Friday, March 16, 2018

Saving the heartland: Place-based policies in 21st Century America Benjamin Austin, Edward Glaeser, and Lawrence Summers

Saving the heartland: Place-based policies in 21st Century America

Benjamin Austin, Edward Glaeser, and Lawrence Summers

Editor's Note: 

This paper is part of the Spring 2018 edition of the Brookings Papers on Economic Activity, the leading conference series and journal in economics for timely, cutting-edge research about real-world policy issues. Research findings are presented in a clear and accessible style to maximize their impact on economic understanding and policymaking. The editors are Brookings Nonresident Senior Fellow and Northwestern University Economics Professor Janice Eberly and James Stock, Brookings Nonresident Senior Fellow and Harvard University economics professor. Read summaries of all six papers from the journal here.

ABSTRACT

America's regional disparities are large and regional convergence has declined if not disappeared. This wildly uneven economic landscape calls for a new look at spatially targeted policies. There are three plausible justifications for place-based policies–agglomeration economies, spatial equity and larger marginal returns to targeting social distress in high distress areas. The second justification is stronger than the first and the third justification is stronger than the second. The enormous social costs of non-employment suggests that fighting long-term joblessness is more important than fighting income inequality. Stronger tools, such as spatially targeted employment credits, may be needed in West Virginia than in San Francisco.

CITATIONS

Austin, Benjamin, Edward Glaeser, and Lawrence Summers. 2018. "Saving the Heartland: Place-Based Policies in 21st Century America." BPEA Conference Draft, Spring.

CONFLICT OF INTEREST DISCLOSURE

The authors received financial support for this work from the Smith Richardson Foundation. With the exception of the aforementioned, the authors did not receive financial support from any firm or person for this paper or from any firm or person with a financial or political interest in this paper. With the exception of the aforementioned, they are currently not officers, directors, or board members of any organization with an interest in this paper. No outside party had the right to review this paper before circulation.
John Case
Harpers Ferry, WV

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Larry Kudlow to NEC Chair... [feedly]

Larry Kudlow to NEC Chair...
http://www.bradford-delong.com/2018/03/larry-kudlow-to-nec-chair.html

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Paul Krugman Explains Trade and Tariffs [feedly]

Paul Krugman Explains Trade and Tariffs
https://www.nytimes.com/2018/03/15/opinion/paul-krugman-aluminum-steel-trade-tariffs.html

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New Issue! Plus: Regional economic disparities and Hillary Clinton’s Unfortunate Remarks



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New Issue! Plus: Regional economic disparities and Hillary Clinton's Unfortunate Remarks // Dollars & Sense Blog
http://dollarsandsense.org/blog/2018/03/new-issue-plus-regional-economic-disparities-and-hillary-clintons-unfortunate-remarks.html

Our March/April issue is at the printers (and in e-subscribers' inboxes). (Not a subscriber yet? You can subscribe now here!)

We just posted an article from the new issue–Jerry Friedman's "Economy in Numbers" column, Growing Together, Flying Apart: Regional Disparities in American Politics and Economics.  Coincidentally, it provides excellent commentary on the remarks Hillary Clinton made recently, to great controversy, characterizing the parts of the country she won in the 2016 presidential election compared to those won by Trump:

"If you look at the map of the United States, there's all that red in the middle where Trump won," Clinton said. "I win the coast, I win, you know, Illinois and Minnesota, places like that."

"I won the places that represent two-thirds of America's gross domestic product," she continued. "So I won the places that are optimistic, diverse, dynamic, moving forward. And his whole campaign, 'Make America Great Again,' was looking backwards."

Jerry's article talks about the regional economic disparities that have left Trump-voting regions (and rural parts of Clinton-voting regions) behind, and the political consequences of those disparities.

Here is the editorial note for the issue:

This Is Your Economy on Finance

The Dow Jones Industrial Average reached an all-time high of 26,616 points on January 26 of this year. That was after rising almost 8,000 points since Donald Trump's inauguration. The Dow then fell over 2,700 points in early February, which met the technical definition of a market correction—a drop of at least 10% from a recent high. Since then, the Dow and other indices have gone up and down, but mostly up, since the correction.

What does this mean for the rest of us, and what does it tell us about the economy? Much of the business press would like us to think the rising stock market is good news for the economy; that was President Trump's message in his first State of the Union a couple of weeks before the correction. But the business press tipped its hand when it explained the correction as markets' reaction to lower unemployment and a minor uptick in wages. Why would investors consider wage increases bad news? According to John Miller, it's all about class conflict—and about the disconnect between stock market investors (and stock values) and workers on "Main Street." Even slightly higher wages lead investors to fear higher labor costs and inflation. But workers' share of output remains low, and corporate profits continue to be at record highs—numbers which "reveal the unwillingness of the financial powers to share with workers the gains of economic growth."

In the second part of her three-part series on deindustrialization in Keene, N.H., Marie Duggan gets into more detail about the adverse effects of a financialized economy, and its tendency toward financial bubbles, on workers. The story of how a local company, Miniature Precision Bearings, was acquired by a much larger company, Timken, shows how asset bubbles and financialization have contributed to deindustrialization and job loss. When management spends its accumuated capital manipuating stock price, the math means there will be less capital available for investment in the equipmient and people to produce quality product. The financial bubble of the 1990s seemed so great at the time with the rising value of pensions, but it turns out that the market wasn't raising funds for industry, but rather was persuading industry to abandon product quality and investment in the company, workers, and community. The backstory of the decline of rural America may be the giant sucking sound of the stock market removing funds from the industrial base into stock price manipulation, given the 1990s bubble. This is all the more ominious, given that the rise of the stock market under Trump gives every appearance of being a bubble itself.

Gerald Friedman's Economy in Numbers column in this issue tells a related story of regional economic disparities and their political consequences. As Friedman points out, federal policies favoring Wall Street have been better for urban areas on the coasts, but have contributed to deindustrialization and lagging income growth in other regions (and, as we see from Duggan's article, non-urban parts of coastal regions are also falling behind). Both political parties' embrace of neoliberalism has eroded the safety net and has neglected industrial policy.

This issue's cover story suggests an alternative understanding of finance and monetary policy that could point to a way out of neoliberal economic policies that have led to these regional disparities and to widening inequality. Modern monetary theory (MMT) addresses the connection between lending (and debt) and money, and undermines the standard views of taxes and deficits that justify austerity policies. MMT points to a way to stimulate the economy by providing the finance and credit people need to buy products, and that businesses need to be able to sell their products, and in that way moving economic policies beyond austerity and deficit fear-mongering. The MMT approach could finance government policies—including infrastructure spending, direct job-creation, national health care, and industrial policy—that would lead to full employment and greater equality.

Also in this issue: Arthur McEwan tallies up the economic costs of Puerto Rico's ongoing crisis, Noah Berlasky lays bare the neoliberal foundations of the self-help literature, and more!


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Thursday, March 15, 2018

Larry Kudlow to NEC Chair... [feedly]

Larry Kudlow to NEC Chair...
http://www.bradford-delong.com/2018/03/larry-kudlow-to-nec-chair.html

Larry Kudlow has not been an economist in at least a generation. Rather, he plays an economist on TV. Whatever ability he once had to make or analyze or present coherent and data-based economic arguments is long gone—with a number of his old friends blaming long-term consequences of severe and prolonged drug addiction.

The right way to view this appointment is, I think, as if Donald Trump were to name William Shatner to command the Navy's 7th Fleet.

That said, probably little damage will be done. The major day-to-day job of the NEC Chair is to coordinate the presentation of economic policy options to the President, and to try to keep the agencies and departments on the same page as they implement policy. Kudlow has negative talents in either organizing and presenting alternative points of view or in controlling bureaucracies. Therefore the agencies will each continue marching to its different drummer, and there will be no coherent presentation of policy options to the President. But that will not be new.



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Wednesday, March 14, 2018

Webb: Trade, power grab, racism, and other loose ends


Trade, power grab, racism, and other loose ends


Sam Webb

1. Dan Rodrick, Harvard professor, has been studying the global economy and its unfairness for some time. Most of his academic life, in fact. In this analysishe comments on Trump's protectionist measures, announced last week. He doesn't suggest that the sky is going to fall in as these measures wend their way through the global economy, but he does argue that they are no way to address the undeniable inequities in the current global trade regime. If anything, they will, he avers, make that urgent task more, not less, difficult.

At about the same time, I read an interview of Leo Gerard, the president of the United Steel Workers Union. What bothered me wasn't Gerard's defense of Trump's tariffs. I expected that. What I found bothersome is that he had nothing — not a word — to say about the potential negative impacts on other sections of the working class here and elsewhere, resulting from Trump's actions.

Nor did he offer a comment on the peculiar situation of the union's alignment with a president that is authoritarian and backward in every way. We should expect more from a leader of the labor movement in these difficult times.

2. What we saw last week is the usurpation of power and decision making by a lone individual in the White House. Worse still, this individual is narcissistic and impulsive to the extreme, authoritarian to the core, and singularly bereft of any humanity. Meanwhile, the Republican majority in Congress act as enablers of this rogue president. This danger, unprecedented in my experience, is the ground floor of authoritarian rule. This would be discouraging to any sane person if it were not for a whole array of state institutions, social constituencies, and the media that are resisting Trump's power grab. Still, it's fair to ask: are we doing enough?

3. Trump's said a lot of ugly things in his speech at a rally in W.PA. over the weekend, but the ugliest, but not necessarily the one receiving the most coverage, was his dismissal of Representative Maxine Waters, Democrat of California, as a "low-I.Q. individual." Bear in mind that this was delivered in a predominantly white region, where such racist rhetorical volleys resonate among a considerable section of white voters. No one should think that Trump's base is strictly animated by its economic discontent. Trump, obviously, doesn't believe so. And yet, the notion persists that it is enough for Democrats to present an economic alternative that addresses wage and income inequality to turn the tables in November.

4. Any analysis that occludes the rise of right wing extremism in the mid-1970s and its persistence into this century doesn't help us understand either the past or the present, including the Trump phenomenon. Moreover, it leaves its proponents (and those they influence) flatfooted strategically and tactically. And yet, this blind spot continues to inform the thinking of some progressives and radicals.

5. I hope Mueller does his job – and it appears that he is — and the rest of us do ours in the voting booth in November. Both are necessary to escape this extraordinarily poisonous, perilous, and unprecedented situation in which we — and the world's people — find ourselves in. If we had any doubts about this, Trump's behavior and the newest revelations over the past two weeks should have dissipated them.

6. I just finished watching, "7 Seconds," on Netflix. What a compelling story and performance! The production and its actors deserve an award of some kind.


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John Case
Harpers Ferry, WV

The Winners and Losers Radio Show
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Tuesday, March 13, 2018

Steel tariffs: Playing Trump’s protectionist game

Good summary, but does not actually take a position

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Steel tariffs: Playing Trump's protectionist game // Article – People's World
http://www.peoplesworld.org/article/steel-tariffs-playing-trumps-protectionist-game/

President Donald Trump's imposition of steel and aluminum tariffs has sparked debate among labor leaders, union activists, and progressives. Questions about the effectiveness of the tariffs as a policy and about Trump's political motivations have resulted in a variety of opinions. The article below is one of several analyses and commentaries that People's World will publish on the topic. The views represented here are those of the author.

Just like the retailers and manufactures who dutifully awarded one-time bonuses to employees immediately after the passage of the GOP tax cut bill, Republic Steel lined up to play its part last week following Trump's imposition of new tariffs on imported steel and aluminum. In a move so smooth it could have been scripted by a public relations wizard, within hours of Trump signing off on the hefty new import taxes, the Canton, Ohio-based company announced it would again fire up its plant in Lorraine and create 1,000 new jobs.

Republic fulfilled its role in Trump's political PR game, but it wasn't the only one. Some critics argue there are a few in the labor movement, as well as some Democratic politicians, who have also been a little too eager to join the chorus.

They point to figures like United Steelworkers (USW) International President Leo Gerard, who said that Trump's tariff decision "aligns with what every citizen knows: these products are vital to our national security." He was echoing Trump's official rationale for the new duties: that U.S. steel is vital to production of U.S. war machines.

Noting another aspect of the pro-tariff argument, Sen. Sherrod Brown of Ohio praised Trump, saying, "This welcome action is long overdue for shuttered steel plants across Ohio and steelworkers who live in fear that their jobs will be the next victims of Chinese cheating."

For the Steelworkers and the Democrats that they have long backed, the embrace of the White House's latest move is being spun as a sort of "getting what we can out of Trump" tactic. To be sure, there is substance to the claim; it's not like the USW is enlisting in the Trump army lock, stock, and barrel. Gerard says the tariffs are "only one of the many issues" his members care about, and, indeed, at the same time that the union is lauding Trump's tariffs, it is also working hard to block his guy, right-to-work Republican Rick Saccone, from winning a Congressional seat in Pennsylvania's steel country.

Gerrard, Brown, and others have been put into a tough spot, and that's exactly where Trump wants them. He has signaled he's willing to adopt portions of their agenda on trade—an agenda which for so long has been spurned by the free trade mantra that dominates the leadership of both of the mainline political parties. How could they not express some satisfaction and even grudging acknowledgement of Trump's efforts?

When Leo Gerard says, "For too long, our political leaders have talked about the problem but have largely left enforcement of our trade laws up to the private sector," he's absolutely right.  For decades, workers (and not just those in the U.S.) have been hung out to dry as globalization proceeded apace with only minimal efforts made to help them navigate the transition of industrial and technological change.

Shareholder interests alone have dominated the economic conversation and shaped trade agreements. The need for a not just fairer trade, but for a smarter and more cooperative international regulatory regime has been apparent to unions and progressive economists for a long time.

However, can protectionism—which is really what these tariffs amount to—save the day for steel? And even if tariffs were a part of the solution to the woes of unfair trade and abusive labor practices overseas, is what Trump's proposing actually going to help?

It is estimated that a maximum of 140,000 people are directly employed in the steel industry in the United States, though some estimates put the number closer to 90,000. It is these workers—and even more so their bosses in the Steel Manufacturers Association—who are the supposed beneficiaries of any ramping-up of U.S. steel production. They'll have greater job security, and new jobs will be created as plants like the one in Lorraine come back on-line.

But citing figures from the Commerce Department, automakers and major industrial equipment manufacturers claim that 6.5 million Americans are employed in downstream manufacturing industries that consume steel and aluminum—including cars, aircraft, aluminum cans and other products, pipe manufacturers, and building materials. As tariffs bump up the price of the metals their industries rely on, they argue that the country may actually end up losing jobs.

It's a bit of whom do you believe: this capitalist or that one? But there are reports suggesting that when George W. Bush implemented steel tariffs in 2002, as many as 200,000 jobs were lost in downstream industries—a number greater than the size of the entire U.S. steel-producing workforce at the time.

All that to say, it is not at all clear that Trump's tariffs will be a net gain for U.S. workers. They may arguably be a boon to steel workers, but whether the total job impact will be positive is debatable. And even for steel workers, the long-term outlook is not assured; Bush's tariffs slowed the decline in the number of U.S. steel jobs, but only temporarily.

As for the national security argument? Totally bogus.

Under a 1933 law, the Pentagon is required to give preferential treatment to domestic suppliers of steel and aluminum construction materials UNLESS the country's producers cannot meet demand. Even with the most massive military machine on Earth, the Pentagon currently only consumes 3 percent of U.S.-made steel and aluminum. Over two-thirds of all steel used in the United States is still domestically-produced, so there is absolutely zero chance that America would be unable to meet its metal needs in case of a war. But national defense is always a go-to argument when you want to stop a policy debate.

So how about the dumping claim—the oft-repeated desire to stop China from flooding the U.S. market with cheap steel? China now accounts for nearly half of global steel production, and without doubt that country's production has pushed down the international price for the metal. But the China-bashing that Trump and his entourage (and some union leaders) engage in just doesn't hold up when you look at the numbers.

Producing a tiny 2.4 percent of the raw steel consumed in the U.S., China doesn't even make the top-ten list of foreign importers. All the talk of stopping Chinese dumping is a political show staged by Trump. He is pitting worker against worker, both domestically and internationally. Chinese workers are not the problem. Chinese steel is not the problem. Policies that force workers to compete on wages and investment decisions made for private economic interests rather than social benefit are the problem.

Trump is already looking ahead to the midterm elections and, even further, to 2020. The tariffs are not just a manifestation of the economic nationalist outlook that he has spouted for decades; they are also a part of a strategy to hold onto and expand upon the 43 percent of union households who voted for him in 2016.

If he is to maintain his advance into former Democratic strongholds like Michigan, Pennsylvania, Ohio, and Wisconsin, he knows that driving a wedge into organized labor is a necessity. And tariffs may be just the thing that will do the trick. As for the rest of the Republican Party, the ideological blinders of free trade (and campaign contribution checks) are forcing many to keep their distance from Trump, even though there could be some electoral gain for them.

President Donald Trump, posing with workers, signs the proclamation on steel imports. | Susan Walsh / AP

Trump is hoping that Leo Gerard is correct when he says it will be "very hard" for union steelworkers to forget what Trump has done for them when it comes time to head to the voting booth. That is precisely the calculation that Trump is making with these tariffs. It is a dangerous game for unions and liberal politicians, but given their constituencies' demands and the fact that a president is finally calling for some of the things they've been demanding for a generation, their options are limited.

Labor and progressives should be cautious of anything Trump puts on the table; he's not thinking of their interests with any of his proposals—these tariffs included.

As for the long-term way out, the dilemma brings to mind the words of Frederick Engels from some 130 years ago: "Protection is at best an endless screw, and you never know when you have done with it. By protecting one industry, you directly or indirectly hurt all others, and have therefore to protect them too. By so doing, you again damage the industry that you first protected, and have to compensate it; but this compensation reacts, as before, on all other trades, and entitles them to redress, and so on ad infinitum."

There is no easy answer to the problems of unfair trade, but knee-jerk protectionism is not likely to be part of it.


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