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Politics : American Presidential Politics and foreign affairs -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Jim S who wrote (39734)12/17/2009 5:47:52 PM
From: TimF  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 71588
 
I think a lot of the talk about specific multipliers, is somewhere between being overly (falsely) specific (as in we have a general idea, but want to give a specific number), to complete hogwash (as in who knows what it really is but this number sounds good and supports our argument...)

But for those that want specific numbers the article I quoted has this "According to the Romers, each dollar of tax cuts has historically raised G.D.P. by about $3", which I don't think is unreasonable, except perhaps in being too specific (yes even the relatively vague "about $3", may be too specific, its not like you can just calculate out an economy and factor out any other influences).

In any case if the goal is raising nominal GDP that isn't to hard (just print enough money), even if its raising real GDP there are all sorts of ways to do that in the short run, but nominal GDP can be meaningless in the context of policies specifically taken to boost it, and even real GDP isn't the real goal (cash for clunkers, or the rebuilding of New Orleans after Katrina, probably boosted GDP a bit in the short run, but destroying property in order to replace it isn't really a net plus)



To: Jim S who wrote (39734)1/3/2010 10:56:30 PM
From: Peter Dierks1 Recommendation  Respond to of 71588
 
Uncertainty and the Slow Recovery
A recession is a terrible time to make major changes in the economic rules of the game.
JANUARY 3, 2010, 9:39 P.M. ET.

By GARY S. BECKER, STEVEN J. DAVIS AND KEVIN M. MURPHY
In terms of U.S. output contractions, the so-called Great Recession was not much more severe than the recessions in 1973-75 and 1981-82. Yet recovery from the latest recession has started out much more slowly. For example, real GDP expanded by 7.7% in 1983 after unemployment peaked at 10.8% in December 1982, whereas GDP grew at an unimpressive annual rate of 2.2% in the third quarter of 2009. Although the fourth quarter is likely to show better numbers—probably much better—there are no signs of an explosive take off from the recession.

We believe two factors are behind this rather tepid rebound. An obvious one is the severe financial crisis that precipitated this recession, with many major financial institutions receiving large bailouts from the federal government. The confidence of bankers and venture capitalists has been shattered, at least for a while, and it will take time for them to recover from the financial turmoil of the past couple of years. The household sector also faces a difficult period of financial retrenchment in the wake of a major collapse in home prices, overextended debt positions for many, and high unemployment.

The second factor is less obvious, but possibly also of great importance. Liberal Democrats won a major victory in the 2008 elections, winning the presidency and large majorities in both the House and Senate. They interpreted this as evidence that a large majority of Americans want major reforms in the economy, health-care and many other areas. So in addition to continuing and extending the Bush-initiated bailout of banks, AIG, General Motors, Chrysler and other companies, Congress and President Obama signaled their intentions to introduce major changes in taxes, government spending and regulations—changes that could radically transform the American economy.

The efforts to transform the economy began with a fiscal stimulus package of nearly $800 billion. While some elements served the package's stated purpose and helped to soften the recession's impact, the overall package was not well designed to foster a speedy recovery or set the stage for long-term growth. Instead, the "stimulus" was oriented to sectors that liberal Democrats believe are deserving of much greater federal help. This explains why much of the stimulus money is going toward education, health, energy conservation, and other activities that would do little to soak up unemployed resources and stimulate the economy.

In terms of discouraging a rapid recovery, other government proposals created greater uncertainty and risk for businesses and investors. These include plans to increase greatly marginal tax rates for higher incomes. In addition, discussions at the Copenhagen conference and by the president to impose high taxes on carbon dioxide emissions must surely discourage investments in refineries, power plants, factories and other businesses that are big emitters of greenhouse gases.

Congressional "reforms" of the American health delivery system have gone through dozens of versions. The separate bills passed by the House and Senate worry small businesses, in particular. They fear their labor costs will increase because of mandates to spend much more on health insurance for their employees. The resulting reluctance of small businesses to invest, expand and hire harms households as well, because it slows the creation of new jobs and the growth of labor incomes.

The administration also indicated early on that it would take a different approach to antitrust policy, reversing a 30-year trend toward more consumer-based interpretations of antitrust laws. Likewise, the installation of a pay "czar" in Washington is scary, even though his activities are so far confined to companies that received substantial bailout assistance from the Treasury. Perhaps as a next step, Congress will decide that executive pay is too high generally and levy special taxes on bonuses, or impose other controls over executive compensation—as the British and French have done. Congress is also considering major new regulations on consumer financial products.

In its efforts to combat the financial crisis and recession, the Fed created over $1 trillion of excess reserves at banks through various bailout programs and open market operations. When banks draw on these reserves for loans to businesses and households, there is a potential for the money supply to grow rapidly, possibly producing a substantial inflation. How hard the Fed will fight inflationary pressures through open market sales and other actions that raise interest rates is a significant source of uncertainty about future inflation and about the potential for monetary policy tightening to choke off the recovery.

The uncertainty about monetary policy has important political dimensions as well. The Fed now faces greater political pressures than at any other time in the past quarter century, as seen from the grilling the Senate Banking committee gave to Fed Chairman Ben Bernanke in deciding whether to approve his reappointment. These pressures may intensify greatly if, and when, future Fed actions to restrain inflation conflict with politicians' desires to prop up housing and the major government enterprises enmeshed in housing finance.

Even though some of the proposed antibusiness policies might never be implemented, they generate considerable uncertainty for businesses and households. Faced with a highly uncertain policy environment, the prudent course is to set aside or delay costly commitments that are hard to reverse. The result is reluctance by banks to increase lending—despite their huge excess reserves—reluctance by businesses to undertake new capital expenditures or expand work forces, and decisions by households to postpone major purchases.

Several pieces of evidence point to extreme caution by businesses and households. A regular survey by the National Federation of Independent Businesses (NFIB) shows that recent capital expenditures and near-term plans for new capital investments remain stuck at 35-year lows. The same survey reveals that only 7% of small businesses see the next few months as a good time to expand. Only 8% of small businesses report job openings, as compared to 14%-24% in 2008, depending on month, and 19%-26% in 2007.

The weak economy is far and away the most prevalent reason given for why the next few months is "not a good time" to expand, but "political climate" is the next most frequently cited reason, well ahead of borrowing costs and financing availability. The authors of the NFIB December 2009 report on Small Business Economic Trends state: "the other major concern is the level of uncertainty being created by government, the usually [sic] source of uncertainty for the economy. The 'turbulence' created when Congress is in session is often debilitating, this year being one of the worst. . . . There is not much to look forward to here."

Government statistics tell a similar story. Business investment in the third quarter of 2009 is down 20% from the low levels a year earlier. Job openings are at the lowest level since the government began measuring the concept in 2000. The pace of new job creation by expanding businesses is slower than at any time in the past two decades and, though older data are not as reliable, likely slower than at any time in the past half-century. While layoffs and new claims for unemployment benefits have declined in recent months, job prospects for unemployed workers have continued to deteriorate. The exit rate from unemployment is lower now than any time on record, dating back to 1967.

According to the Michigan Survey of Consumers, 37% of households plan to postpone purchases because of uncertainty about jobs and income, a figure that has not budged since the second quarter of 2009, and one that remains higher than any previous year back to 1960.

These facts suggest that it was a serious economic mistake to press for a hasty, major transformation of the U.S. economy on the heels of the worst financial crisis in decades. A more effective approach would have been to concentrate first on fighting the recession and laying solid foundations for growth. They should have put plans to re-engineer the economy on the backburner, and kept them there until the economy emerged fully from the recession and returned to robust growth. By failing to adopt a measured approach to economic policy, Congress and the president may be slowing the economic recovery, and thereby prolonging the distress from the recession.

The authors are economists at the University of Chicago. Messrs. Becker and Murphy are also fellows of the Hoover Institution of Stanford University. Mr. Davis is also a visiting scholar at the American Enterprise Institute.

online.wsj.com



To: Jim S who wrote (39734)1/9/2010 9:15:49 AM
From: Peter Dierks1 Recommendation  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 71588
 
The Long Jobs Wait
Policy uncertainty hurts hiring.
JANUARY 9, 2010.

Sooner or later the economic recovery will start creating new jobs, we promise. But it sure is turning out to be a long, agonizing wait. The economy has been growing for at least six months, amid high productivity growth and rebounding corporate profits, yet employers still shed a net 85,000 jobs in December.

The jobless rate remained at 10%, but 15.3 million Americans are out of work. Employers still appear to be on strike, not laying off as they were in the early part of 2009, but not hiring new workers either. The 10% rate would have been even higher had the civilian labor force not shrunk by 661,000 workers in December. Only 64.6% of working age Americans are now in the labor force, the lowest in 25 years. The so-called total jobless rate—which includes discouraged workers no longer looking—ticked up to 17.3% from 17.2%.

Perhaps most dismaying is that nearly four in 10 (39.8%) of the jobless have been unemployed for six months or more. The longer these Americans stay out of the workplace, the more their career prospects will suffer in an economy that rewards ever-higher skills.

The long-term danger is that the U.S. labor market becomes more like Europe's, with workers who have jobs doing fine while millions of others can't get full-time work. Congress hasn't helped this trend by reducing the incentive to job hunt by extending jobless benefits—another example, like the minimum wage, in which Congress does tangible harm in the name of compassion.

We can't blame employers for their caution. With so much policy uncertainty out of Washington and the state capitals, no one can be sure what they will pay for energy (rising oil prices, cap and trade) or new regulation (antitrust), how high their taxes will rise, and how much each new employee will cost (health care). In this kind of world, employers will wait as long as possible to add new workers.

With trillions of monetary stimulus in the pipeline, the economy will grow and employment will rise in 2010. The sooner Congress stops doing damage, the faster that will be.

Printed in The Wall Street Journal, page A12

online.wsj.com



To: Jim S who wrote (39734)1/12/2010 9:17:02 AM
From: Peter Dierks1 Recommendation  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 71588
 
The Jobs Recession
Posted 01/08/2010 07:11 PM ET

Economy: Most economists agree that the U.S. left its recession sometime last summer. Yet with each passing month, the employment news remains grim. Looks like we're in a jobless recovery.

The December job numbers released Friday were of little comfort. True, November's payroll loss was revised upward to show a minuscule gain of 4,000 jobs. But December's loss of 85,000 was about twice what Wall Street expected, and the unemployment rate remained at 10%.

For key groups, the news is far worse. Teens, for instance, suffer a 27% unemployment rate. If you're a construction worker, it's little better — one in four workers in that industry are without work.

Overall, those "underemployed" — lacking either a job or not working full time when they would like to — now stands above 17%. Also last month, emergency filings for jobless benefits surged 43% nationwide — a scary statistic if ever there was one.

Since the start of the recession in December 2007, we've seen eight million jobs disappear — four million in the last year alone. The last decade was the first in memory to show no job growth at all — and that includes the Great Depression decade of the 1930s.

It's not for nothing the National Association of Business Economics now calls the recent downturn the "Great Recession." It fits.

House Speaker Nancy Pelosi last month said Democrats will measure their success by "jobs, jobs, jobs." So far, things aren't working out. It may be, as some economists believe, that job growth will resume soon. But the bar is a bit higher than many suppose.

Each month, the U.S. adds 110,000 to 140,000 new employees to the work force. Monthly job growth, therefore, must average more than 100,000 just to stay even. And even at that pace, it'll take six years just to get back to the number of jobs the U.S. had in 2007.

Last February, after the Congress and President Obama triumphantly passed their $787 billion stimulus program, we were told it would mean 3.5 million new jobs over two years. Unless something unforeseeably dramatic happens, there's no way that will occur.

Yet there was Obama on Friday, doubling down, getting serious one more time about jobs, jobs, jobs. His answer? More stimulus funding for clean technology manufacturing.

That might be funny if people weren't hurting so much already from the administration's focus on government make-work. For the record, every program the government put in place in 2009 has failed. Yet, we keep doing the same thing, at a cost of literally trillions of dollars. This is madness to the nth power.

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