Friday, December 25, 2020

Tim Taylor: What Should Be Included in Income Inequality? [feedly]

An insightful, class look at diverse dimensions of rising inequality; converging on economic grounds for broad unity for incomes in the bottom 90%

What Should Be Included in Income Inequality?
Tim Taylor
https://conversableeconomist.blogspot.com/2020/12/what-should-be-included-in-income.html

Like many other concepts in economics, "income" is an idea that is only simple if you don't think about it too much. Moreover, one's measure of the inequality of income will depend to some extent on the measure of income that is chosen. 

One well-known example is whether income inequality is measured before taxes or after taxes. Another is whether income inequality is measured after including benefits of government programs, including not just cash payments like Social Security or Temporary Assistance to Needy Families or unemployment insurance, but also the value of noncash programs like Medicare, Medicaid, and food stamps. The Congressional Budget Office publishes regular reports showing income inequality adjusted in these various ways. 

As one either digs into these questions (or is slowly dragged into the swamp of these questions, depending on one's perspective), you are forced to face an overall question: In a very big-picture economic sense, what is produce in an economy in a given year as measured by gross domestic product is equal to the total income received in a year by parties throughout the economy. But when we measure inequality of "income"--even when we use a broad measure that includes taxes and the value of government transfers--it represents only a part of the economy. 

For example, if we start counting noncash government benefits as income, what about noncash benefits received by workers, like the value of employer-provided health insurance, employer-provided contributions to a pension or a retirement account, or an employer-provided life insurance plan. Economists point out that if you live in a house you own, you are--in effect--renting that house to yourself, and one could in principle count the "imputed income" you receive from yourself as part of your personal income, just like any other landlord is required to count rental income. After all, living rent-free because you own a house is a form of the capital income that you receive from home ownership. Or what about business owners who receive a benefit both from the annual salary they receive, but also from reinvesting company profits in a way that leads to a rising value of their business? 

With all of these ideas in mind, economists have been trying to develop "distributional national accounts," which try to figure out what income inequality would look like with everything included. Two leaders in this effort are Emmanuel Saez and Gabriel Zucman, and they lay out the state of play in this effort "The Rise of Income and Wealth Inequality in America: Evidence from Distributional Macroeconomic Accounts" (Journal of Economic Perspectives, Fall 2020, 34:4, pp 3-26). Saez and Zucman have been leaders in using tax data to estimate income inequality (instead of using data from household surveys), but they are now focusing more on forms of income that the tax data leaves out. They write: 

On the labor side, untaxed labor income includes tax-exempt employment benefits (contributions made by employers to pension plans and to private health insurance), employer payroll taxes, the labor income of non-filers, and unreported labor income due to tax evasion. The fraction of labor income which is taxable has declined from 80 to 85 percent in the post-World War II decades to just under 70 percent in 2018, due to the rise of employment fringe benefits—in particular the rise of employer contributions for health insurance, particularly expensive in the United States. Most studies of wage inequality ignore fringe benefits even though they are a large and growing fraction of labor costs. As for capital, only one-third of total capital income is reported on tax returns. Untaxed capital income includes undistributed corporate profits, the imputed rents of homeowners, capital income paid to pension accounts, and dividends and interest retained in trusts, estates, and fiduciaries.

Thinking about how to allocate all of these forms of income to specific individuals, and then to form an income distribution based on the results, is an enormous task. It necessarily involves a lot of judgement calls, which are discussed in some detail in the paper. But here's an example of one of their results. This figure shows the average tax rate paid by different parts of the US income distribution at different times--where "income" here is broadly defined to include everything, not just what people see on a pay stub or report on their taxes, and taxes include all taxes at the federal, state, and local level. 

Several patterns from this figure are especially striking. First, for most of the income distribution in most of these years, the tax burden looks relatively flat--that is, once you combine federal income rates (where those with high incomes pay a higher share of income) with all the other taxes and forms of income, the share of income paid in taxes rises a bit with income, but not a lot. Second, if you look at the far right-hand-side of the figure, focused on the upper 1% and smaller slices of the top 1%, the average tax rate paid looks to have declined sharply. The basic story here is that back in the 1950s,  corporate tax rates, capital gains tax rates, and the top marginal income tax rates were all higher. Now, those with very high income levels have figured out ways for that income to come in the form of capital gains, so that the tax rate is relatively low and taxes can be deferred until the capital gain is realized. 

But as I mentioned a moment ago, it takes a lot of assumptions to develop this data, and others have argued that the Saez-Zucman assumptions are in various ways biased toward showing greater inequality than in fact exists. Wojciech Kopczuk and Eric Zwick present some of the counterarguments in "Business Incomes at the Top"(Journal of Economic Perspectives, Fall 2020, pp 27-51). They focus in part on the distinction between wage inequality and business inequality. 

As a vivid example, think for a moment about some of the employer-paid benefits of being a top corporate executive some decades back in the 1960s and 1970s, like company-paid cars, country club memberships, meals and entertainment, gold-plated health insurance, bring-your-family "work" events and vacations, and personal assistants. At the highest level, there were perks like having a plane available for private use. Business owners can have the firm donate to charities, free of taxes, and then have salaried family members run those charities. And this doesn't include executive benefits which are contractual commitments made in the present but only paid in the future, like lavish retirement plans. All of these used to be counted as business expenses, not as income to the executives involved.  

These kinds of issues suggest a potential problem in comparing levels of income inequality over time, as is done in the figure above. It may be that in the past, top executives faced higher tax rates on the "income" that they reported for tax purposes, but also received much higher levels of "income" in various untaxed forms via employer-paid benefits. Now these patterns have changed. Top executives face lower tax rates than they did some decades ago on the income reported for tax purposes, but they also have fewer options for receiving such a wide array of untaxed employer-paid benefits. 

Kopzcuk and Zwick point out that there have been dramatic shifts in the administrative form in which business income is received in the economy. From the 1960s until into the mid-1980s, more than 80% of business income was typically received by C-corporations--the big companies with lots of stockholders that commonly referred to as "corporations." But since about 2000, it's been common for the C-corporations to receive about 40% of all business income, and even less in some years. Instead, a much larger share of business income is being received by "pass-through" companies, like partnerships, S-corporations and RICS and REITS, where all the profits earned must be passed through to the owners each year. These shifts in corporate ownership affect the ability to keep business income inside the company and thus delay paying income taxes on those earnings, but may also affect the other ways in which the owners of these companies can benefit personally from business expenses.   

Many other issues arise in thinking about what a full measure of income inequality would look like. There seems to be general agreement that the income inequality has risen in recent decades, pretty much however you measure it, but the specific amount will depend heavily on the measure of income used. The idea of multiple kinds of income inequality shouldn't be a shock: indeed, in some cases it's a feature rather than a bug. For example, in some cases you might want to know about the amount of inequality generated by market-paid wages, and the compare that to the inequality that remains after taxes are paid, and then compare that to the inequality that remains after transfer payments are made, and then dig into how all of these estimates are affected by the problems in measuring "income" described here. 

There also seems to be a consensus that these issues are still being worked out, and that it may take some time to work them out. For example, Saez and Zucman write:  

In time, we hope that our prototype distributional national accounts will be taken over by governments and published as part of the official toolkit of government statistics. Inequality statistics are too important to be left to academics, and producing them in a timely fashion requires resources that only government and international agencies possess. A similar evolution happened for the national accounts themselves, which were developed in the first half of the twentieth century by scholars in the United States (such as Simon Kuznets), the United Kingdom (such as James Meade and Richard Stone), France (such as Louis DugĂ© de Bernonville), and other countries, before being taken over by government agencies. 

It may take decades before we get there. Economic statistics, like aggregate output or concentration of income, are not physical facts like mass or temperature. Instead, they are creations that reflect social, historical, and political contexts. How the data sources are assembled, what conceptual framework is used to combine them, what indicators are given prominence: all of these choices reflect objectives that must be made explicit and broadly discussed. Before robust distributional national accounts are published by government agencies, there are still many methodological choices to be debated and agreed on by the academic and statistical community. As part of that process, our prototype can be used to characterize the rise of inequality in the United States, to confront our methods and findings with those of other studies, and to pinpoint the areas where more research is needed.

I would be remiss in not mentioning  the third paper published in this same symposium in the Fall 2020 issue of JEPFlorian Hoffmann, David S. Lee, and Thomas Lemieux discuss "Growing Income Inequality in the United States and Other Advanced Economies" (pp. 52-78). These authors look at contributions of labor and non-labor income in contributing to rising income inequality. They focus on rising labor income disparities among different income groups, and some ways in which this plays out differently for men and women. They also show rising inequality of incomes in Germany, Italy, and the United Kingdom, although not in France.   

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Dean Baker: Quick Note on the Federal Reserve Board [feedly]

Quick Note on the Federal Reserve Board
Dean Baker
http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/beat_the_press/~3/rFZkCJLDCk8/

When Pennsylvania Senator Pat Toomey, at the last minute, insisted on adding language to the pandemic rescue package, stripping the Fed of emergency powers, I was among those screaming "No Deal."  I have not always been a huge fan of the Fed, but I felt this plan was a deliberate effort to sabotage an effective response to any financial/economic crises that may arise in a Biden administration.

Just for background, we know that the Republicans are perfectly fine with sabotaging the economy in order to hurt the political prospects of a Democrat in the White House. This is exactly what they did under President Obama, as they demanded recovery killing austerity as they feigned concern about deficits. Republican Senate Leader Mitch McConnell openly said that his job was to make Obama a one-term president.

With this recent history, there can be little doubt that Republicans in Congress will do everything they can to sabotage the economy under President Biden. In this context, it is especially important that the Fed have the ability to take the steps necessary to counteract crises that could arise.

The specific power at issue with Senator Toomey's proposal was whether the Fed could establish special lending facilities to help a market facing a crisis. This could be the situation if, for example, there is a sudden fear of widespread bankruptcies in the municipal bond market, if a major city defaults on its debt.

Without emergency powers, the only thing the Fed could do is to push down Treasury bond rates (they are already very low) and buy some short-term municipal debt. It could not engage in purchases of long-term debt and commit to support the market. Many, perhaps most, Republicans in Congress would then be celebrating as "Democrat" cities lost their ability to borrow and suddenly were unable to pay their bills.

Fed critics (I have often been one myself), have argued that we should not view the Fed as an ally of progressives. It certainly has a very mixed record, so there are plenty of grounds for suspicion. Under Paul Volcker and Alan Greenspan, the Fed repeatedly raised interest rates in an explicit effort to weaken workers' bargaining power and thereby reduce wages. This was done ostensibly to prevent inflation.

More recently, the Fed, beginning under Janet Yellen and continuing under Jerome Powell, the current chair, has acknowledged the role of monetary policy in inequality and especially racial inequality. Chair Powell has committed to keeping interest rates low until we are seeing a full employment economy that is creating serious inflationary pressures

This change in approach stems at least in part from the Fed Up Campaign, organized by the Center for Popular Democracy. (Ady Barkan was lead organizer in getting this campaign going.) This group brought labor and community organizers together to press the Fed for more pro-worker policies. (I was one of the economists who worked with Fed Up.) Chair Yellen and other members of the Fed's leadership took the effort seriously and listened to the arguments. This was a big victory.

As far as the Fed's conduct in the pandemic recession, I would mostly be supportive. They lowered interest rates as much as possible and acted to stabilize markets. This did help businesses and the stock market, but it also led to a housing boom that created hundreds of thousands of jobs. In addition, lower interest rates allowed millions of middle class homeowners refinance, putting thousands of dollars in interest savings in their pocket every year going forward. I have a hard time seeing the world being in a better place if the Fed had sat on its hands.

By contrast, I was one of few economists to criticize the bailouts in the Great Recession. The banks and financial institutions were in a crisis of their own creation, they had made hundreds of billions of dollars of bad loans due to their own greed and stupidity. Being a good capitalist, I thought it was important to let these companies enjoy the fruits of their labor. (We also would have gotten instant financial reform, as the financial sector would have been quickly downsized, eliminating an enormous source of economic waste.) 

The Fed was 100 percent complicit in covering the tracks of the industry, including pushing end of the world stories to force Congress to approve the TARP. By far the best argument for the TARP was that the commercial paper market was shutting down. This meant that even healthy non-financial companies, like Verizon and Boeing, could not get the money they needed to meet their payroll and other regular bills. This really would have been an economic catastrophe.

However, the dirty little secret here was that the Fed always had the power to sustain the commercial paper market on its own, without any assist from Congress. We found this out the weekend after the TARP passed when the Fed announced the creation of a commercial paper lending facility.

The long and short, is yes, we absolutely have to view the Fed with suspicion, but it can play a positive role, and has so far in this crisis. It would be foolish to let Republicans take away its ability to do so in a future crisis.

 


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Wednesday, December 23, 2020

The Ghost of Sabotage Future [feedly]

PM: The Ghost of Sabotage Future
https://www.nytimes.com/2020/12/21/opinion/republicans-covid-stimulus.html

The not-a-stimulus deal Congress reached over the weekend — seriously, this is about disaster relief, not boosting the economy — didn't come a moment too soon. Actually, it came much too late: Crucial aid to many unemployed Americans and businesses expired months ago. But now some of that aid is back, for a while.

True, the aid will be less generous than it was in the spring and summer: $300 a week in enhanced unemployment benefits, rather than $600. But because the workers still out of a job as a result of the pandemic tended to have low earnings even before the coronavirus struck, they will, on average, be receiving something like 85 percent of their pre-Covid-19 income.

By the way, although the one-time $600 checks to a much wider group of Americans are getting much of the media coverage, they account for only a small percentage of the overall expense and are far less crucial than the unemployment benefits to keeping families afloat.

So what's not to like about this relief package? There's some dumb stuff, like a tax break for corporate meal expenses — fighting a deadly pandemic with three-martini lunches. But the serious problem with this deal is that economic aid will end far too soon: Enhanced unemployment benefits will last just 11 weeks. And the process by which the deal was reached has ominous implications for the future.


Why isn't 11 weeks of aid enough? Because we won't be able to begin a vigorous economic recovery until a large fraction of the population is vaccinated, which might not happen until the summer or even the early fall. And we're still down around 10 million jobs from pre-Covid levels; even if we can regain jobs as quickly as we did during the false dawn of May and June (when the Trump administration insisted that the pandemic was ending), it will take months more before we're anywhere close to full employment.



So while the new legislation provides a sort of bridge to the post-Covid future, it's a bridge that spans only part of the chasm ahead. And the way the bill was passed offers few reasons to be optimistic about Republican willingness to let the Biden administration finish the project.

Remember, until recently Mitch McConnell showed little interest in passing any kind of relief package. And there's no mystery about what changed his mind: It was all about the Senate runoffs in Georgia. "Kelly [Loeffler] and David [Perdue] are getting hammered" over the failure to provide aid, he told his political allies.

Once those races end on Jan. 5, McConnell's sure to lose interest all over again. And unless Democrats win both elections, he'll still be Senate majority leader, in a position to stand in the way of any further economic relief.



Beyond that, the final hurdles to reaching an agreement were a reminder of something we should have learned during the Obama years: When a Democrat is in the White House, Republicans try to sabotage the economy. And the sabotage doesn't stop with using phony deficit concerns to block necessary spending; it also involves deliberately increasing the risk of financial crisis.

Remember, G.O.P. flimflam when Barack Obama was president went beyond posing as deficit hawks to block needed fiscal stimulus. It also involved constant criticism and harassment of the Fed over its efforts to rescue the economy. And now it's happening again.

Some background: Although the pandemic recession was deep and ugly, it could easily have been even uglier. For a few weeks in March, America teetered on the edge of a financial crisis approaching the meltdown following the fall of Lehman Brothers in 2008. Fortunately, however, this incipient crisis was quickly contained by the Federal Reserve, which stabilized markets both by purchasing trillions of dollars' worth of financial assets and by making it clear that it would do even more if necessary.

That was a job well done. But the risk of financial crisis hasn't gone away, so we want to make sure that the Fed has the tools to meet future challenges.

Yet last month Steven Mnuchin, the blessedly departing Treasury secretary, gratuitously clawed back hundreds of billions of dollars in budget backing for Fed emergency lending programs, making those funds unavailable to his successor. And talks over economic relief almost fell apart over a last-minute demand by Senator Pat Toomey, backed by the Republican leadership, that the legislation bar the Fed from restarting some of these programs or anything like them.

In the end, this poison pill appears to have been rendered mostly harmless, with face-saving language that prevents exact copycat programs but seems to leave room for slightly different programs that would achieve the same results.

But the episode was a preview of things to come. If another crisis develops, expect Republicans to do all they can to prevent an effective response.

So how should we feel about this relief deal? The glass is half full: For millions of American families, the next few months will be less hellish than they would have been otherwise. The glass is half empty: Unless Democrats win those Georgia seats, expect an ugly spring and years of economic sabotage ahead.

The Times is committed to publishing a diversity of letters to the editor. We'd like to hear what you think about this or any of our articles. Here are some tips. And here's our email: letters@nytimes.com.

Follow The New York Times Opinion section on Facebook, Twitter (@NYTopinion) and Instagram.

Paul Krugman has been an Opinion columnist since 2000 and is also a Distinguished Professor at the City University of New York Graduate Center. He won the 2008 Nobel Memorial Prize in Economic Sciences for his work on international trade and economic geography. @PaulKrugman


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Friday, December 18, 2020

Trumpism and crony capitalism [feedly]

Trumpism and crony capitalism
https://crookedtimber.org/2020/12/11/trumpism-and-crony-capitalism/

 -- via my feedly newsfeed

Some Thoughts on US Wealth Patterns [feedly]

As usual with Tim 'Taylor, the view beneath the lead in US inequality (ratio of wealth/GDP for 1% vs below) -- gets complicated over time.

Some Thoughts on US Wealth Patterns
https://conversableeconomist.blogspot.com/2020/12/some-thoughts-on-us-wealth-patterns.html

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The Coase Theorem: A Process of Becoming [feedly]


A fascinating dive from Tim Taylor into the ways and means a managed market-mixed economy can handle the COSTS of EXTERNALITIES [not just weather, but costs, like pollution, not included in the transaction price of the commodities produced that are imposed on society at large, or even someone else's property rights.]
Even, indeed especially, socialist and social democratic-led societies must find efficient ways to minimize waste in managing such costs.

$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$

The Coase Theorem: A Process of Becoming
https://conversableeconomist.blogspot.com/2020/12/the-coase-theorem-process-of-becoming.html

Steven Medema know more about the history of the Coase theorem than many of us know about our spouses. So whether you are distantly or intimately familiar with the idea, you are likely to pick up some insights in his article, "The Coase Theorem at Sixty" (Journal of Economic Literature, 2020, 58:4, pp. 1045-1128, subscription required).

In the 1960 article by Ronald Coase, "The Problem of Social Cost," the Coase "theorem" was not actually a theorem, nor does it seem to be the main point of the entirely verbal essay.  Coase was working on various questions of regulatory economics, which might be summarized as the question of the appropriate government reaction in situations where market don't perform well. For example, it had been recognized since the 1920s and the work of A.C. Pigou that some economics activities might involve "externalities," where social costs were imposed on others who were not part of the market transaction. Pollution is an obvious example. The common policy prescription was that the government should estimate the value of this additional social cost, and then impose a "Pigovian tax" so that the firm producing the externality would face the actual social cost of its action--in effect, it would no longer be able to dump its pollution garbage into the environment for free. 

Coase approached the problem of social cost from a different angle. Medema writes: 

The article makes three basic points. First, externalities are reciprocal in nature. Yes, A's actions impose costs on B, but to restrain A in favor of B imposes costs on A. The economic problem, Coase emphasized, is to avoid the more serious harm. ... Second, if the pricing system works costlessly and rights are assigned over the relevant resources, agents will negotiate a solution that maximizes the value of output, and this outcome will be reached irrespective of to which party those rights are assigned—the idea that came to be known as the Coase theorem. ... In the frictionless world of welfare economics circa 1960, the negotiation result shows that Pigouvian remedies are completely unnecessary for an efficient resolution of externality problems. Third, in the real world of positive transaction costs, all coordination mechanisms—markets, firms, and government—are costly and imperfect, meaning that there is no route to the optimum. The best that we can do is to choose among imperfect alternatives ...  Comparative institutional analysis, then, becomes the method of choice, and the goal, from an economic perspective, is to select the coordination mechanism that maximizes the value of output for the problem under consideration.
Here's how I tried to convey the Coase "theorem" insight in an article I wrote last summer about "Are Property Rights a Solution to Pollution? (PERC Reports, Summer 2020). In my words: 
In one famous example, Coase discussed the hypothetical situation of a railroad running beside a farmer's field. Sparks from the train would sometimes start fires in the crops. How should this external cost—a kind of pollution "externality"—be addressed? 
For non-economists, an obvious answer is for the government to pass a law. For example, the government might require that the railroad company install spark arrestors on the smokestacks of its locomotives, use a different blend of fuel or a new engine, leave a buffer zone beside the field, or relocate the rails altogether. Alternatively, the government might declare that the farmer should build a fence to protect the field, install a sprinkler system, change crops, leave a buffer zone, or perhaps even relocate the farm. 

Rather than viewing anti-pollution efforts in terms of how governments should choose which rule to impose, Coase took an altogether different approach. He pointed out that the problem could be rephrased in terms of property rights—in other words, who has what rights? For example, the government could say that the railroad company had a right to emit sparks, in which case the farmer would have to figure out the most cost-effective way of protecting the fields. Alternatively, the government could say that the farmer had a property right not to have sparks land among his crops, in which case the railroad would have to figure out an answer—which might include installing spark arrestors or other technology to prevent fires from occurring, or even just paying the farmer to put up with the annoyance.

In Coase's approach, the question of how to respond to problems of pollution such as unwelcome railroad sparks did not need to be delegated to a government vote or board of experts. Nor did the problem of pollution, in Coase's view, need to be solved by regulators imposing a Pigouvian tax to account for the "externality" imposed. After all, governments or any outside groups will inevitably possess much less detailed and hands-on information about the range of possible options—and how those options might be tweaked or combined—than railroads and farmers. Moreover, any choice of specific government regulations will be affected by politics and lobbying. Instead, Coase argued that once property rights were clearly defined, then one party or the other would have an incentive to seek out the most cost-effective way of reducing this form of "pollution."

Coase's work often pushed back against a common assumption (common both then and now), that direct government actions and mandates are the appropriate answers to problems with markets. He emphasized that governments often lacked both detailed knowledge of how to resolve issues with markets, and also that government acting under political pressure might lack the incentive to resolve such problems appropriately. Instead, the role of government could be to set up a system in which the economic actors themselves would use their detailed private information to reach a better decision.  

In other classic examples, Coase argued in the 1950s that when it came to allocating spectrum rights, it was better for the government to auction those rights rather than to allocate them by an administrative decision-making process. Such auctions would cause private actors to reveal their true preferences, rather than just deploy their lobbyists. In another paper, Coase argued that although economists often invoke lighthouses as an example of where markets can't work well, as a historical fact many lighthouses were built by the private sector once the government gave them the right to collect tolls.   

It's perhaps useful to note that Coase is certainly not claiming that real-world markets are perfect, and that private negotiations will resolve any issues. His prescriptions often involve the active intervention of government: for example, in setting the rules over whether railroads or farmers are responsible for dealing with sparks, or setting up auctions for spectrum rights, or giving lighthouse builders a right to charge tolls. Coase is arguing against "blackboard economics," as he later called it, where market problems and government solutions are sketched out in a classroom like a solved problem. Instead, Coase favored of a comparative institutional economics, where the specific details of situations take on a central role and thus it becomes important to think about details of information and incentives is possessed by the actual parties involved. 

Coase did not refer to his result as a theorem: instead, this label was bestowed by George Stigler a few years later. Medema writes: "[T]he Coase theorem is neither prediction nor testable hypothesis nor descriptor nor policy prescription. It is, and can be nothing more than, a benchmark—a generator of predictive, testable, descriptive, and policy insights."

Medema describes in detail the unfolding of the Coase result over time, as the issues of potential problems, involved parties, information, and incentives have been explored in many contexts--including contexts outside of economics. Here, I'll close with Medema's overall summary of this process. 

The Coase theorem is, by any number of measures, one of the most curious results in the history of economic ideas. Its development has been shrouded in misremembrances, political controversies, and all manner of personal and communal confusions and serves as an exemplar of the messy process by which new ideas become scientific knowledge. There is no unique statement of the Coase theorem; there are literally dozens of different statements of it, many of which are inconsistent with others and appear to mark significant departures from what Coase had argued in 1960. ...

The theorem has never been given a generally accepted formal proof; yet it has been the subject of scores of attempts  to "disprove" it in a stream of analysis and debate that continues to this day. It has been labeled a "tautology" and the "Say's law of welfare economics" (Calabresi 1968, pp. 68, 73), an "illuminating falsehood" (Cooter 1982, p. 28), and even a "religious precept" (Posin 1993, p. 810). Halpin (2007, p. 339) calls the theorem "theoretically degenerate … and ideologically charged." Usher (1998, p. 3) bundles these various charges together, claiming that the theorem is "tautological, incoherent, or wrong," with the specific verdict resting upon to which version of the theorem one subscribes.  ... 

The nature of the theorem's underlying assumptions is often said to make its domain of direct applicability nil; yet, it has been invoked, criticized, and applied to legal-economic policy issues in thousands of journal articles and books in economics and law ... as well as in journals spanning fields from philosophy (Hale 2008) to literature (Minda 2001) to biology (Frech 1973a). Indeed, the Coase theorem may be the only economic concept the use of which is more extensive outside of economics than within it.


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State attorneys general taking on protection of workers’ rights [feedly]

State attorneys general taking on protection of workers' rights
https://www.epi.org/blog/state-attorneys-general-taking-on-protection-of-workers-rights/

State attorneys general (AGs) have been getting more and more involved in defending workers' rights, including bringing wage theft cases, suing companies such as Uber and Lyft for misclassification, and fighting non-compete and no poach agreements.

Their evolving labor-enforcement role was the topic of the "State Attorneys General as Protectors of Workers' Rights" webinar hosted by the Economic Policy Institute and the Harvard Law School Labor and Worklife Program on December 3, 2020, that included insights from bureau, division, and section chiefs who lead labor rights work in their state attorneys general offices.

They talked about some of their cases, and shared thoughts about how state AGs select cases, how they decide whether to proceed civilly or with a criminal prosecution, and how they've worked, sometimes behind the scenes, to safeguard workplace safety and health during the pandemic. The webinar followed up on an August report on this topic issued by EPI and the Harvard Labor and Worklife Program.

Here is a Q&A based on some of the follow-up questions asked during the webinar. They delve into everything from setting up a labor unit in the AG's office to AGs' authority to address workplace safety matters.

Questions about the role and activities of state AG office labor units

Regarding case selection: What about AG's deciding "not to get involved?" That seems a productive question that slightly adjusts the "How do you 'get cases' question."

Several of the panelists discussed how they select cases, which are primarily based on impact litigation criteria: offices try to focus on cases with a pattern or practice that violates the law, and in which handling the case can help to bring broader change in an industry or regarding a certain practice. Offices also consider the number of workers involved, egregiousness of the violations, and strength of the evidence (including documentary evidence as well as worker witnesses), among other things. What cases they decide not to get involved in is driven by these same considerations. A case involving a few workers, working for a small employer, with de minimus violations and weak evidence is likely to be unappealing.

Do you do outreach to labor unions? Do you reach out to those who are not represented by unions?

A number of state AGs engaged in this work do considerable outreach to unions, worker centers, worker advocacy groups, community-based organizations and others, as detailed in the August report. If your state AG is not engaging with worker organizations, it's a good idea to reach out and begin the conversation.

Do AG offices get involved in enforcing Families First Coronavirus Response Act expanded leave benefits?

AG office jurisdiction varies considerably: some may have authority to enforce it, others may not. Regardless, offices can always do outreach and know-your-rights education about these rights, as the D.C. AG's office has done; such outreach is important given the general public's lack of knowledge about these laws.

How does preemption under the National Labor Relations Act (NLRA) shape your work, especially where there could be disagreement about whether violations are within the scope of the NLRA?

There is broad preemption of state action by the NLRA. However, states retain their police powers and are not preempted from enforcing general laws unrelated to collective bargaining. So for example, if restaurant workers organizing a union also file a complaint about subminimum wages, and they are subsequently discharged in an arguably retaliatory termination, the NLRA would not preempt a state AG's office from taking action (investigate and if warranted, sue) to address the retaliation because it stems, at least in part, from the subminimum wage complaint.

Is there an AG national organization?

The National Association of Attorneys General is a nonpartisan national organization of state AGS. Another resource is the website www.stateag.org. In addition, James Tierney, former Attorney General of Maine and a Lecturer at Harvard Law School has developed an open source casebook which can be consulted for more detailed background on attorneys general.

I work in a state that has a state Department of Labor (DOL) opposed to worker rights but an AG's office that may be more sympathetic. Is the ability for state AGs to handle labor cases just a question of state law typically?

Yes and no. Ideally, state AGs would have direct and explicit jurisdiction to enforce state workplace laws. Some AG offices have gotten this authority through legislation in recent years, including D.C.Illinois, and Minnesota. But other offices have brought labor cases using more general authority to bring cases to protect the people of their jurisdictions. The California AG's office has used an unfair competition law as the basis for jurisdiction to enforce these laws, and the New York AG's office has long brought labor cases using a law granting the AG authorityto address repeat or persistent fraud or illegality in the running of a business. Prior to its grant of jurisdiction, the Illinois AG office used a creative combination of approaches, including bringing cases under parens patriae authority. Washington State's AG brought a noncompete case under an anti-trust theory.

But even without any explicit jurisdiction, state AG offices can use a range of other tools to protect workers: gathering information and issuing reports, proposing legislation, joining multi-state actions, writing amicus brief, holding town halls, referring cases to other agencies, conducting outreach and know-your-rights presentations, and more. In addition, state AG offices have the important role of representing the state Department of Labor (or its equivalent) in court, and in states with worker-friendly labor departments, the AG office may be able to collaborate closely with that agency in aggressively pursuing employers with egregious violations. Finally, some state AG offices have criminal jurisdiction, and may be able to pursue wage theft, payroll fraud, and other workplace violations through criminal prosecution, if the facts warrant this approach.

Do you have any info about red states' AGs?

As profiled in the report, some Republican attorneys general have taken action to protect workers. For example, in 2020, West Virginia Attorney General Patrick Morrisey helped secure over $1 million in owed paid time off and other benefits for workers whose employer, a hospital, had abruptly closed; the settlements covered a range of workers including certified nurse assistants, support nurses, support staff and cafeteria and maintenance workers. In 2019, Montana Attorney General Tim Fox obtained a guilty plea from the owner of a construction company for failing to pay workers' compensation insurance, among other things. And at the start of the pandemic, Arizona Attorney General Mark Brnovich issued a press releaseinforming workers of their rights under the state's paid sick leave law.

How are AGs acting to protect educators and others who must work in school settings during the pandemic? The desire to educate kids and limit remote school is strong, but the risks to these front-line workers is increasingly serious.

The Vermont AG's office issued guidance regarding reasonable accommodations during the pandemic for schools, school districts, educators, and support staff. In addition, the Illinois AG's office sued to enforce the state's mask mandate in a school context. (Motion for Temporary Restraining Order and memorandum from case).

Questions about starting labor units in state AG offices

How and who generally sets up the labor units in the AG's office? Is that something decided by the AG, or by statute, or is that a legislative or governor-based decision? In other words, how does one encourage a state to develop the position and the office? And what was the state labor department's position?

This is generally something decided by the AG. In offices with labor units that have started since 2015, the AGs decided that workers' rights would be a priority within their offices. In some cases, this meant moving positions from other bureaus when there was turnover or attrition. For example, if a consumer division had 25 lawyers, and one departed from the office, the AG might use that position to start a labor unit, leaving the consumer division with 24 lawyers (96 percent of its prior staffing) and create a whole new labor unit starting with just one lawyer. In fact, in several offices, labor units started with only one attorney, and later grew. In addition, as noted above, state legislatures recently granted AG offices jurisdiction on these matters in D.C. (2017), Illinois (2019), and Minnesota (2019); the legislation in Illinois also established the AG's Workplace Rights Bureau by statute, so that its continued existence would no longer be a matter of discretion of the officeholder.

Regarding the state labor department, in state AG offices with dedicated labor units, there are generally collaborative and synergistic relationships. Labor departments have welcomed the additional and complementary involvement of the AG's office in the shared mission of protecting workers. Of course, this is not a foregone conclusion; one could imagine a situation in which ideology or concerns about turf might lead to a less collaborative approach.

Are progressive worker protection units structured so that they can survive changes in AGs and shifting priorities? If not, what could the public do to ensure survival and effectiveness?

As a matter of practice, AG offices often retain the same general bureaus and structure even when there are changes in administrations. This is part of the value of institutionalizing the work in a dedicated bureau, division, or unit. One approach to ensuring the continuation of such units would be to enshrine its existence in statute, as occurred in Illinois.

Several participants asked what state AGs are doing or have done about misclassification of workers as independent contractors instead of as employees, a practice which results in a range of workplace law violations.

State AGs have been involved in addressing misclassification in various ways. As discussed in the webinar, the Massachusetts and California AGs both sued Uber and Lyft for misclassification (although California's efforts for injunctive relief are impacted by the passage of Proposition 22 in that state). The Massachusetts AG also reached settlements with two placement agencies that required reclassification of workers as employees (they involved staff placed in dental offices and schools). Also, state AGs often deal with misclassification of workers in their role representing state agencies; for example, the New York AG office represented the state labor department in a case in which the state's highest court upheld a determination that a Postmates worker was an employee, not an independent contractor, for the purposes of unemployment insurance. The New York AG also recently filed a brief urging the state's appellate court to uphold a similar determination regarding Uber drivers.

Have AGs used their criminal prosecution authority to address workplace safety and health violations or workers' deaths?

Some state AGs have used criminal prosecution authority extensively to pursue employers, but it has generally focused on cases of wage theft, failure to pay unemployment taxes and workers' compensation fraud. However, the Maine AG's office recently charged a roofing company in a workplace fatality case, and the New York AG's office brought child labor prosecutions in the case of a teenage restaurant worker whose arm was severed and a 14-year-old killed while operating heavy equipment on a farm.

There are, however, numerous examples of district attorney offices (or their equivalents), who often have broader prosecutorial authority than AGs, that have brought charges against employers in relation to workplace fatalities, including in ColoradoMassachusettsNew York, and elsewhere.

There were a number of questions about various policy issues: prison labor, right-to-work laws, the right to refuse hazardous work, corporate immunity from COVID-19-related litigation, imbalanced bargaining power between workers and employers, and the national impact of California's Proposition 22, among others.

The labor chiefs who were panelists on the webinar surely have personal opinions on some of these topics, like many of us do, but their role is not primarily policymaking; it's enforcing the laws that are on the books. State AGs do have the ability to affect policy in various ways: they have proposed state legislation, testified in Congress, written reports, authored op-eds, issued opinion letters, filed amicus briefs, and of course their affirmative litigation, such as cases against the federal government, can lead and has led to policy changes. However, the lawyers overseeing enforcement do not generally have a formal role in policymaking in the way lawyers in nonprofits, think tanks, or legislative offices might. (They also would typically be unlikely to speak publicly about their policy opinions, since there is usually a chain of command in government agencies that would require approval before offering such responses.)

Finally, looking to the future, some participants wondered about state AGs' worker protection role in light of the upcoming Biden administrationWill the AGs' role or priorities change?

Offices with labor units will likely expend fewer resources opposing proposed federal rules or suing to block enacted ones. Given the dire situation of workers in the U.S., however, this is clearly an all-hands-on-deck moment, with ample reasons for state AGs to continue their active and growing engagement in this work.


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