Monday, June 13, 2016

Senate Bill Continues Eroding Social Security Operating Funds [feedly]

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Senate Bill Continues Eroding Social Security Operating Funds
// Center on Budget: Comprehensive News Feed

The 2017 funding bill for the departments of Labor, Health and Human Services, and Education that the Senate Appropriations Committee approved today would continue squeezing the Social Security Administration (SSA), which faces a record workload as the baby boomers age into their peak years for retirement and disability.  

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Brexit and the Globalization Trilemma [feedly]

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Brexit and the Globalization Trilemma
// *Dani Rodrik's* weblog

I have not written much on Brexit because I do not have a strong or particularly well-informed view of it. My personal hope is that Britain will choose to remain in the EU – but that is as much because of a belief that without Britain the EU will likely become less democratic and more wrong-headed as it is because of the likely economic costs of Brexit.

Yes, I do think exit poses significant economic risk to Britain (and possibly to the world economy), though I believe there are very large margins of uncertainty around the quantitative prognostications presented by the U.K. Treasury and many British economists. But there are also serious questions posed about the nature of democracy and self-government in the EU as presently constituted.

Ambrose Evans-Pritchard (AEP) has now written a remarkable piece that makes the political case for Brexit. AEP makes clear that he has little in common with the jingoistic and nativist tone of the Brexit campaign. The distortions and lies promoted by the Brexiteers aside, the referendum does raise a serious question about how Britain will be governed:

"Stripped of distractions, it comes down to an elemental choice: whether to restore the full self-government of this nation, or to continue living under a higher supranational regime, ruled by a European Council that we do not elect in any meaningful sense, and that the British people can never remove, even when it persists in error.

We are deciding whether to be guided by a Commission with quasi-executive powers that operates more like the priesthood of the 13th Century papacy than a modern civil service; and whether to submit to a European Court (ECJ) that claims sweeping supremacy, with no right of appeal.

It is whether you think the nation states of Europe are the only authentic fora of democracy, be it in this country, or Sweden, or the Netherlands, or France …."

The trouble is that the EU is more of a technocracy than a democracy (AEP calls it a nomenklatura). An obvious alternative to Brexit would be to construct a full-fledged European democracy. AEP mentions Yanis Varoufakis, a Brexit opponent, who has argued for something like "a United States of Europe with a genuine parliament holding an elected president to account." But as AEP says,

"I do not think this is remotely possible, or would be desirable if it were, but it is not on offer anyway. Six years into the eurozone crisis there is no a flicker of fiscal union: no eurobonds, no Hamiltonian redemption fund, no pooling of debt, and no budget transfers. The banking union belies its name. Germany and the creditor states have dug in their heels."

All of this is of course what I tried to highlight with my "political trilemma of the global economy," reproduced below.


The trilemma suggests democracy is compatible with deep economic integration only if democracy is appropriately transnationalized as well – the solution that Varoufakis favors. AEP, by contrast, believes a democratic and accountable European super-state is neither feasible, nor even desirable.

Note that the tension that arises between democracy and globalization is not straightforwardly a consequence of the fact that the latter constrains national sovereignty. There are ways in which external constraints – as with democratic delegation – can enhance rather than limit democracy. But there are also many circumstances under which external rules do not satisfy the conditions of democratic delegation. See the discussion here.  

AEP believes that European rules clearly lie within the latter category. In addition to the European bureaucracy (and its treatment of the euro crisis), he is especially bothered by the broad authority the European Court of Justice (ECJ) has over national policies, without right to appeal. As for Britain's opt-out: "Need I add too that Britain's opt-out from the Charter under Protocol 30  - described as "absolutely clear" by Tony Blair on the floor of the Commons - has since been swept aside by the ECJ."

I do not have a clear view on the substance of AEP's argument – as to whether Britain's self-government is sufficiently impaired by the EU, or its opt-out has been nullified by the ECJ. But it is clear that the EU rules needed to underpin a single European market have extended significantly beyond what can be supported by democratic legitimacy. Whether Britain's opt out remains effective or not, the political trilemma is at work. In AEP's evocative language,

"The [European] Project bleeds the lifeblood of the national institutions, but fails to replace them with anything lovable or legitimate at a European level. It draws away charisma, and destroys it. This is how democracies die."

I first thought of the globalization trilemma when I was asked to contribute to a special millennial issue of the Journal of Economic Perspectives (in 2000), where I was asked to speculate about the nature of the world economy in 100 years' time. I presented it as the political analogue of the macroeconomic trilemma of the open-economy well known to economists (we can have at most two among monetary independence, free capital flows, currency pegs). I thought then, and still do, that it will increasingly shape the evolution of world's political economy.

At the time, I viewed the EU as the only part of the world economy that could successfully combine hyperglobalization ("the single market") with democracy through the creation of a European demos and polity. I expressed the same view, somewhat more cautiously, in my 2011 book The Globalization Paradox.

But I now have to admit that I was wrong in this view (or hope, perhaps). The manner in which Germany and Angela Merkel, in particular, reacted to the crisis in Greece and other indebted countries buried any chance of a democratic Europe. She might have presented the crisis as one of interdependence ("we all contributed to it, and we are all in it together"), using it as an opportunity to make a leap towards greater political union. Instead, she treated it as a morality play, pitting responsible northerners against lazy, profligate southerners, and to be dealt with by European technocrats accountable to no one serving up disastrous economic remedies.   

As Brexit opponents keep reminding us, the economic costs of Britain's departure could be indeed sizable. Reasonable people have to make up their own mind as to how those costs stack up against the damage to democratic self-government. EAP is fully aware that his choice entails taking a "calculated risk."

My generation of Turks looked at the European Union as an example to emulate and a beacon of democracy. It saddens me greatly that it has now come to stand for a style of rule-making and governance so antithetical to democracy that even informed and reasonable observers like AEP view departure from it as the only option for repairing democracy.  

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Sunday, June 12, 2016

FOMC Preview and Review of Projections [feedly]

FOMC Preview and Review of Projections
http://www.calculatedriskblog.com/2016/06/fomc-preview-and-review-of-projections.html


Almost all analysts are expecting no change in Fed policy at the March FOMC meeting this week. As an example, from Goldman Sachs economists Jan Hatzius and Zach Pandl: 
"The May employment report was weak enough to raise questions about momentum in the labor market and the economy more broadly. At this point the natural reaction from policymakers will likely be to wait for more information and keep options open—and this should be the message from Chair Yellen in her press conference.

... With the unemployment rate at 4.7%, wage growth clearly picking up, and financial conditions much easier, there is likely a limit to how long the Fed's pause can last.
Currently the Fed Funds target rate is the range of "1/4 to 1/2 percent". The current effective rate is 0.37 percent, close to the middle of the current range.

The focus this month will be on the wording of the statement, any changes to the projections, and on the press conference. 

Here are the March FOMC projections.  Since the release of those projections, Q1 GDP was reported at a 0.8% annual rate.

Currently GDP is tracking around 2.5% annualized in Q2.  The FOMC might revise down GDP for 2016 slightly.

GDP projections of Federal Reserve Governors and Reserve Bank presidents
Change in
Real GDP1
201620172018
Mar 2016 2.1 to 2.32.0 to 2.31.8 to 2.1
Dec 2015 2.3 to 2.52.0 to 2.31.8 to 2.2
1 Projections of change in real GDP and inflation are from the fourth quarter of the previous year to the fourth quarter of the year indicated. 

The unemployment rate was at 4.7% in May, so the unemployment rate projection for Q4 2016 might be revised down.

Unemployment projections of Federal Reserve Governors and Reserve Bank presidents
Unemployment
Rate2
201620172018
Mar 2016 4.6 to 4.84.5 to 4.74.5 to 5.0
Dec 2015 4.6 to 4.84.6 to 4.84.6 to 5.0
2 Projections for the unemployment rate are for the average civilian unemployment rate in the fourth quarter of the year indicated. 

As of April, PCE inflation was up only 1.1% from April 2015.   With the recent increase in oil and gasoline prices, the range of PCE inflation projections might be narrowed, and the low end revised up for 2016.

Inflation projections of Federal Reserve Governors and Reserve Bank presidents
PCE
Inflation1
201620172018
Mar 2016  1.0 to 1.61.7 to 2.01.9 to 2.0
Dec 2015  1.2 to 1.71.8 to 2.01.9 to 2.0

PCE core inflation was up 1.6% in April year-over-year.  It appears core PCE inflation might be revised up slightly for 2016.

Core Inflation projections of Federal Reserve Governors and Reserve Bank presidents
Core
Inflation1
201620172018
Mar 2016 1.4 to 1.71.7 to 2.01.9 to 2.0
Dec 2015 1.5 to 1.71.7 to 2.01.9 to 2.0

Overall, it appears these indicators are close to expectations.   The FOMC will probably take no action at the meeting this week, and wait to see if employment picks up in June.

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Progressive redistribution without guilt: Using policy to shift economic power and make U.S. incomes grow fairer and faster

http://epi.org/107762

Saturday, June 11, 2016

Brexit would hit the UK economy much harder than its promoters expect [feedly]

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Brexit would hit the UK economy much harder than its promoters expect
// Economic Policy Institute Blog

On June 23, British voters will accept or reject a proposal that Britain leave the European Union. The latest polls show the vote in favor of the British exit, or "Brexit," narrowly ahead.

The case for getting out has largely been driven from the political right, on the grounds that dropping out of the EU would allow Britain to close off immigration and free British businesses from rules made in Brussels that protect labor and the environment. A liberated Britain, goes the argument, would have the freedom to pursue policies that would bring it more prosperity.

But after an initial shock, the prolonged economic uncertainty following a win for Brexit would hit the U.K. economy much harder than its promoters expect. It would take at least two years to negotiate the terms of the pullout with the remaining 27 countries, which are unlikely to give Britain anywhere near its current privileged access to member countries' customers or financial markets. It will then take even longer for the U.K. to find and negotiate trade deals for other export markets at a time of spreading deflation and rising protectionism throughout the globe. Pile on the political complications of disentangling British business regulations from rules made in Brussels, and the adjustment process could take as long as a decade.

Read more

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Senate Bill Continues Eroding Social Security Operating Funds [feedly]

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Senate Bill Continues Eroding Social Security Operating Funds
// Center on Budget: Comprehensive News Feed

The 2017 funding bill for the departments of Labor, Health and Human Services, and Education that the Senate Appropriations Committee approved today would continue squeezing the Social Security Administration (SSA), which faces a record workload as the baby boomers age into their peak years for retirement and disability.  

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Thursday, June 9, 2016

A Public Note to my Friend, Bernie Sanders [feedly]

I do not always agree with Reich. But I do here, and would sign the letter myself. Thank you Bernie Sanders.

A Public Note to my Friend, Bernie Sanders
http://robertreich.org/post/145616017895

Dear Bernie:

I don't know what you're going to do from here on, and I'm not going to advise you. You've earned the right to figure out the next steps for your campaign and the movement you have launched.

But let me tell you this: You've already succeeded.

At the start they labeled you a "fringe" candidate – a 74-year-old, political Independent, Jewish, self-described democratic socialist, who stood zero chance against the Democratic political establishment, the mainstream media, and the moneyed interests.

Then you won 22 states.

And in almost every state – even in those you lost – you won vast majorities of voters under 30, including a majority of young women and Latinos. And most voters under 45.

You have helped shape the next generation.

You've done it without SuperPACs or big money from corporations, Wall Street, and billionaires. You did it with small contributions from millions of us. You've shown it can be done without selling your soul or compromising your conviction.

You've also inspired millions of us to get involved in politics – and to fight the most important and basic of all fights on which all else depends: to reclaim our economy and democracy from the moneyed interests.

Your message – about the necessity of single-payer healthcare, free tuition at public universities, a $15 minimum wage, busting up the biggest Wall Street banks, taxing the financial speculation, expanding Social Security, imposing a tax on carbon, and getting big money out of politics – will shape the progressive agenda from here on.

Your courage in taking on the political establishment has emboldened millions of us to stand up and demand our voices be heard.

Regardless of what you decide to do now, you have ignited a movement that will fight onward. We will fight to put more progressives into the House and Senate. We will fight at the state level. We will organize for the 2020 presidential election.

We will not succumb to cynicism. We are in it for the long haul. We will never give up.

Thank you, Bernie.


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