Showing posts with label Growth. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Growth. Show all posts

Thursday, August 18, 2011

Professor Romers Op Ed



I have copied Professor Christina Romer's op ed piece from the Sunday NYT  below.  The emphasis is mine

August 13, 2011

The Hope That Flows From History

AFTER the grim economic developments of the last few weeks, it’s easy to lose hope. Could the Great Recession of 2008 drag on for years, just as the Great Depression did in the 1930s? Adding to the despair is the oft-repeated notion that it took World War II to end the economic nightmare of the ’30s: If a global war was needed to return the economy to full employment then, what is going to save us today?
Look more closely at history and you’ll see that the truth is much more complicated — and less gloomy. While the war helped the recovery from the Depression, the economy was improving long before military spending increased. More fundamentally, the wrenching wartime experience provides a message of hope for our troubled economy today: we have the tools to deal with our problems, if only policy makers will use them.
As I showed in an academic paper years ago, the war first affected the economy through monetary developments. Starting in the mid-1930s, Hitler’s aggression caused capital flight from Europe. People wanted to invest somewhere safer — particularly in the United States. Under the gold standard of that time, the flight to safety caused large gold flows to America. The Treasury Department under President Franklin D. Roosevelt used that inflow to increase the money supply.
The result was an aggressive monetary expansion that effectively ended deflation. Real borrowing costs decreased and interest-sensitive spending rose rapidly. The economy responded strongly. From 1933 to 1937, real gross domestic product grew at an annual rate of almost 10 percent, and unemployment fell from 25 percent to 14. To put that in perspective, G.D.P. growth has averaged just 2.5 percent in the current recovery, and unemployment has barely budged.
There is clearly a lesson for modern policy makers. Monetary expansion was very effective in the mid-1930s, even though nominal interest rates were near zero, as they are today. The Federal Reserve’s policy statement last week provided tantalizing hints that it may be taking this lesson to heart and using its available tools more aggressively in coming months.
One reason the Depression dragged on so long was that the rapid recovery of the mid-1930s was interrupted by a second severe recession in late 1937. Though many factors had a role in the “recession within a recession,” monetary and fiscal policy retrenchment were central. In monetary policy, the Fed doubled bank reserve requirements and the Treasury stopped monetizing the gold inflow. In fiscal policy, the federal budget swung sharply, from a stimulative deficit of 3.8 percent of G.D.P. in 1936 to a small surplus in 1937.
The lesson here is to beware of withdrawing policy support too soon. A switch to contractionary policy before the economy is fully recovered can cause the economy to decline again. Such a downturn may be particularly large when an economy is still traumatized from an earlier crisis.
The recent downgrade of American government debt by Standard & Poor’s makes this point especially crucial. It would be a mistake to respond by reducing the deficit more sharply in the near term. That would almost surely condemn us to a repeat of the 1937 downturn. And higher unemployment would make it all that much harder to get the deficit under control.
Military spending didn’t begin to rise substantially until late 1940. Once it did, fiscal policy had an expansionary impact. Some economists argue that the effect wasn’t very large, as real government purchases (in 2005 dollars) rose by $1.4 billion from 1940 to 1944, while real G.D.P. rose only $0.9 billion.
But this calculation misses two crucial facts: Taxes increased sharply, and the government took many actions to decrease private consumption, like instituting rationing and admonishing people to save. That output soared despite these factors suggests that increases in government spending had a powerful stimulative effect. Consistent with that, private nonfarm employment — which excludes active military personnel — rose by almost eight million from 1940 to 1944.
The lesson here is that fiscal stimulus can help a depressed economy recover — an idea supported by new studies of the 2009 stimulus package. Additional short-run tax cuts or increases in government investment would help deal with our unemployment crisis.
What of the idea that monetary and fiscal policy can do little if unemployment is caused by structural factors, like a mismatch between workers’ skills and available jobs? As I discussed in a previous column, such factors are probably small today.
But World War II has something to tell us here, too. Because nearly 10 million men of prime working age were drafted into the military, there was a huge skills gap between the jobs that needed to be done on the home front and the remaining work force. Yet businesses and workers found a way to get the job done. Factories simplified production methods and housewives learned to rivet.
Here the lesson is that demand is crucial — and that jobs don’t go unfilled for long. If jobs were widely available today, unemployed workers would quickly find a way to acquire needed skills or move to where the jobs were located.
Finally, what about the national debt? Given the recent debt downgrade, it might seem impossible for the United States to embark on fiscal stimulus that would increase its ratio of debt to G.D.P.
Well, at the end of World War II, that ratio hit 109 percent — one and a half times as high as it is now. Yet this had no obvious adverse consequences for growth or our ability to borrow.
This isn’t hard to explain. Everyone understood then why the nation was racking up so much debt: we were fighting for survival, and for the survival of our allies. No one doubted that we would repay our debts. We had done it after every other war, and raising taxes even before the attack on Pearl Harbor showed our leaders’ fiscal resolve.
Today, we can do much more to aid recovery, including a near-term increase in our debt. But we need to make the reasons clear and make concrete our commitment to deal with the debt over time.
In place of the tepid budget agreement now in place, we could pass a bold plan with more short-run spending increases and tax cuts, coupled with much more serious, phased-in deficit reduction. By necessity, the plan would tackle entitlement reform and gradually raise tax revenue. This would be the World War II approach to our problems.
Equally important, someone needs to explain to the nation and to world markets just why we must increase the debt in the short run. Unemployment of roughly 9 percent for 28 months and counting is a national emergency. We must fight it with the same passion and commitment we have brought to military emergencies in our past.

Christina D. Romer is an economics professor at the University of California, Berkeley, and was the chairwoman of President Obama’s Council of Economic Advisers.

Thursday, October 14, 2010

Measuring Unemployment and Job Growth

A Long Road Ahead .... NYTimes

Friday, October 8, 2010

ProfessorBrad DeLong on Macroeconomics

 DeLong summarizes Jean Baptiste Say, JS Mill, Malthus and Niall Ferguson

Copied completely from Professor DeLongs site

 What Does Cutting-Edge Macroeconomics Tell Us About Economic Policy for the Recovery?


 (Emhasis mine)

Let us start with one of the first economists, Jean-Baptiste Say.
Say wanted to be a technocrat, and was well on the way—special assistant to Girondist Party Finance Minister Etienne Claviere in the early days of the first French Republic. His patron was fired, purged, arrested, imprisoned, probably tortured, sentenced to the guillotine, which he cheated by committing suicide the day before his scheduled execution.

Monday, September 27, 2010

Myths de Jour, Krugman and Me

 Krugman has a piece which resonates.  My comments precede his oped below.

The mythology of the "invisible hand" of "free market competition" working in "an efficient market" was pushed when it was profitable for American corporations and banks.

Friday, September 17, 2010

Fifteen Non GDP Measures of US Economic Health

Most of my posts discuss US economic health.  I almost always use GDP growth as a measure, and will continue to do so.

Though GDP as a yardstick of economic health is deeply flawed, it is the only  measure universally recognized by politicians and economists, and is a not unreasonable measure of economic growth, albeit not economic health.  

Monday, September 6, 2010

Krugman -- "...It's all downhill from here"

NYT Sept 6th 
Krugman -- Delusions of Recovery

"  I’ve had a couple of conversations lately with people who follow politics and public affairs, but aren’t that close to the economic discussion — and I’ve discovered that there are two comforting delusions still out there.

Delusion #1 is that we’re on the road to recovery, just more slowly than we’d like; to be fair, the White House keeps saying this.
But it’s not at all true. GDP is growing below potential; employment, even if you focus just on private employment, is growing more slowly than the working-age population. If you ask how long it will take us to return to, say, 5 percent unemployment on the current track, the answer is forever.

Delusion #2 is the belief that the stimulus may yet do the trick, because there are still substantial funds unspent. I tried to deal with this last year. The level of GDP depends not on total funds spent, but on the rate at which funds are being spent, which has already peaked; GDP growth on the rate of change in the rate at which funds are being spent, which peaked last year. It’s all downhill from here. "
Emphasis mine

Sunday, August 22, 2010

Energy and US Economic Growth

I wanted to take a brief break from talking about debt as a drag on US economic growth.  

So... here are a few words and a few pictures about oil, an even more fundamental limitation than US debt, on world and US economic growth. 
Chart 1: Chart from an EIA Energy Conference in April 2009 from a presentation by Sweetnam
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Friday, August 13, 2010

NYT Reporting 2010Q2 GDP growth may be 1.2%

From NYT


August 11, 2010, 11:11 am


2nd Quarter G.D.P. May Be Revised Even Lower


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Source: Bureau of Economic Analysis, via Haver Analytics
 

Wednesday, August 11, 2010

US Borrowing, Debt and Growth Part 1

Below is a picture (Chart 1), for the last three decades, of the total amount of money Americans borrow each year.  The credit is provided, primarily by American banks for
  1. American households, 
  2. American businesses, 
  3. American banks, 
  4. Various branches of American government.
By far the majority of credit is provided to the "private" that is the "non government" sector, which are the first three sectors above.

Contrary to much of Main Stream Media and politician noise, private borrowing and private debt has been our primary borrowing and debt problem.  It has not been government borrowing and government debt.

It was only in the last couple of years (since Q4 2008) that the Bush administration, with the complete agreement of the incoming Obama administration, and the Federal Reserve, that the US federal government (USG) bailed out the private banking system, and thus took on the responsibility for redeeming private debt.

Thus did we middle class Americans have the excretions of bankers and conniving politicians dropped on our unwitting heads.

The USG got involved because the world credit "suddenly" froze and bank lending ceased.

In less than two years, Americans changed from borrowing about $4.5trillion per year to borrowing less than nothing -- whatever that means.  (More on that in later posts).

What does that signify?  Sound and Fury Signifying Nothing?  Just a Bump in the Road of  Perpetual Economic Growth?  A Harbinger of Economic Doom?

You will find my answer at the end of this piece.

This post is the first of a bunch of wonkish, but hopefully commonsense and easily understandable posts on the subjects of American borrowing, American debt and American economic growth (US GDP).

Chart 1.  Total US annual borrowing.  Data from the Fed Flow of Funds Table D2
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Saturday, August 7, 2010

US Economic Growth -- Consensus and Limits

Image via Wikipedia


Chart1.  World and US GDP growth rate from US Dept of Agriculture Economic Research Service Source: "World Bank World Development Indicators, International Financial Statistics of the IMF, Global Insight, and Oxford Economic Forecasting, as well as estimated and projected values, developed by the Economic Research Service all converted to a 2005 base year" Data published November 2009.
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Monday, August 2, 2010

GDP Growth Rates, Debt and Tooth Fairies

Last Friday the Bureau of Economic Anaysis (a federal government bureau) issued their corrected GDP numbers for the last several years.  This post uses this updated data to begin the first of a few posts on Growth in a time of Debt.

Chart 1: BEA Quarterly Annualized Seasonally adjusted US GDP growth, 2005q1 thru 2010q2
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