yet Sen. Bob Corker, who has said he wouldn’t vote to add “one penny” to the federal debt, seems to have been under the impression, until Thursday afternoon, that the Senate bill might come within the ballpark of meeting that pledge…. Adding to the mess, the Senate parliamentarian informed Republicans that Corker’s idea for a “trigger”—a mechanism that would roll back some of the tax cuts if economic projections were not met after several years—violates Senate rules. So now Corker is apparently demanding a reduction of the tax cuts….

This is not a very smart way to reduce the cost of the bill, for a couple of reasons: One is that, if you shrink the corporate tax cuts, you’ll reduce the revenue loss—but you’ll also reduce the positive economic effects, so you’ll still have a big deficit problem. This is kind of like trying to crawl out of a sand trap; you’ll keep falling back in. Another is that making the corporate tax-rate cut temporary is an especially bad idea when combined with another provision of the Republican bill, which temporarily allows businesses to write off capital expenses in the year of purchase…. IAll of which is to say, if the bill is adjusted in this manner to win Corker’s vote, it may actually have the effect of discouraging business investment over the next few years, reducing economic growth…

Ten years after the beginning of the Great Recession, is it time to abandon the natural rate hypothesis?

A lone job seeker checks in at the front desk of the Texas Workforce Solutions office in Dallas.

How far into the future will the aftershocks of the Great Recession be felt? According to the National Bureau of Economic Research, the Great Recession began in December 2007, meaning that today marks the beginning of the 10-year anniversary of the historic downturn’s beginning. The deep economic shock that lasted until mid-2009 touched every corner of the United States and shaped the political, cultural, and, of course, economic affairs of the country. But how long will the consequences last?

In economics, this question looms large because the debate about the impact of recessions on the long-run potential of the economy raises questions about how we think about the working of the macroeconomy. In a recent working paper, economist Olivier Blanchard of the Peterson Institute for International Economics takes a look at the “natural rate hypothesis.” This hypothesis was laid out by the famous economist Milton Friedman in his 1968 presidential address to the American Economics Association. Friedman argued that, broadly, monetary policy couldn’t have a long-term impact on the potential of an economy and that policymakers couldn’t rely on using the trade-off between inflation and unemployment in the long-run. The speech was originally quite controversial but now serves as an important idea underlying the models of the economy used by central banks and mainstream macroeconomists.

Blanchard argues that the hypothesis really contains two separate subhypotheses: the independence hypothesis and the accelerationist hypothesis. Either might be true or prove to be false—and the implications for how we think about recessions and responses to them change if either or both don’t hold up.

The independence hypothesis is the idea underlying the concept of a “natural rate of unemployment” or “potential Gross Domestic Product.” This hypothesis claims that the underlying potential of the economy—the number of workers that can be employed or the value of goods and services produced with steady inflation—is fixed by a number of factors such as technology, the availability of capital, and the ease of hiring workers. But the current health of the economy is, under this hypothesis, not a factor that determines how strong the economy can potentially get.

Blanchard, however, finds some evidence that a recession can have an effect on the long-run potential of the economy, particularly when it comes to the labor market. He points, for example, to suggestive evidence in the data and careful research that suggests a weak labor market can push workers out of the labor market and potentially lock them out of future employment. This would mean that a recession can have a persistent effect on the level of unemployment years later.

The second hypothesis involves the trade-off between inflation and the health of the economy, an idea described by the Phillips Curve. The accelerationist hypothesis states that pushing unemployment below its natural rate will result in accelerating inflation. This happens because households and businesses are aware of the current inflation rate and will change their expectations of future inflation a lot if current inflation changes. A stronger economy with more inflation would increase expectations of higher inflation which in turn creates more inflation, and the feedback loop continues on.

But this hypothesis rests on the assumption that consumers and businesses are aware of inflation and find the level of inflation salient to their everyday decisions. This assumption might have held up during the 1970s, when inflation was high enough that people had to think about it, but that’s not true today. Blanchard shows data that consumers don’t change their expectation of inflation with changes in actual inflation, which would undermine the accelerationist story.

The consequences of these hypotheses not holding up are quite important. If the impact of recessions is quite persistent, then the need for countercyclical monetary and fiscal policy during downturns—more money pumping into the economy and more government spending—is much stronger. If the accelerationist view of inflation isn’t correct, then policymakers can do more to push unemployment down without seeing much of a pick-up in inflation.

Blanchard comes to the conclusion that while the natural rate hypothesis doesn’t look good in light of these data and other research, it’s worth holding onto for now. But there’s a clear need for research on these questions that Blanchard mentions many times in the paper. One case in point: Understanding how much the chance of long-term unemployed workers getting a job varies over the business cycle of an economy could help determine the level of persistence of recessions. Conversely, a better understanding of what determines households’ inflation expectations will result in a stronger test of the accelerationist hypothesis.

It’s been almost a decade since the last recession began. Sometime in the future, another one will start, and policymakers will need a better grip on the baseline—whether we’ve actually recovered from the previous recession—and therefore how aggressively they should fight the next downturn. More research in this area will help do just that.

Should-Read: Douglas Holtz-Eakin (April 26, 2017): Trump’s tax plan is built on a fairy tale

Should-Read: Can you say “unprofessional hack”? Sure you can: Douglas Holtz-Eakin (April 26, 2017): Trump’s tax plan is built on a fairy tale: “Proposing trillions of dollars in tax cuts and then casually asserting that such a plan would ‘pay for itself with growth’, as Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin said, is detached from empirical reality…”

Douglas Holtz-Eakin, James Miller, and a Few Over 100 Other Unprofessional Republican Economists (November 29, 2017): Trump tax reform opinion: Why Congress should pass: “Sophisticated economic models show the macroeconomic feedback… will exceed that amount [and be] more than enough to compensate for the static revenue loss…”

What possible rewards could possibly induce such unprofessional behavior as that we see here?

Should-Read: Robert C. Allen: Absolute Poverty: When Necessity Displaces Desire

Should-Read: This seems to me to be a significant improvement in productivity measurement: Robert C. Allen: Absolute Poverty: When Necessity Displaces Desire: “A new basis for an international poverty measurement is proposed based on linear programming…

…for specifying the least cost diet and explicit budgeting for non-food spending. This approach is superior to the World Bank’s ‘$-a-day’ line because it is (1) clearly related to survival and well being, (2) comparable across time and space since the same nutritional requirements are used everywhere while non-food spending is tailored to climate, (3) adjusts consumption patterns to local prices, (4) presents no index number problems since solutions are always in local prices, and (5) requires only readily available information. The new approach implies much more poverty than the World Bank’s, especially in Asia…

Should-Read: Tom Simonite: Robots Threaten Bigger Slice of Jobs in US, Other Rich Nations

Should-Read: This is a serious problem: success at exporting told developing countries that their efforts to build engineering communities of practice were working; the fact that a lot of global value was created in labor intensive manufacturing industries meant that industrialize-via-export policies had large potential reach and oomph. Those days may be over: Tom Simonite: Robots Threaten Bigger Slice of Jobs in US, Other Rich Nations: “Although the short-term disruption from automation may be smaller in developing countries than in richer countries…

…the developing nations face more difficult challenges in the longer term. China has shown how low-cost manufacturing can provide a kind of step ladder that helps a country gradually climb into more complex and lucrative sectors, says Brad DeLong, an economics professor at University of California, Berkeley, who worked in the Clinton administration. But as automation technology gets cheaper and more capable, more manufacturing likely will migrate back to countries like the US. “The fear is that China is the last country for which this will be a successful strategy,” DeLong says. Governments need to think not just about how automation affects workers, but their entire economic underpinnings…

Should-Read: Larry Summers and Jason Furman: A modest proposal part II: the debate over US tax reform

Should-Read: Larry Summers and Jason Furman are back, with their response to the non-response from the Nine Unprofessional Republican Economists. What did I do in a previous life to deserve this fresh hell? What did any of us do?: Larry Summers and Jason Furman: A modest proposal part II: the debate over US tax reform: “We appreciate… you are backing off from the statement… that ‘the gain in the long-run level of GDP would be just over 3 per cent, or 0.3 per cent per year for a decade’… [and] ‘not offer[ing] claims about the speed of adjustment’…

…The only three studies you explicitly called out in your original letter do, however, provide specific estimates… 0.1-0.2 percentage points per year for the next decade… not…close to paying for the cost of the tax cut. Even these growth rates, however, are likely to be too high. We have honest differences with you on how the economy operates, including how responsive behaviour is to tax changes. But these are not the source of the differences here. Instead, much of the difference appears to be that you continue to mis-cite your sources while failing to consider the actual Tax Cut and Jobs Act (TCJA)….

Your use of the OECD study is flatly erroneous and we request that you publish an explicit correction….

Your letter to Secretary Mnuchin reported only one of the three models the Treasury used to assess the… Growth and Investment Tax Plan… the one that reported long-run output effects more than twice as high as the other two Treasury models. Your new letter asserts this was because you “believed [this model] most accurately reflects likely saving responses and thus capital accumulation”. Do you have any basis for this belief?

Your original letter emphasised the importance of analysis that reflects the fact that “the United States operates in an international capital market” while the Treasury model you chose to present “do[es] not account for international trade or capital flows”…. It is hard for us to escape the conclusion that you cherrypicked the highest reported estimate in the Treasury report instead of making a considered economic judgment….

Your letter admits that you did not model the specific provisions of the TCJA….

You did not address one specific question we asked: if your estimates are correct would the tax bill result in a large increase in the trade deficit? We assume you agree that it does….

Our sense that you are implying substantially larger growth effects than are warranted is reinforced by the fact that your conclusions appear to be at odds with… the Chicago Booth IGM Panel….

Given that we are not likely to reconcile our differences any time soon, all of us should instead send a clear and united message that encourages Congress to rely on estimates from the expert and non-partisan Joint Committee on Taxation.

Should-Read: Paul Krugman: @paulkrugman on Twitter: Understated NYT Headline

Should-Read: Well, yes, Paul Krugman is shrill this morning. What did you expect? Paul Krugman: @paulkrugman on Twitter: Understated NYT Headline: https://t.co/3hrbq6mp5n “There is no analysis, because Trump admin doesn’t want one—afraid it will say what all the other analyses say, which is not good for admin case. Mnuchin has been lying all along…

…A thread on lies, damned lies, voodoo economics and cowardice: from the beginning, the core claim of the Trump administration has been that its tax cuts would raise growth so much that they would pay for themselves. It claimed to have analysis to that effect. As many of us suspected, that claim was a flat-out, brazen lie. There never was such an analysis, and the tax experts at Treasury were in fact prevented from carrying out any analysis. But let us not simply blame Mnuchin and the Trump admin. Senate Republicans are also trying to ram their bill through before JCT, Congress’s own scorekeeper, has time to assess its impact on growth and any “dynamic” effects—bc they know it won’t be good.

And let’s also not let Republican-leaning economists off the hook, What Brad DeLong calls the Nine Unprofessional Economists released an open letter asserting great growth effects from corporate tax cuts. In so doing, they misrepresented the research https://t.co/8uiLJ27rbE. They didn’t explicitly claim that tax cuts pay for themselves—but they didn’t strongly assert the contrary either; clearly, their goal was to offer aid and comfort to the tax cutters while preserving deniability. And aid and comfort they provided:

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And when called on their two-facedness, they denied having said what they very clearly said. (Similar to the behavior of some of the same people after their false claims about Fed policy) So this was both disingenuous and cowardly.

The rot and corruption here spreads wide and runs deep. It encompasses not just Trump and company, but essentially all Republicans in Congress and many Republican-oriented professional economists.

Should-Read: Martin Feldstein: New Priorities for a New Fed Regime

Should-Read: A price-earnings ratio of 25 corresponds to an expected long-run real equity return of about 4%/year. Why is this seen as dangerously high? Especially given low real rates of return on other assets, why isn’t this just what is appropriate?: Martin Feldstein: New Priorities for a New Fed Regime: “The Fed has kept the short-term federal-funds interest rate at less than the rate of inflation for nearly a decade…

..exploded its balance sheet…. Low interest rates have caused investors and lenders to reach for yield, pushing up asset prices and making high-risk investments and loans. The most obvious increase in financial risk has been the rapid rise in share prices. The price/earnings ratio of the S&P 500 index rose from an average of 18.5 in the three years before the downturn of 2007 to 25.2 now, an increase of 37%. The current P/E ratio is 63% higher than its historic average and higher than all but three years in the 20th century. If the P/E ratio declines to its historic average, the implied fall would reduce the value of household equities by $9.5 trillion. If every dollar of decline in wealth reduces spending by the historic average of 4 cents, the level of household spending would fall by $475 billion, or more than 2% of gross domestic product….

Bond prices are also out of line with historic experience. With inflation at around 2%, the long-term 10-year Treasury yield should be at about 4.5%. Instead it is only about 2.5%. If the yield on long-term bonds returns to normal historic levels, there will be substantial losses of value for current bondholders. Commercial real estate is overpriced because investors compare the yield on real estate with the interest rate on long-term bonds. Since real estate is often held in highly leveraged investments, falling prices could lead to an even greater decline in the net value of real-estate assets. The combination of overpriced real estate and equities has left the financial sector fragile and has put the entire economy at risk. The Fed has so far chosen not to address this fragility….

The departing Fed chair clearly prefers regulatory and supervisory policies that focus on banks over monetary policy when dealing with the risks of financial instability. Let’s hope her successor disagrees and incorporates financial stability as a key goal of monetary policy.

If I may try to summarize what I take to be Marty’s argument: Eventually asset prices—both equity and bond—will normalize. They may normalize suddenly. That would be a huge destructive shock.

So to prevent a sudden destructive normalization in the future, we should act now to remove any doubt that prices will normalize. We should do so by raising interest rates faster and making it clear that we will raise interest rates to a higher level—no matter what that means for the level of employment and the level of inflation. By removing any doubt that normalization is coming and coming relatively soon, we will greatly reduce the chance of a surprise sudden distractive normalization when people finally realize that this time is, in fact, not different.

I see a big problem here. Marty advocates a régime change: a sharp shift in policy to raise interest rates further and faster and commit to raising interest rates to a higher level, to abandon the current inflation targeting régime for one that seeks to put a ceiling on asset prices to keep them from reaching “bubble” levels. But the the extent financial markets are forward-looking and that such a régime change is credible, it would seem to have the greatest possible chance of bringing hat long run into being today. That would be the crash now that Marty Feldstein fears that the future might bring.

Thus I simply don’t understand how this argument is coherent. You try to avoid a possible future cold by giving the economy the flu now? Why?

U.S. corporate tax cuts and wage growth

The Capitol Dome of the Capitol Building is visible in Washington, D.C.

The U.S. Senate this week may well pass a large cut in the U.S. corporate tax rate. Supporters argue that reducing the rate to 20 percent from 35 percent will lead to large pay increases for typical workers. Opponents maintain that corporate shareholders, corporate chieftains, and the rest of the so-called C Suite will capture most of the gains in the form of dividends and buybacks, higher salaries, and greater nonsalary compensation such as stock options.

Economic research suggests that the trickle-down argument is overstated, and the more likely case is that the majority of the gains will accrue to investors, CEOs, and other highly compensated employees. Our infographic details the consequences of a corporate tax cut for investors, CEOs, and workers in both scenarios: the myth versus the likely reality.

Should-Read: Gavyn Davies: Marvin Goodfriend would be good for the Fed

Should-Read: I disagree with the very sharp Gavyn Davies about the potential confirmation of the honorable and professional Marvin Goodfriend to the Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve. I think he would be a bad choice. Gavyn does not: Gavyn Davies: Marvin Goodfriend would be good for the Fed: “Prof Goodfriend has recently argued that the FOMC should explicitly compare its policy actions with the recommendations from… a rule…

…because this would reduce the tendency to wait too long before tightening policy. This places more emphasis on rules-based policies than Ms Yellen or Fed vice-chair Stanley Fischer would like, but he is not really a hardliner on this debate. Overall, Marvin Goodfriend would be a very good appointment to the board. He is in no way a political crony, and would stand up for the Fed’s basic role in maintaining stable prices. He is less of a gradualist on interest rate changes than Ms Yellen, and he may lean towards earlier monetary tightening than the current regime.

Marvin Goodfriend was one of those so wrong about the state of the economy and about what good monetary policy would have been in the first half of the 2010s that :I would only support his nomination if he had done a deep-dive rethinking of his intellectual and policy positions in response. And he has not. When your forecasts and projections are wrong, it means that the universe is telling you something important. You should listen. And I do not think he has sufficiently done so.