Friday, April 21, 2017

Bernstein/Thoma: Supply-side, trickle-down nonsense on the NYT oped page [feedly]

Supply-side, trickle-down nonsense on the NYT oped page
http://economistsview.typepad.com/economistsview/2017/04/supply-side-trickle-down-nonsense-on-the-nyt-oped-page.html


Jared Bernstein:

Supply-side, trickle-down nonsense on the NYT oped page: There's a robust debate to be had as to why the NYT published this op-ed on the alleged economic benefits of trickle-down tax cuts, as virtually every paragraph touts an alternative fact. It is the opinion page, I guess, and the authors advise (or at least advised) the president, so I can see why it's there. But it does require debunking, so thanks NYT, for some make work.
Here's much of the article's text, followed by my comments in italics:

A few of the comments:

... Here we have the first in a series of trickle-down claims. The alleged sequencing is: cut taxes of business and the wealthy, they invest more, that raises profits and productivity, and the benefits trickle down to the middle class. Every link in that chain is broken: tax cuts, even on investment income, do not correlate with greater investment, and they certainly are uncorrelated with faster productivity growth. Businesses already receive very favorable tax treatment on their investments; in fact, their tax burden on debt-financed investments can be negative. No question, tax cuts raise after-tax profitability, but absent much more worker bargaining power, those profits stay in the pockets of those at the top of the income scale. ...
Here we have the "money" 'graf: the straight-up claim that trickle down tax cuts will boost the earnings of the working class, which will help offset their cost—the Laffer curve in action. I guess I should give the authors credit for adding "if we are right," though I'll give you very long odds that the editors insisted on this addition. Because there's no reason to ask if they're right. They're not, with the latest exhibit being the state of Kansas, an "experiment" derived by some of these very authors.
BTW, I've endorsed my friend Kevin Hassett for his new job as a voice of economic reason in this administration. But I've been careful to note this flaw in his work and his thinking. In fact, the study they reference here has been thoroughly debunked in various places. ...
Again with the urgency, and "trust us, folks, it's not the zillionaires for whom our hearts bleed—it's 'jobs and the economy.'" Not to mention the stock market, which is getting "jittery" over the possibility that Trump won't deliver a tax plan like the one these guys wrote, which delivers fully half of its goodies to the top 1 percent (or even better, the Ryan plan, which, once fully phased in, delivers 99 percent of its cuts to the top 1 percent).
Puh-lease. How stupid do these people think we are (rhetorical question!)? Their simple scheme—Trump wins, the rich get big tax cut—has turned out to be harder to pull off than they'd hoped. That's a feature, not a bug, of our current political moment, even if it means we have to read a WSJ oped in the NYT.

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Krugman: Elizabeth Warren Lays Out the Reasons Democrats Should Keep Fighting [feedly]

Finally, Krugman finds hope in Elizabeth Warren. Maybe this means he is tired sucking his thumb over Hillary's loss and ready to return to a progressive agenda he can fight for. It's still "anybody but Bernie" no doubt, but at least its got him to stop whining....


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Krugman: Elizabeth Warren Lays Out the Reasons Democrats Should Keep Fighting
http://economistsview.typepad.com/economistsview/2017/04/krugman-elizabeth-warren-lays-out-the-reasons-democrats-should-keep-fighting.html

Paul Krugman reviews This is Our Fight: The Battle to Save America's Middle Class, By Elizabeth Warren, Metropolitan Books/Henry Holt & Company:

Elizabeth Warren Lays Out the Reasons Democrats Should Keep Fighting: ...Elizabeth Warren ... brings an edge to her advocacy that many Democrats have shied away from... Even the Obama administration, while doing much more to fight inequality than many realize, balked at making inequality reduction an explicit goal.
Furthermore, Warren comes down forcefully on the left side of an ongoing debate over both the causes of inequality and the ways it can be reduced.
One view, which was dominant even among Democratic-leaning economists in the 1990s, saw rising inequality mainly as a result of ineluctable market forces. Technology, in particular... Given this view, even liberals generally favored free-market policies. ...
The alternative view, which Warren clearly endorses, is all for taxing the rich and strengthening the safety net, but it also argues that public policy can do a lot to increase workers' bargaining power — and that inequality has soared in large part because policy has, in fact, gone the other way.
This view has gained much more prominence over the past couple of decades, mainly because it's now backed by a lot of evidence...
But why has actual policy gone the other way? ...
Consider ... West Virginia, where Obamacare cut the number of uninsured by about 60 percent, where minimum wage hikes and revived unions could do wonders for workers in health care and social services, the state's largest industry. That is, it's a perfect example of a state that would benefit hugely from an enlightened-populist agenda.
But last November West Virginia went almost three-to-one for a very unenlightened populist...
But maybe it's a matter of time, and what Democrats need right now is a reason to keep fighting. And that's something Warren's muscular, unapologetic book definitely offers. It's an important contribution, even if it isn't the last word.

 -- via my feedly newsfeed

Krugman: Elizabeth Warren Lays Out the Reasons Democrats Should Keep Fighting [feedly]

Krugman: Elizabeth Warren Lays Out the Reasons Democrats Should Keep Fighting
http://economistsview.typepad.com/economistsview/2017/04/krugman-elizabeth-warren-lays-out-the-reasons-democrats-should-keep-fighting.html

Paul Krugman reviews This is Our Fight: The Battle to Save America's Middle Class, By Elizabeth Warren, Metropolitan Books/Henry Holt & Company:

Elizabeth Warren Lays Out the Reasons Democrats Should Keep Fighting: ...Elizabeth Warren ... brings an edge to her advocacy that many Democrats have shied away from... Even the Obama administration, while doing much more to fight inequality than many realize, balked at making inequality reduction an explicit goal.
Furthermore, Warren comes down forcefully on the left side of an ongoing debate over both the causes of inequality and the ways it can be reduced.
One view, which was dominant even among Democratic-leaning economists in the 1990s, saw rising inequality mainly as a result of ineluctable market forces. Technology, in particular... Given this view, even liberals generally favored free-market policies. ...
The alternative view, which Warren clearly endorses, is all for taxing the rich and strengthening the safety net, but it also argues that public policy can do a lot to increase workers' bargaining power — and that inequality has soared in large part because policy has, in fact, gone the other way.
This view has gained much more prominence over the past couple of decades, mainly because it's now backed by a lot of evidence...
But why has actual policy gone the other way? ...
Consider ... West Virginia, where Obamacare cut the number of uninsured by about 60 percent, where minimum wage hikes and revived unions could do wonders for workers in health care and social services, the state's largest industry. That is, it's a perfect example of a state that would benefit hugely from an enlightened-populist agenda.
But last November West Virginia went almost three-to-one for a very unenlightened populist...
But maybe it's a matter of time, and what Democrats need right now is a reason to keep fighting. And that's something Warren's muscular, unapologetic book definitely offers. It's an important contribution, even if it isn't the last word.

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Links for 04-20-17 [feedly]

How President Trump and congressional Republicans are undercutting wages and protections for working people [feedly]

How President Trump and congressional Republicans are undercutting wages and protections for working people
http://www.epi.org/blog/how-president-trump-and-congressional-republicans-are-undercutting-wages-and-protections-for-working-people/

We are nearly 100 days into President Donald Trump's administration, a benchmark that gives us a chance to take stock of what the president and new Congress have accomplished and what their priorities are. We have seen a flurry of activity—from legislation and executive orders, as well as actions taken (or not taken) by the administration—that, sometimes subtly, shift power away from working people and towards corporations and the 1 percent. Some of these actions have been high profile, but others have gone almost unnoticed. Taken together, they undercut wages and protections for working people.

EPI's Perkins Project tracks actions by the administration, Congress, and the courts that affect people's wages and their rights at work. Here are the top ten things the president and Congress have done that affect working people. For more, see our Worker Rights and Wages Policy Watch, which is continuously updated with information on the steps taken that affect workers.

Read more


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Enlighten Radio Podcasts:Stewart Acuff Interviews Bill Fletcher on Resistance Radio

John Case has sent you a link to a blog:

Podcast of Stewart Acuff Interview with Bill Fletcher on Resistance Radio (resistance.enlightenradio.org)

Blog: Enlighten Radio Podcasts
Post: Stewart Acuff Interviews Bill Fletcher on Resistance Radio
Link: http://podcasts.enlightenradio.org/2017/04/stewart-acuff-interviews-bill-fletcher.html

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Enlighten Radio:Science and its enemies, Gas pains, Workers Memorial Day

John Case has sent you a link to a blog:



Blog: Enlighten Radio
Post: Science and its enemies, Gas pains, Workers Memorial Day
Link: http://www.enlightenradio.org/2017/04/science-and-its-enemies-gas-pains.html

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West Virginia GDP -- a Streamlit Version

  A survey of West Virginia GDP by industrial sectors for 2022, with commentary This is content on the main page.