| Nearly everyone I talk with has the sense that
we are at some critical point in our economic and national paths, not just
in the US but in the world. One path will lead us back to relative growth
and another set of choices leads us down a path which will put a very real
drag on economic growth and recovery. For most of us, there is very little
we can do (besides vote and lobby) about the actual choices. What we can
do is adjust our personal portfolios to be synchronized with the direction
of the economy. The question is "What will that direction be?"
Today we are going to look at what I think is a very clear roadmap given
to us by Dr. Woody Brock, the head of Strategic Economic Decisions and
one of the smartest analysts I have come in contact with over the years.
This week's Outside the Box is his recent essay, "The End Games Draws Nigh."
For those who have the contacts in government, I urge you to put this piece
into the correct hands so that Woody's very distinct message gets out.
I think this is one of the most important Outside the Box letters I have
sent out.
Woody normally does not allow his work to go beyond the circles of his
clients, but I suggested to him that this piece was quite macro in cope
and important for both individuals and policy makers everywhere to understand.
In my own simple terms, trees cannot grow in some unlimited manner to the
sky. Families cannot grow debt without limit beyond the growth of their
incomes. And countries have the same constraints. While growth of debt
in the short term is viable, growth of debt faster than the growth of GDP
is not viable over the long run. This is not debatable. It is a simple
fact. Therefore, as Woody says, it is important that you get the growth
side of the equation right as you increase the debt side. Without the proper
balance, you are heading for disaster.
From his intro:
"We weave these three concepts together so as to make possible
an extension and generalization of "macroeconomic policy" as normally understood.
Central to this extension is the need for policies that drive down the
nation's Debt-to-GDP Ratio over time. Accordingly, we identify 15 policies
that jointly reduce the growth of federal debt and increase the growth
of GDP over time. Doing so not only points to a new set of policies for
exiting today's quagmire, but also permits an appraisal of the Obama administration's
current policy proposals. Regrettably these proposals do not fare well
with respect to growth. Furthermore, the extension of macroeconomics we
propose applies not only to the US economy, but to most all others as well.
It should thus be of interest to readers everywhere."
This is longer than the usual Outside the Box, and will require you to
put on your thinking cap. But you need to digest this, and especially the
conclusions. But it is very important that you understand the principles
and concepts Woody discusses. We are at a very critical juncture, and the
paths we choose will have profound impacts on our lives and fortunes. I
cannot overemphasize the point. If we choose a path of growing debt faster
than we can grow GDP, the negative implications for many traditional asset
classes are enormous.
Let me again thank Woody for allowing me to send this on to you. And
for those who post this letter on various sites, just be sure to include
a link to Woody's website, http://www.sedinc.com/.
For those interested in his subscription service you can contact Woody
at woody@sedinc.com or visit
his website.
Thanks,
John Mauldin, Editor, Outside the Box
The
End Game Draws Nigh -
The
Future Evolution of the Debt-to-GDP Ratio
By Horace "Woody" Brock, Ph.D.
Preface: In this new report, we link together three quite different
concepts that have been discussed in these publications during recent years.
First, the problems posed for classical fiscal and monetary policy when
extremely large deficits must be financed; second, the critical importance
of the rate of economic growth as primus inter pares of all economic
variables; and third, the all-important concept of "incentive-structure-compatibility"
introduced by Leonid Hurwicz in the 1960s, and recognized in the award
to him in 2007 of the Nobel Memorial Prize.
We weave these three concepts together so as to make possible an extension
and generalization of "macroeconomic policy" as normally understood. Central
to this extension is the need for policies that drive down the nation's
Debt-to-GDP Ratio over time. Accordingly, we identify 15 policies that
jointly reduce the growth of federal debt and increase the growth
of GDP over time.
Doing so not only points to a new set of policies for exiting today's
quagmire, but also permits an appraisal of the Obama administration's current
policy proposals. Regrettably these proposals do not fare well. Furthermore,
the extension of macroeconomics we propose applies not only to the US economy,
but to most all others as well. It should thus be of interest to readers
everywhere.
A. Introduction and Overview
In our 2008 research programme, we focused on three issues. First,
what exactly caused the worst credit crunch the nation has arguably experienced
since the depression of the 1930s? Second, how did the downturn
in the US morph into a collapse in Planet Earth's GDP rate from nearly
5% in June 2008 to -0.5% in winter 2009? Third, can traditional
macroeconomic policy suffice to turn around the economy? More specifically,
will a killer application of classical fiscal and monetary policy truly
restore the economy to a stable growth trajectory? Or is there an internal
contradiction within macroeconomic policy that could prevent it from succeeding
this time around?
To explain the "perfect storm" in the credit market, we drew extensively
on the new Stanford theory of endogenous risk to demonstrate that there
are three jointly necessary and sufficient conditions to predict and explain
the perfect storm we have experienced: (i) A mistaken market forecast
of some exogenous event that impacts security prices (in this case, a vastly
higher than expected default rate on mortgages); (ii) A high level
of Pricing Model Uncertainty bedeviling bank assets (the true cause of
the "toxicity" of those complex securities that have clogged the
arteries of the banking sector); and (iii) An unprecedentedly
high degree of leverage in the financial sector (money center banks had
off-and-on balance sheet leverage of about 40:1 in contrast to the socially
optimal leverage of 10:1). The reader can tack "greed" and "incompetence"
onto this triad, although doing so diverts attention from the real causes
of today's crisis.
To explain the collapse of economic growth worldwide in an astonishingly
short period, we utilized a game theory model that explained how the cessation
of inter-bank lending amongst the principal money center banks of the world
precipitated the first known case of global credit market emphysema:
The availability of credit dried up almost everywhere in the course of
six months, from Auckland to Iceland. We stressed that this credit contraction
had little to do with "globalization" as properly understood, and had no
counter-part in history.
To explain the potential failure of fiscal and monetary policy in restoring
growth, we demonstrated how the financing of exceptionally large government
deficits usually causes a sharp rise in longer-term real interest
rates -- a rise that bites back and offsets the GDP impact of the fiscal
stimulus being applied. The logic leading to this conclusion is reviewed
just below in the context of Figure 2.
B. The Good News -- A World of Greatly Reduced Uncertainty
A year ago, even six months ago, the great debate centered on whether
the credit market crisis would precipitate either a US or global recession.
A majority predicted a manageable recession in the US, but nowhere else
with the possible exception of the UK. Uncertainty was great, and kept
increasing until recently -- but no longer. The good news today is that
this uncertainty has disappeared. For we now know with probability ¹ that
everything sucks everywhere. Welcome to a risk free world!
To wit, the G-7 economies are all in recession, and more astonishingly
the economy of the planet earth is growing at about -1% or even less. Earnings
are crumbling, global trade has decreased by nearly 10%, rising global
unemployment foretokens social unrest in many quarters, industrial production
has dropped more than ever before, and excess capacity is rising in almost
all manufacturing sectors globally. Stephen Roach of Morgan Stanley believes
that the "world output gap" could reach a mind boggling 8%-10% by year
end. All in all, we have witnessed problems that originated within the
US give rise to global scenarios that were virtually unthinkable
as recently as the summer of 2008, and do so with blinding speed.
Within the US, there are two parallel problems. First, the nation faces
a hitherto unprecedented growth of Federal debt, over both the short and
long run. Second, there is the severity of the recession itself. Figure
1 offers a simple way of understanding what killed growth in the US economy.
The variables shown remind us of the old adage that "History rhymes, but
does not repeat."
History Rhymes: More specifically, the contents of the figure
will disturb those seeking to identify today's US recession with earlier
ones in 2001 or 1991 or 1981 or 1973 or even 1931. No such identification
is possible since the three developments highlighted in the chart and
their improbable synergies are different from anything we have seen
before. This sui generic nature of today's crisis explains why traditional
theories of recessions and "debt super-cycles" possess little explanatory
and predictive power.
For example, according to standard business cycle theory, "pent-up demand"
on the part of consumers is a principal driver of recovery -- but it will
not be this time around. The shift towards less consumption and more savings
due to the implosion of household balance sheets and to demographics is
most probably permanent. If so, this bodes poorly for hopes of a pent-updemand-driven
recovery.
History Repeats: While the context of today's crisis differs
from those in the past, history repeats itself in that the common denominator
of this and all other debt crises has been excess leverage -- our mantra
in these pages for three years. Our greatest fear was that the all-important
role of leverage would be sidestepped in the rush to assign blame and reform
the financial system. In this regard, it is dismaying that, whereas we
have now vented our anger at bankers and capped bonuses, we have not capped
leverage. To be sure, there are calls for "improved bank capitalization"
and related reforms, but the crucial role of excess leverage in bringing
down the global financial system has not been properly recognized. Instead,
excess "greed" has been the principal focus.
Then again, from a game theoretic viewpoint, it may not be surprising
that the role of leverage has been underplayed. For leverage is precisely
what is required for financiers to reap those huge incomes needed to fund
both political parties in Washington, not to mention those "blockbuster"
exhibitions we all love so much at the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New
York. Stay tuned for Loophole Analysis 101.
C. The Bad News -- Two New Uncertainties
Two new uncertainties are now rising to the fore. First, will traditional
fiscal and monetary policy suffice to restore economic growth -- and in
the process restore the viability of the financial sector? Without the
latter, there is little hope of revived growth. Our concerns about the
inadequacy
of traditional macroeconomic policy were discussed at length in our February
2009 PROFILE, and are summarized in Figure 2 taken from that
analysis. The flattening out of the stimulus curve in the figure reflects
that, when fiscal stimulus exceeds a certain level (e.g., 7% on the horizontal
axis), the financing of deficits is likely to cause a sharp increase in
real longer-term interest rates. Importantly, this holds true
regardless of whether the huge deficits are monetized for reasons we carefully
articulated. Higher real yields in turn neutralize the original fiscal
stimulus, thus causing the curve to flatten out.1
We concluded that the risks of policy failure in today's context are
disturbing. Moreover, even if traditional policies do prove successful
in the shorter run, there is a genuine risk that the huge amount of debt
that accrues and must be serviced in the future could transform
the US into a "banana republic" in the much longer run. This risk is heightened
by the need to fund soaring Social Security and Medicare "entitlements,"
as record numbers of baby-boomers retire during the next two decades. Moreover,
as time goes on, it is precisely these longer-term risks that will matter
most to the market, and will increasingly be discounted. Investors of every
stripe will be impacted.
The second new uncertainty focuses on whether new and different fiscal
and monetary policies can help salvage matters, and guarantee a happier
ending.
If the effectiveness of traditional macroeconomic remedies
is in doubt, can its arsenal of policies be expanded so as to restore strong
longer-term equilibrium growth? The answer is yes, and it is the purpose
of this new essay to sketch such an extension of classical macroeconomics.
D. The Critical Dynamics of the Debt-to-GDP Ratio
There is nothing new about a nation running into trouble and running
up large amounts of debt in bailing itself out. There is also nothing new
about attempting to monetize (via "quantitative easing") the resulting
accumulation of debt. The good news for the US is that its total federal
debt of some $10T at the outset of the crisis in 2008 was a manageable
70% of current GDP of $14T.² Suppose debt rises $3T by the end of 2011
as the Congressional Budget Office now predicts, and then rises $7T more
by 2020. The result will have been a doubling of federal debt between 2008
and 2020, rising from $10T to $20T.³ While this increase is shocking,
some forecasts are much worse.
Suppose, moreover, that GDP rises conservatively to $17 trillion in
2020 from today's $14T as a result of a modest 2% GDP growth recovery between
2011 and 2020. Then the federal Debt-to-GDP ratio would rise from today's
0.7 to 1.18. Interestingly, this does not represent the disaster
many observers assume. To begin with, there are nations where a disturbingly
high Debt-to-GDP ratio proceeded to fall way back down over time. Thus,
the US Debt-to-GDP ratio was 1.25 at the end of World War II, yet it fell
to 0.25 by 1980. Britain's Debt ratio upon defeating Napoleon in 1815 was
over 2.7, and it fell back to 0.2 by the end of the 19th century.
In other cases, the Debt-to-GDP ratio has stayed persistently high,
neither increasing nor decreasing dramatically over time. Thus Japan has
had a very high ratio of 1.5 to 1.8 for the past decade. Italy and Belgium,
too, have sustained high ratios in the range of 1 to 1.25. Finally, there
are the countries where the Debt ratio continues to rise after some
initial shock with either hyperinflation or outright default being the
end result. Such has been the fate of myriad banana republics including
some large players such as Brazil, Argentina and Russia. What exactly determines
which nations dig their way out, or else go under? This will be our primary
focus in the pages ahead.
Rebounders versus "Banana Republics": To begin with, note that
what matters is not a onetime rise in the Debt-to-GDP ratio due to a particular
shock (e.g., today's US housing and credit crises), but rather the dynamic
trajectory of the ratio in the years subsequent to the initial rise.
It is the direction of this trajectory that is all-important. If
the Debt ratio continues to rise, then it tends to accelerate due
to the ever-rising cost of servicing this ever-rising "primary" deficit.
Not only does the increasing debt-load itself cause ever-higher servicing
costs, but the rising real rates that typically result from ever-greater
debt make the spiral ever worse. The result can be economic and social
collapse.
If, on the other hand, the Debt-to-GDP ratio stagnates, it tends to
be associated with very low real growth, political paralysis, and a degree
of social disenchantment. If the ratio falls, it is usually because of
a combination of two developments: higher real growth and vigorous
fiscal discipline. Rising living standards, dreams of a better future,
and a sustained belief in democracy are associated with this happiest of
trajectories.
Three Sets of Scenarios: Figures 3.A - 3.C illustrate the stunning
range of outcomes that can result from sustained differences in the growth
rates of debt versus of GDP. We have adapted the analysis here to the case
of the US. We assume an initial federal debt burden of $12T for 2011, and
an initial GDP value of $14T. We then grow these forward at the stipulated
growth rates.
At the one extreme of very low economic growth and very
high debt growth, the Debt ratio rises to an arresting 18 -- a half-way
house to Zimbabwe. At the opposite extreme, the ratio falls to a paltry
0.4, half of today's level. These two extreme outcomes are circled in the
table.
The data in the tables represent real growth rates of both debt
and GDP.
E. The Case for Driving Down the Debt-to-GDP Ratio - "It's the Growth
Rate, Stupid!"
We can deduce from the foregoing analysis that sustainable long run
economic recovery from a debt overload requires two sets of policies:
One set must be dedicated to curtailing the growth of government spending
and hence, the growth of the deficit. The other set must be dedicated to
maximizing real economic growth. In this way, both the numerator and
the denominator of the killer Debt-to-GDP ratio will be managed so as to
maximize future social welfare.
Policies aimed at augmenting real growth are arguably the
more important here. This is because more rapid growth not only reduces
the Debt ratio, but also causes swelling tax revenues which can help to
reduce the deficit each year. That is, stronger growth drives both
the numerator and the denominator in the right directions.
This reality underscores why "It's the real growth rate" must become
the mantra of recoveries not only in the US, but almost everywhere else
as well. Note that this "strong growth" mantra is a far cry from the Obama
administration's counsel to the world at the recent G-7 conference: "Stimulate
everywhere by running higher deficits!"
The True Payoffs from Strong Growth: Looking at matters from a game
theoretical "Who wins?" standpoint, strong economic growth is the rising
tide that lifts all ships. Within a given nation, it alone offers win-win
strategies whereby most all interest groups can come out ahead. Externally
across nations, strong growth generates expanding trade. Happily, the game
of trade between nations is that all-important positive-sum game that encourages
peace and discourages war. It creates "the ties that bind." For example,
the recent globalization of the supply chain is a principal reason why
the business community has been so strangely silent in demanding protectionist
policies during the present crisis. When a significant portion of your
own manufacturing inputs come from "abroad," do you really want trade barriers?
Finally, and perhaps most importantly, productivity-driven strong growth
alone increases living standards that boost the hopes and dreams of people
everywhere for a better tomorrow for their children. When citizens have
realistic hopes of a better tomorrow, social unrest is minimized. Conversely,
when prospects for the long run are grim, voters are easily swayed by demagogues
to vote for the Hitler of their day.
Three Important Books: Are these points obvious? They should
be, but they frankly are not. Moreover, they are never sufficiently emphasized,
and virtually no orientation towards rapid future growth is evident in
the policies and "reforms" proposed by the Obama administration, as we
see in Section G below. The arguments set forth in three books support
the view we are taking as regards the critical role of growth.
First, a widespread lack of understanding and appreciation of
growth led Professor Ben Friedman of Harvard University to write his superb
book, The Moral Consequences of Economic Growth (A. Knopf, 2005).
This is the best work we know of that makes the case for growth and (more
implicitly) for globalization at an appropriate economic and moral level
of analysis.
Second, and at a more practical level, Alan Beattie's brand new
book False Economy: A Surprising Economic History of the World (Riverhead
Press, 2009) provides myriad case studies of how nations chose between
success or survival or ruin by the specific policies they adopt. His case
studies make very clear indeed how policies that depress the Debt-to-GDP
ratio of Figure 3 correlate strongly with success, whereas policies that
inflate the ratio correlate with ruin.
Third, at an even deeper and more theoretical level, there is
the late Mancur Olson's magisterial The Rise and Decline of Nations:
Economic Growth, Stagflation, and Social Rigidities (Yale University
Press, 1982). Olson explains from first principles how special interest
groups become entrenched and, in defending their turf, usually cause nations
to go bust. [Our "entitlements lobby" anybody?]
Olson's logic is game theoretical: He shows that special
interest groups become the principal players in a generalized Prisoner's
Dilemma game whereby individually group-rational strategies lead
to the collectively irrational outcomes of declining growth, diminishing
dreams, increasing social unrest, and ultimately ruin.
This book should be required reading by anyone serving in government. It
is one of the best books the present author has ever read in the field
of political economy.
F. Four Debt-Minimizing Strategies
Before turning to those all-important strategies for maximizing the
growth in the denominator of the Debt-to-GDP ratio, consider several different
strategies for minimizing the growth of the numerator.
First, counter-cyclical policies should consist of temporary
increases in spending -- spending that automatically expires with no Congressional
vote when good times return. The Obama administration policies largely
amount to permanent spending increases, and have been widely criticized
as such.
Second, a new set of government accounts must be introduced that
clearly distinguish government investment expenditures from non-investment
expenditures. The former should not be included as part of "the deficit."
Only an appropriately amortized portion should be included. Moreover, for
reasons stressed below, infrastructure investments should take priority
when discretionary government spending decisions are made. The current
administration has not proposed the required accounting changes. This is,
of course, consistent with its failure to propose serious investment spending
in the first place (see below).
Third, true leadership -not to be confused with fine rhetoric-
is needed to alert citizens to the true disaster we face if the growth
of long-term federal debt is not curtailed. This is particularly true given
the demographic realities that now lie around the corner. Nobody has made
this point better than Stephen Roach in a recent commentary in Morgan Stanley's
"Debating the Future of Capitalism" series, March 26, 2009:
I believe that Congress and the White House should collectively
declare a formal "fiscal emergency" and empower a bi-partisan task force
to develop new guidelines for federal budgetary control.
Washington did this once before in an effort to contain the runaway
budget deficits of the Reagan era -- deficits that now look like child's
play when compared with what lies ahead. The automatic spending caps and
sequestration mechanisms prescribed by the GrammRudman-Hollings Balanced
Budget and Emergency Deficit Control Acts of 1985 succeeded in taking some
of the optionality out of the fiscal debate.
This problem is too big -- and the long-term stakes are too high
-- for fiscal sustainability to be entrusted to the oft-politicized whims
of the year-by-year discretionary budgeting process.
Slam Dunk! Given the reality that today's deficit crisis far exceeds that
of the Reagan era, it is all the more irresponsible that the President
has not already proposed the "fiscal emergency task force" that Roach correctly
calls for. Paul Volcker: Where are you when we need you the most? The reforms
that such a task force would propose are all pretty obvious, including
"sunset provisions" for all manner of government mandates, entitlement
reforms, an end of ear-marking, etc.
Fourth, as noted in Section E above, policies must be adopted
that maximize economic growth since faster growth is the best way to generate
those higher revenues needed to reduce a given deficit. We identify specific
growth policies just below.
Lingering Doubts: Even longstanding Democratic Party liberals
are now expressing shock at the staggering growth of long-term government
debt the US now confronts. Nonetheless, the President's cheerful rhetoric
suggests little concern with the growth of the numerator. To be sure, his
administration's OMB budget projections blithely assume that very
high growth rates will magically return after the next three years, and
nothing solves fiscal problems as well as rapid growth. Yet everyone acknowledges
that these projections are smoke-and-mirrors, constituting a leadership
default of the first magnitude.
Yet could all of this be deliberate? Could the administration's choice
to tax and spend ad infinitum have been politically strategic in
nature? After all, haven't both President Obama and his chief of staff
Rahm Emanuel openly admitted that "the new budget is a means to altering
the very architecture of American life, with government playing a much
larger role than before"? The likelihood that their new architecture would
drive the growth of numerator of the Debt-to-GDP ratio ever-higher and
the growth of the denominator lower was never mentioned.
Do financial commentators even understand this risk? While the press
has expressed appropriate "concern" about the sea of red ink to come, there
is little sense of the true End Game at stake: Which of our Figure 3 scenarios
will occur, and what will it imply?
The answer may well determine whether we face a future of
peace and prosperity, or of war and privation. As a personal aside, this
author has never been more concerned than he is now about the economic
state of the nation.
G. Growth-Maximizing Strategies
We now identify a plethora of growth-maximizing policies. Before doing
so, however, we must recall the true origins of economic growth
itself. Only by understanding these origins can we identify meaningful
pro-growth policies.
G. 1. The Two Principal Sources of Real Economic Growth
At the most basic level, trend growth is the sum of workforce growth
plus productivity growth. Intuitively, this rate of growth equals the rate
of growth of the number of workers producing the pie, plus the rate of
increase of pie production per person hour. In the latter case, we distinguish
between productivity increases that result solely from "working smarter"
versus
increases that result from increased investment per worker, or "factor
stuffing" in economics jargon. The former is called pure labor productivity
growth (e.g., take a weekend off and invent the differential calculus),
whereas the latter is referred to as total factor productivity growth.
The very rapid growth of emerging economies is usually due to a very
high rate of increase in total factor productivity growth as workers gain
access to roads, computers, medicines, and other productivity-improving
(but not free!) endowments for the first time. Developed economies cannot
replicate this strategy, so their growth rate is much lower than the "catch-up"
rates in newer economies.
Thus, policies that augment growth must operate through two channels:
Increasing productivity growth (via enhanced skills and investment),
and/or increasing workforce growth.
Incentive-Structure-Compatibility: In proposing pro-growth policies
of both kinds, we shall keep in mind the requirement that such policies
be "incentive-structure-compatible" with growth, a concept first articulated
by the economist and philosopher Leonid Hurwicz in the late 1950s. Everyone
acknowledges the importance of incentives in a given situation, e.g., the
appropriate carrots and sticks needed to raise children, to motivate workers,
etc.
What Hurwicz first articulated was the way in which the
totality
of incentives throughout society -- its "incentive structure" -- could
be conducive to achieving a particular societal goal, such as maximal
growth. The great importance of Hurwicz's concept is that it provides the
correct analytical bridge between the micro and macro domains of social
life. This was a stunning achievement, and earned him the 2007 Nobel Memorial
Prize.4
Most "policies" and "goals" promulgated by politicians turn out not
to be incentivestructure-compatible with growth, or with any other defensible
objective. That is to say, most policy proposals are hot air.
Figure 3 summarizes the structure of our argument up to this point.
G.2. Productivity-Enhancing Growth Strategies
During the past three decades, a great deal of research has been done
to understand the true sources of productivity growth. In particular, Paul
Romer of Stanford University developed his theory of "endogenous growth"
in which the rate of productivity growth is determined within the
economic system, as opposed to being modeled as an external "residual"
as it previously had been. In what follows, we draw on this and related
research in an informal manner.
1. Infrastructure-Orientated Fiscal Stimulus: Economists increasingly
believe that consumption will fall by 7% from its 72% share of US GDP in
2007 to around 65% over the next three years. Moreover, they believe it
will remain at a significantly lower level. Pessimists conclude that "without
a recovery of household spending to previous levels, the economy will suffer
for a long time." Yet this is not the case.
Should investment spending (both in the corporate sector and in government
infrastructure spending) rise by an offsetting 7% of GDP, the growth rate
of GDP will not only match, but in fact exceed its old rate of growth.
This is due to the role of classical macroeconomic "accelerator/multiplier"
theory: A dollar invested will generate much greater future output than
a dollar of transfer payments or consumption-stimulating tax cuts.
As regards today's humongous fiscal deficits, this reality
implies that, the more the deficit is dedicated to infrastructure investment
each year, then (i) the greater productivity will be (recall that
investment raises productivity), and (ii) the greater both job growth
and output will be over time via the Keynesian multiplier theory. Since
virtually everyone recognizes that US infrastructure spending has been
woefully inadequate for decades, and that consumption has been excessive,
the current recession has, in fact, presented the government with
a golden opportunity to "rebalance" the composition of GDP in a highly
desirable manner.
Yet there are two additional reasons why the increased deficit should be
infrastructure-investment-orientated. First, government expenditure on
productivity-raising investment is not, in fact, "an expenditure"
that raises the deficit and frightens bond market vigilantes. For as explained
above, government investment spending of this ilk should be amortized over
time. Thus, the larger the investment share of a given stimulus package,
the smaller the resulting deficit. Second, to the extent that today's deficit
explosion burdens the young with much more debt to be serviced, then it
is our moral obligation to dedicate the extra spending to investments
that raise the productivity growth and thus the size the future GDP. Doing
so clearly reduces the real burden on future tax payers of servicing the
debt being accumulated today.
Given this rare opportunity -- and moral obligation -- to tilt the economy
towards long overdue investment spending, how can the Obama stimulus package
have fallen so short of the mark? It is frankly embarrassing to witness
Chinese policy advisors like Professor Yu Qiao of Tsinghua University scolding
the US about something as basic as this:
Most of Mr. Obama's stimulus spending is devoted to social
programmes rather than growth promotion, which may exacerbate America's
over-consumption problem and delay sustainable recovery.
Financial Times, Editorial page, April 1, 2009
Qiao's point parallels a principal point we are making in this essay.
Why are we not reading this from Christina Romer or Larry Summers in Washington?
Have the Best and the Brightest once again lost their moral integrity as
they did during the Vietnam War era? Can they seriously believe that more
transfer payments to Democratic Party special interest groups is what the
nation needs in this hour of its distress? The author considers the composition
of the proposed $3 trillion of discretionary stimulus over the next five
years a moral travesty.
Case Study of Energy: As a case study in how poor the administration's
policies are in this regard, consider its energy policies. Is anyone in
the new administration reading about the disastrous 9% annual decrease
in the output of "old" oil (yes, "peak oil" turned out to be true), in
conjunction with a collapse of previously scheduled investments in exploration
and development, and in refining capacity? Are they blind to the supply-crisis
that is unfolding, one that calls not only for "renewable energy," but
also for a major expansion of traditional oil and gas production?
By now, has it not become crystal clear that the increased production
of traditional fuels should come from within the US, given the devolution
of both the political leadership and the infrastructure of those thugocracies
upon whom the US increasingly depends for 40% of its consumption? Is no
thought being given to the rising probability of $500 oil prices -- or
perhaps outright rationing -- when global energy demand recovers? [Recall
how jointly price-inelastic demand and supply curves cause huge
changes in price both upward and downward, as we demonstrated mathematically
five years ago.]
Elementary arithmetic is all that is needed to ascertain that the administration's
BTU gains from increased renewable energy production and conservation from
increased "weather-stripping" will not yield even 10% of the BTU shortfall
that the nation will confront. The reality, therefore, is that the country
needs a vast expenditure of funds on novel and traditional sources
of energy, as well as on our deteriorating energy infrastructure. Expenditures
of this kind would create several million jobs of precisely the
kind that are needed during the next decade. And they would leave the next
generation with an improved infrastructure, in addition to lessening our
extraordinary dependence on imports from rogue states.
But what do we get from the Obama team? A present value tax hike of
up to $400 billion on "big oil" in one form or another, along with weather-stripping
tax credits and expenditures on renewable energy alone. And who is the
newly appointed spokesman for national energy policy? A highly credentialed
academic who strikes virtually everyone as indecisive and ineffectual.
Does even one reader of this essay know his name? [Steven Chu] Of course,
his Nobel Prize supposedly substitutes for his lack of political skills.
By extension, are we about to witness the "quant" financial theorist Myron
Scholes appointed as Treasury Secretary after Tim Geithner steps down?
After all, Scholes too, is a Nobel laureate, even if his notorious "pricing
models" helped to bring down Long Term Capital Management and then the
world economy a decade later. The Lord save us from "The best and the brightest!"
2. Stimulation of Innovation and Venture Capital: While increased
infrastructure investment is one channel to higher productivity growth
(and hence higher GDP growth), innovation is another. As someone who lived
in Menlo Park, California for two decades between 1980 and 2000, the author
was privileged to witness first hand the stunning comeback of the US from
its "rust bowl" status of the 1970s.
The comeback was almost entirely due to a broad array of venture capital
sponsored innovations, starting with the micro-processor. In a Memo he
wrote for Mssrs. Clinton and Rubin in 1996, the author demonstrated that
the US had an "Innovation Quotient" 17 times higher than that of our next
competitor. [Finland. Think Nokia!] As a result, US productivity growth
doubled from its depressed level of 1.4% in the 1970s to 3% by the late
1990s and early 2000s. No other nation came close to this achievement.
Yet now, when we need renewed innovation and enhanced productivity growth
as much as we did in the 1970s, we read that the Obama Treasury Secretary
Geithner has proposed to regulate the venture capital industry. Specifically,
he has called for mandatory SEC registration of large firms, lest the sector
become a "systemic risk" like hedge funds and proprietary trading desks.
As Jack Biddle of the VC firm Novak Biddle Venture Partners has pointed
out in a Wall Street Journal interview (April 9, 2009):
I cannot imagine any venture capital firm being of a size
to pose 'systemic risk,' so they (the administration) either do not understand
the nature of the business, or...What Washington needs to understand is
that bank-style regulation could destroy the culture that created the micro-processor.
3. Education and Elitism: In contemplating the sources of productivity
growth, we would all do well to recall Isaac Newton's celebrated confession
that, in developing his theory of mechanics and the differential calculus,
"I stood on the shoulders of giants." Politically incorrect as it is to
admit, we need policies that identify and reward elite young people
and entrepreneurs from a very early age, and do so regardless of where
they come from. Indeed, we should be seeking young scientific talent worldwide
and paying for immigrants to come to the US and study.
Instead, the stimulus package dedicates significant funds to lowest
common denominator educational expenditures. In particular, virtually nothing
is being proposed to end the monopoly of teachers' unions that discourages
qualified teachers from attempting to teach. The consequences for productivity
growth of the longstanding decline of our public schools is by now well
known, and has been articulated by public figures ranging from Bill Clinton
to Bill Gates and Steve Jobs.
4. Taxation that Rewards Innovation and Success: Both the president
and his chief of staff Rahm Emanuel have been completely candid about their
redistributionist agenda -- an agenda that has even alarmed European liberals.
Were they at all concerned with innovation, productivity, and growth, the
administration would not publicly espouse taxation policies that punish
success and reward failure. In particular, they would not have declared
war on small business, since small businesses typically generate the bulk
of new jobs and innovations that determine the rate of economic growth.
To be sure, disparities in the current tax code do permit Warren
Buffet to incur a much lower tax rate than his receptionist, as he quipped.
Such inequities must be remedied. But the fact remains that the top decile
and quartile of income earners in the US pay a larger share of government
tax revenues than in any other G-7 nation. If so, why does the president
assume it is "fair" to hike the tax rates on top income earners, and only
on this group? From an employment standpoint, the new tax rates may well
send talented young Americans to live elsewhere. Starting in 2011, a New
York City wage earner will pay a marginal tax rate (federal, state, and
local) of over 60% on "high" incomes of $200,000. This rate is higher than
comparable rates in Germany and France where taxes paid secure decent schooling
and medical care, which they do not in the US. Yet even so, France has
witnessed a veritable diaspora of young talent to London, the US,
and Switzerland during the past two decades.
5. Incentives for Investment in the Private Sector: Productivity
growth comes not only from government-sponsored infrastructure of the kind
discussed above, but also from investment by private businesses of all
sizes in new capital stock. It is not clear what the new tax policy will
be towards investment tax credits, but such credits have not yet been identified
as important. They are important, especially at a time when the search
for higher productivity and hence higher economic growth must become the
nation's number one priority.
6. Less Regulation, Not More: "Re-regulation" is back in vogue.
But increased regulation where it's not needed chokes off innovation and
growth. While the financial sector clearly needs re-regulation, it is not
clear that other sectors do. Should the new administration become growth-oriented,
then it must be very careful not to choke off the all-important forces
of "creative destruction."
Even in the financial sector, overkill is likely. In our own view, two
general forms of regulation are needed. First, incentives must be properly
aligned (e.g., banks issuing securitized products must hold a certain proportion
of such products in-house.) Second, leverage must be radically curtailed,
a point we have stressed for three years. As for "excess pay," the limitation
of leverage and proper alignment of incentives will automatically
remedy most excesses of recent years. In brief, the less regulation the
better.
G.3. Workforce-Enhancing Growth Strategies
1. Strong GDP Growth: The six growth-maximizing strategies above
will do more to boost workforce growth than anything else. The strong correlation
of workforce growth and GDP growth is well understood at both an empirical
and theoretical level. Most important, perhaps, is the need to stimulate
innovation so that new industries can rise and replace old industries via
the unfettered forces of creative destruction. Indeed, new industries have
contributed over 75% of job growth in the US during recent decades. Numerous
studies have shown how policies preventing creative destruction within
most of Europe depressed private sector job creation during recent
decades. Most job creation occurred in the public sector. Regrettably,
none of these employment realities have been discussed by the new administration.
2. Deficit Composition: Utilization of today's huge deficits
for boosting investment expenditures triggers those accelerator/multiplier
effects cited above that boost employment far more than transfer payments
or tax cuts do. Yet the administration's stimulus package is very infrastructure-lite,
as was discussed above.
3. Deregulation of the Labor Market: Labor unions have long wanted
to return to the practices of card-check balloting (or majority sign-up)
without secret balloting. Yet such practices are definitionally anticompetitive,
and retard employment growth. The administration initially supported card-check
legislation or the so-called Employee Free Choice Act, but does not have
enough votes to impose it. As to the tricky issue of immigration, the Obama
team is doing a good job to date supporting rights for undocumented workers
who have played such an important role in the nation's economic history,
and must continue to do so in the future.
4. Managing Demographic Change within the Labor Market: There
will be new and important tensions within the US labor market, given the
likely influx of millions of post-65 year old boomers. It is becoming clear
that the retirement planning of this generation was woeful, with up to
half of boomers expecting they could afford a retirement financed by the
ever-rising values of stocks and houses. Such expectations have been shattered,
and many boomers will have to work until age 75 to afford the lives they
expect.
In many ways, this is a good development. However, it presupposes that
the requisite jobs exist. Yet they will not exist unless labor markets
are deregulated, not re-regulated. In particular, minimum wages
and guaranteed hours of work must go by the boards. Maximum flexibility
will be needed to equate supply and demand in the labor market, thereby
reducing tensions between older and younger job-seekers. Such tensions
have already begun to appear in today's scramble for jobs.
A welcome dividend of elderly workers joining the workforce will be
the reduction of the Social Security Trust Fund deficit. If the average
retirement age de facto (not de jure) rises from 64 to 70,
trillions of dollars of unfunded liabilities will evaporate as people draw
upon their Social Security entitlements later, and contribute longer. The
present value of the resulting fiscal savings is truly huge, making it
all the more important that the US labor market become as flexible and
efficient as possible. The administration has never touched upon this issue.
5. Tax Policy: Any student of public finance will recall that
the best kind of tax is the tax that least distorts the efficiency of the
economy. The Value Added Tax (VAT) is well known to be optimal in this
regard. Conversely, taxes on labor (e.g., income taxes) distort workforce
growth and thus, economic efficiency the most. But the administration is
wedded to higher taxes on labor, and has never proposed a VAT.
This concludes our identification of over a dozen policies that can
drive the Debt-to GDP ratio down. Please note that each of the pro-growth
strategies is incentive-structure-compatible with growth, as desired and
as promised up front.
H. Conclusion: When Being "Smart" Is Not Enough
This essay began with a demonstration of the all-important role of the
evolution
of a nation's Debt-to-GDP ratio. The direction of this evolution is a good
proxy for the future success or failure of the nation. We argued that a
one-time shock (like today's US recession) that drives the initial Debt
ratio way up does not pose the problem most people assume. Long
run recovery is possible, but only if policies are adopted that drive the
growth rate of the numerator down, that of the denominator up, and thus
that of the ratio down.
We then identified over a dozen policies that can achieve the goal of
driving down the Debt-to-GDP ratio in the longer term. The End Game that
is now being played is whether policies of this kind are adopted, or whether
they are not. In our view, the Obama administration has adopted both a
philosophical perspective and a set of policies that will drive the ratio
up. If this is indeed the price of a "new American social architecture,"
then it is a price that is too high.
We also proposed that these "ratio management policies" should be viewed
as a refinement, and indeed an extension of classical monetary and fiscal
policy. They add a new dimension to the concept of "macroeconomic policy,"
and to its objectives.
Why do so few administration spokesmen or economic commentators seem
to share our views? Is "politics" the problem? We do not think so, at least
to the extent that growth-maximizing policies are win-win policies that
any good politician should be able to sell. No, the problem is rather one
of the mind-set of a generation that has never before needed to confront
the problems lying ahead, and that is tone deaf to philosophical issues,
as opposed to "policy wonk" issues.
Today's True Challenge -- Governance: In this vein, we proposed
at the end of our February 2009 PROFILE that the root problems
of today are not macroeconomic as much as they are political philosophical:
How can democracy save itself from itself? How can people be made to realize
that a reform of governance is what is now most needed -- more so
even than a reform of Wall Street? And even in the financial sector, it
is increasingly clear that regulatory lapses in Washington were more responsible
than "greed" for what has happened. Messrs. Rubin, Summers, and Greenspan
actively encouraged the most pernicious of the deregulatory policies that
brought down the system.
By now, it is clear that we need bold new constitutional amendments
that mandate (i) sterilization of excess money creation during cyclical
recoveries, (ii) fiscal surpluses during recoveries to pay down
past fiscal deficits, and (iii) deficits during recessions tilted
towards growth-enhancing infrastructure spending, not towards goodies for
special interest groups.
In this regard, economists Martin Wolf and Stephen Roach have both correctly
identified financial market "credibility" as the key to future growth,
inflation, and interest rates. Can today's administration end up with any
credibility when it blithely ignores the very existence of the End Game
we have identified, much less those policies needed to solve it correctly?
Will there be any credibility if the three proposed amendments just cited
are not adopted?
In his magisterial The Rise and Decline of Nations, Mancur Olson
understands that these are the topics that matter -- not greed management
101. Yet barely a word is being said about these issues by the Best and
the Brightest now staffing the Obama White House. Why? The explanation
partly lies in a crisis of intellectual competence. Scholars trained
in "macroeconomics" are as poor in discussing Olson's dilemmas of collective
action as oncologists are in discussing dentistry. The fact that the macroeconomists
in question are "brilliant" is irrelevant. Being smart is not enough.
The abject moral failure of the new team to identify much
less to propose a solution to the End Game is extremely disturbing to the
present author. Despite his initial support of President Obama, he increasingly
wonders whether we have the right team in place. And he is alarmed that
time to rebuild credibility is running out.
© 2009 Strategic Economic Decisions, Inc.
Footnotes:
1 We stressed
that this hike in real rates does not occur in the case of normal-sized
fiscal deficits caused by normal G-7 recessions. It only occurs when the
deficits are exceptionally large, as they are turning out to be this time
around. Accordingly, our analysis cannot be supported by the data of G-7
recessions during the past half century for the simple reason that we have
rarely before experienced deficits of the magnitude confronting the US
today. Nonetheless, our analysis can be supported by the experience
of many emerging market economies that became overly indebted.
2 US federal
debt is often stated to be $5.5T. This is because some $4.5T of debt is
held by the Social Security Administration trust funds and other entities.
But what matters for the purposes of our analysis is the total debt
of some $10T.
3 This forecast
growth of debt excludes the growth of liabilities of the balance sheet
of the Federal Reserve Bank, as well as some off-balance sheet operations
by the Treasury. But much of the costs of bailing out the financial system
should properly be viewed as asset exchanges, and not as increases
in the fiscal deficit per se. The story is highly complicated, and mistaken
interpretations are commonplace.
4 In one of
the grandest achievements in the history of social thought, Hurwicz demonstrated
mathematically that the incentive structure of "true capitalism" alone
is compatible with the societal goals of efficiency, privacy, freedom,
equity, and stability. In our view, this result gave a more compelling
and concrete interpretation of Aristotle's concept of "The Good Life" than
any theory before or since has done.
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