Friday, February 23, 2018

Dani Rodrik: What Does a True Populism Look Like? It Looks Like the New Deal


What Does a True Populism Look Like? It Looks Like the New Deal

By DANI RODRIK
FEB. 21, 2018

President Trump's tough talk on trade and the tariffs he recently imposed on imported washing machines and solar panels, as well as the ones he threatened on foreign steel and aluminum, would seem straight out of the populist playbook. But in terms of targeting the real grievances of his popular base, they largely miss the mark.

The early history of American populism, culminating in the New Deal, suggests a more productive and less damaging kind of populism. When populism succeeds, it does so not by cosmetic gimmicks but by going after the roots of economic injustice directly.

At the 1896 Democratic National Convention, the 36-year-old former Nebraska congressman William Jennings Bryan delivered what became one of the most famous lines of American political oratory: "You shall not crucify mankind upon a cross of gold." Bryan's immediate target was the gold standard, an emblem of the globalization of his day, which he blamed for the economic difficulties of what he called the "toiling masses." Bryan ran for president that year as the joint candidate of the Democratic Party and of the People's Party, also known as the Populist Party.

The populists of the late 19th century had many grievances, but the flames of their discontent were fanned by opposition to economic globalization. Under the gold standard, markets for money, goods, capital and labor had become intertwined among nations as never before. As John Maynard Keynes would later rue, a well-to-do inhabitant in a major capital city like London "could order by telephone, sipping his morning tea in bed, the various products of the whole earth."

Global competition also drove American agricultural prices down. And the rules of the gold standard enforced tight money and credit conditions — what we would today call austerity policies. The consequent economic distress among farmers in the South and the West fueled the populist movement. The populists viewed the railroads as well as the financial and commercial interests of the Northeast, the defenders of the gold standard, as their main opponents. Throwing off the shackles of the gold standard and reclaiming national monetary sovereignty became their rallying cry.

Populism in the 21st century is as much a reaction to globalization as its late-19th-century version. While the backlash in the United States and Europe differs in specific details, the broad outlines are similar. Large segments of the workers in these advanced economies — older, less-skilled manufacturing employees and the communities they live in — have seen their earnings decline or stagnate and their relative social status take a big hit. These groups see governments as increasingly in the pocket of financial and business elites, the big winners of globalization. The discontent in turn fuels populist leaders who promise to wrest control from faceless global market forces and re-empower the nation-state.

The populist backlash unleashed by advanced stages of economic globalization should not have been a surprise, least of all to economists. The warning signs are right there in the basic economic theory we teach in the classroom. Yes, globalization expands economic opportunities: There are gains from trade. But globalization also entails stark distributional consequences, with some groups almost always left worse off. Factory closings, job displacement and offshoring are the flip side of the gains from trade.

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What is more, these redistributive effects loom larger relative to the overall economic gains as globalization advances and trade agreements begin to aim at less consequential barriers. In other words, in its late stages, globalization looks less and less as if it is expanding the overall economic pie and more and more as though it is simply taking money from some groups and giving it to others.

In principle, an active government can take the edge off the resentment produced by redistribution. In Western Europe, an extensive welfare state has historically provided the safety nets that in turn enabled levels of economic openness that are much higher than in the United States. But often the response of the government has been to plead incapacity in the face of inexorable global economic realities: "We cannot tax the winners — the wealthy investors, financiers and skilled professionals — because they are footloose and they would move to other countries." This reinforces populists' yearning to reassert national economic control.

William Jennings Bryan ultimately failed in his quest for the presidency, and the People's Party imploded because of regional and ideological divisions. But many of the Populists' economic ideas, such as the progressive income tax, regulations on big business and much greater government control of the economy, were absorbed by the progressive movement and became part of the political mainstream.

It wasn't until 1933 that the Populists' main plank, the end of the gold standard, was adopted. By then the United States was mired in the Great Depression, and Franklin D. Roosevelt had decided the economy needed the monetary boost that adherence to the gold standard precluded. Internationalists complained that Roosevelt acted unilaterally, but he had little patience with orthodox economic ideas or shackles — foreign or domestic — on his conduct of economic policy. At home, he had to fight conservative courts to put his New Deal reforms in place.

By his day's standards, and perhaps also today's, Roosevelt was an economic populist. But the New Deal reinvigorated the market economy and saved capitalism from itself. It may also have saved democracy, as it helped staved off the dangerous demagogues and chauvinist ideologues, of which there were plenty (such as Father Coughlin and Huey Long).

The lesson of history is not only that globalization and the populist backlash are tightly linked. It is also that the bad kind of populism spawned by globalization may require a good kind of populism to fend it off.

President Trump and his European counterparts have capitalized on the economic difficulties of the middle and lower-middle classes by wrapping them in narratives that exploit prevailing ethno-nationalist prejudices. In the United States, they attribute declining wages and job prospects to Mexican immigrants, Chinese exporters and the federal government's preoccupation with minority groups at the expense of the white middle class. In Europe, they lay the blame for the erosion of the welfare state and public services on competition from immigrants and refugees. But none of this really helps the middle and lower-middle classes. Worse, the illiberal politics of the strategy undermines democracy.

If our economic rules empower corporations and financial interests excessively, then the correct response is to rewrite those rules — at home as well as abroad. If trade agreements serve mainly to reshuffle income to capital and corporations, the answer is to rebalance them to make them friendlier to labor and society at large. If governments feel themselves powerless to institute the tax policies and regulations needed to address the dislocations caused by economic and technological shocks, the solution is not just to seek more national autonomy but also to deploy it toward such reforms.

A populism of this kind can seem like a frontal attack on the economic sacred cows of the day — just as earlier waves of American populism were. But it is an honest populism that stands a chance of achieving its stated objectives, without harming fundamental democratic norms of tolerance and equal citizenship.--
John Case
Harpers Ferry, WV

The Winners and Losers Radio Show
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Locking People Out of Medicaid Coverage Will Increase Uninsured, Harm Beneficiaries’ Health [feedly]

Locking People Out of Medicaid Coverage Will Increase Uninsured, Harm Beneficiaries' Health
https://www.cbpp.org/research/health/locking-people-out-of-medicaid-coverage-will-increase-uninsured-harm-beneficiaries

State and federal policymakers have tried for several decades to make it easier for people to demonstrate their Medicaid eligibility by streamlining enrollment processes and limiting unnecessary requests for documents to verify eligibility. Kentucky's new Medicaid waiver and the extension of Indiana's current waiver mark a sharp reversal of these efforts: both erect multiple new barriers that can trip up eligible but unaware enrollees and lead them to lose coverage or even not apply in the first place if they think they aren't eligible.

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Thursday, February 22, 2018

WV Teachers Walk Out -- Interview



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Jefferson County West Virginia Educational Association (WVEA) representative Keira Garrett talks about the history and issues that have led to a state wide teacher walk-out scheduled for today, February 22, 2018.

This podcast was recorded on enlightenradio.org Feb 21, at the Red Caboose Studio in Bolivar, West Virginia.

Informational picket lines in Jefferson County are scheduled all day in three locations: Shepherdstown Library, Panera Bread in Ranson, and the Library in Charles Town. Get information, and support your teachers.

Hired: a review [feedly]

Hired: a review
http://stumblingandmumbling.typepad.com/stumbling_and_mumbling/2018/02/hired-a-review.html


For some time, I've asked that journalists leave the Westminster Bubble and look instead at ground truth. I'm delighted, therefore, that James Bloodworth has done just this. His latest book, Hired, describes his experiences of working on low wages – at an Amazon warehouse in Rugeley, a call centre in South Wales, as a care worker in Blackpool and as an Uber driver in London.

Of course, he's self-aware enough to acknowledge that he's a tourist. His experience necessarily misses a lot: the sense of despair that comes with knowing that low-wage work is for life; or the difficulties of juggling such work with care responsibilities, for example. However, when so much journalism consists of smears, prejudice and idle gossip whilst the voice of workers goes unheard, James' story is essential reading.

It raises many issues, which should challenge both left and right. I'll list just a few.

One, sad to say, is immigration: especially at Amazon, James is surrounded by Romanians. The issue here isn't just the perception, fuelled by employment agencies wanting to screw down pay and conditions, that there's a vast reserve army of migrants. It's also perhaps that migrants contribute to a lack of class cohesion at work.

Secondly, James shows that a big problem for the low-paid is not just the level of wages but the insecurity. You can get by on the money James made, albeit joylessly. But there are many possible disturbances to these: "mistakes" in calculating wages (surprisingly common); changes in hours; unexpected expenses; or trivial misdemeanours at work that get you the sack. Any of these can force you into to the world of loan-sharks or homelessness.

For me, this strengthens the case for a citizens' income: it provides security against such shocks.

Thirdly, low wages are unhealthy. James says he put on a stone whilst working at Amazon despite walking ten miles a day. The stress of work compels you to want a "momentary morale boost" such as a cigarette, chocolate or junk food. Add in the difficulties of fitting meals around irregular working hours, and the fact that low-wage work steals (pdf)cognitive bandwidth, and we're left with the fact that demands on the poor to eat well are simply unrealistic.

What's more, poverty is oppression. James says:

Whether it was the employment agency underpaying you, the job centre messing you about or the rent-to-own store trying to bamboozle you there was often this running battle with the authorities.

This continues in the workplace. James describes how workers face intense distrust and constant surveillance by either technology or "petty fuhrers".

This oppression, however, doesn't come (directly) from fat plutocrats in top hats grinding the faces of the poor. Job centre staff who "treat you like scum", yobs who attack the homeless and the shop-floor tyrants at Amazon probably earn less than average wages. And yet they contribute massively to the misery of the worse-off. Yes, such people are under stress from those above them. But it's possible that they have, in James' words, "internalized the objectives of their gaolers."

And herein lies a depressing theme of Hired – the lack of class cohesion. James says: "Thatcherism's greatest success was probably in the gradual erosion of class solidarity." You get no sense in his book that his colleagues are active supporters of Corbyn or (worse still) that they have dense networks of friends or family to help them through the hard times. 

Granted, there's a danger here of romanticizing the past. The lack of class solidarity was a theme of Robert Tressell's Ragged Trousered Philanthropists and we must remember that trades union militancy was used to "preserve differentials" and to support Enoch Powell, as well as for more benign ends. Nevertheless, this reminds us of Marx's biggest error - the belief that class consciousness would increase over time.

Rightists like to tell us that there's more to poverty than a lack of money. They might be right, if not in the way they intend.  



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What Happened to Europe’s Left? [feedly]

What Happened to Europe's Left?
http://www.globalpolicyjournal.com/blog/21/02/2018/what-happened-europe%E2%80%99s-left

Only a handful of European states are currently governed by left-wing governments, and several of the traditionally largest left-wing parties, such as the Socialist Party in France, have experienced substantial drops in support. Jan Rovny argues that while many commentators have linked the left's decline to the late-2000s financial crisis, the weakening of Europe's left reflects deep structural and technological changes that have reshaped European society, leaving left-wing parties out in the cold.

Last year was an 'annus horribilis' for the European left. In Austria, France, and the Czech Republic, the left lost its governing position, and the same might occur in Italy in a few weeks. Today, only Portugal, Greece, Sweden, Slovakia, and Malta are governed by the left. The 2017 collapse was precipitous. The Dutch Workers' party went from roughly 25% to 6%; the French Socialist Party went from roughly 30% to 7%. The Czech Social Democrats went from 20% to 7%. And the Czech Communist party saw its worst result in its almost 100-year history.

It may be tempting to connect the failure of the European left to the recent economic recession. It was during this recession or its aftermath that many left-wing governments (in Britain, Spain, Denmark) lost their mandates. Undeniably, the recession with its massive social cost caused much electoral instability, and opened a political door to various populist challengers. It would be, however, naive to suggest that the economic crisis was anything other than a catalyst. It was an accelerator that speeded up the onset of consequences of a structural development that we have been witnessing for at least three decades.

The weakening of the political left has been long in the making. It has been largely caused by deep structural and technological change that has altered the face of European societies, changed the economic patterns of the continent, and given a renewed vigour to politics of identity. In this process, traditional left-wing parties have lost not only the grasp of their main political narrative, they have lost much of their traditional electorates. These electorates did not so much 'switch' away from the left, they have rather disappeared as a comprehensible social group.

What was left behind?

Let us start at the beginning by asking what was the European left in its heyday. The defining characteristic of the post-war European left (which was distinct from the eastern European left of the time) was the democratic fight for the rights of working people. Shortly after the Second World War, most of the mainstream European left rejected Communism, and accepted a democratic path towards the emancipation and support of the working class. During the golden age of post-war development, the left participated in the construction of European welfare regimes, and where it has been most successful – in Scandinavia – it built up universalistic, egalitarian, and predominantly tax-funded and state-run systems of welfare provision.

In this construction, the parties of the left have primarily leaned on a significant and relatively homogenous group of working class electorates. These electorates were since the late 19th century defined by a strong sense of group belonging, or 'class consciousness'. This consciousness was constructed from the cradle and lasted to the grave. It was passed on from parents to children, and cultivated by a plethora of party-associated organisations, such as daycare centres, sports clubs, choral societies, women's clubs, and others. Together with workers' unions organising the work on factory floors, and later in offices, these organisations helped construct a working-class subculture that permeated the social as well as the political, and that ensured the electoral stability of the European left.

Seymour Martin Lipset suggested that the greatest achievement of the left had been the lifting of the working class away from authoritarianism and towards cosmopolitanism espoused by left-wing intellectuals. Indeed, the general success of the left in capturing and 'educating' the lower social strata profoundly shaped European party systems. In western Europe, the political left has been uniformly and continuously associated with progressive policies not only in the economic domain, but also in non-economic matters such as the environment, women's rights, and (slowly and shyly) the rights of minorities – both ethnic and sexual.

Somewhat paradoxically, the left's success precipitated its own demise in a dialectic fashion. First, the emancipation of the working class – primarily the extension of access to higher education – changed the working class and its dependence on left-wing subcultures and organisations. Second, the left's enabling of the search for rights allowed younger generations to seek personal liberation from traditional hierarchies, including those of the left.

From proletariat to 'precariat'

Having lived in Gothenburg, Sweden, the home of the Volvo, I eagerly visited the Volvo factory, looking forward to meeting the contemporary proletariat. What did I see? Halls and halls of conveyor belts shuffling skeletons that would become fancy SUVs in about an hour, while silver robotic arms added various parts to them. And the working class? I saw precious few of them. They were mostly young women, sitting on comfortable chairs surrounded by computer screens and keyboards, listening to their iPods… I later learned that these workers earn as much as Swedish university professors (that means – a lot).

The traditional working class as we imagine it from the times of Henry Ford does not exist anymore. Most of the workers at Volvo with their above-average pay, comfort and job security can hardly be considered as such. Today's working class is much less visible, and much more atomised. Today's working class are the masses of unskilled service workers who predominantly cook, clean or drive. Often, their jobs are short-term or part-time, and low-paying. These people do not come into contact with each other nearly as much as the traditional factory-floor workers did. They are more often than not from diverse minority backgrounds, and thus are separated by cultural boundaries. In short, these people have significantly reduced ability to organise, and they do not. As my research with Allison Rovny shows, their political belonging is weak, and – in the absence of a formative subculture – it is malleable.

The extension of access to higher education has increased the individual ability of people to process more complex information and make their own choices. As education also brings better jobs, this process has created more cognitively and financially independent citizens. The 1968 generation opted for more socially liberal and less hierarchical politics, forming new social movements and later political parties that espoused left-wing economics, but that were defined by their social and cultural openness.

In the context of the changing working class and the developing political supply, the traditional left parties became parties of the new middle class – primarily of the increasing numbers of white-collar state employees. In doing so, the traditional left responded to the Green challenge by adopting more environmental and generally socially liberal profiles, but also it slowly but surely abandoned the new 'precariat' – the new service working classes and those in poor or irregular employment. Politically pulled by social-liberalism (of the 'new' left), and by economic moderation to the centre (preferred by a new group of urban white-collar workers and 'yuppies'), the traditional left opened a political breach – a gaping political vacuum around those seeking economic protection, and a certain cultural traditionalism. The salience of this left and traditionalist political space, vacated by the mainstream left parties, would be boosted by another important structural development – the growth of transnational exchange.

Transnational transformations

The fall of the Berlin Wall in 1989 was a symbolic milestone, opening not just communist eastern Europe, but the entire developed world up to increased international exchange. My ongoing research with Gary Marks, Liesbet Hooghe and David Attewell shows that the three decades since have witnessed significant liberalisation of international trade, expressed in the formation of the WTO, and in the deepening of European integration, which has always practically centred around the free flow of goods, capital and people. The opening of European borders, as well as various conflicts on Europe's doorstep and beyond, further increased migration into and within Europe.

The rise of transnationalism – of extensive cross-border flows of goods, services, money and people – is firstly an economic phenomenon. It replaces domestic products and labourers with cheaper foreign alternatives. Transnationalism thus divides society into those who, while happily consuming cheaper products, earn their income in either sheltered (public) or internationally competitive sectors on the one hand, and those, on the other hand, whose livelihood is threatened by foreign competition in the form of imported products, and imported labourers. Transnationalism thus creates economic winners and losers, who are increasingly keenly aware of their status in our globalised societies.

Transnationalism is, however, also a cultural phenomenon. While the privileged enjoy cross-border travel for business and pleasure on an unparalleled scale, they gain experiences, learn languages, build friendships and, on occasion, have found families across borders and cultures; those with limited financial, and educational means live in a world defined by national boundaries, customs, and language. The inflow of culturally distinct migrants into urban centres furthers this alienation. This opens a cultural chasm between the transnational cosmopolitans, concentrating in larger cities that increasingly embrace pluri-culturalism, and national traditionalists mostly present in smaller, peripheral localities, fearful of immigrants, and sceptical of their immigrant-accepting cosmopolitan co-nationals.

Transnationalism redefines the political space by dissociating economic progressivism from socio-cultural openness. Transnationalism associates cosmopolitanism with open economic exchange on the one side, and national traditionalism with economic protectionism on the other. In doing so, transnationalism effectively shatters the old electoral coalition of the left. The naturally protectionist workers are pulled away from the naturally cosmopolitan intellectuals. This brings us back to the great political void, to the question of who will represent the new 'precariat', seeking economic protection, and cultural traditionalism. Transnationalism also increases the salience of populist anti-elitism, as rural traditionalists feel unrepresented by, shunned by, and distinct from the largely urban, cosmopolitan elite. The populist call to the 'common man', is a call of economic and cultural protection against the transformations of transnationalism.

The left out

In shifting its focus to the new middle classes, the left let the new 'precariat' fall towards nationalist protectionism, where it became fertile ground for the populist radical right. The populist radical right has been around for a good while. First, as an anti-tax, anti-welfare critique of the left, but later, with the dawn of transnationalism, it tapped into the sensitive issue of immigration with game-changing vigour. Attracting a wide coalition of economic interests through its blurry economic proposals, as my earlier research shows, the radical right married its traditional petit bourgeois electorate to swaths of the new 'precariat', and outperformed the left as the dominant political voice of the contemporary working classes.

The transformation of the left, however, offers opportunities for diverse political entrepreneurs. As my forthcoming work with Jonathan Polk, as well as with Bruno Palier and Allison Rovny demonstrates, in countries that experienced particularly drastic economic downturn during the economic recession, such as Greece and Spain, and where the 'precariat' consequently includes many young and educated citizens, the populist challengers are mostly radical left parties that call for a return to true – economically interventionist, and culturally liberal – left-wing politics. In other places, populists eschewing comprehensible political labels gain electoral support largely through the votes of the 'precarious' left-behind.

The transformation of the proletariat into the 'precariat', together with the dawn of transnationalism, have reframed the political field. Post-war politics saw economic interests – primarily the extent and contours of the welfare state – as the dominant political contest that subsumed or largely ignored other, non-economic divides. The new politics of transnationalism promises to be a politics of identity, with the cleaving lines defined by ethno-national labels, as well as by the distinction between large urban centres and the rural periphery. As my work with Gary Marks, Liesbet Hooghe and David Attewell suggests, these divides may be as deep, sticky and formative, as were the traditional class lines of the 20th century. While these divides are as economically rooted, as they are cultural, the new political entrepreneurs will find it easier to frame their narratives in identity-based terms. We should thus expect to see economic issues couched in non-economic discourses of national and local identity.

This competition frame is foreign to traditional left-wing parties, whose identity was always rooted in economic class. They are facing a struggle to adapt to this changing dimensional structure. Recent presidential elections in France as well as in the Czech Republic demonstrate the shift, as both countries saw a leftish authoritarian opposed by a centrist liberal in the second round, while the traditional left imploded. Interestingly, in the context of this new political competition, the west resembles the east, and the mainstream left everywhere is left out in the cold.

 

 

Jan Rovny joined Sciences Po in September 2013 as an assistant professor, affiliated with the Interdisciplinary Research Centre for the Evaluation of Public Policies (LIEPP) and the Centre d'études européennes (CEE).

This first appeared on the LSE's EUROPP blog.



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Bernstein: Perspective, people! [feedly]

Perspective, people!
http://jaredbernsteinblog.com/perspective-people/


The real risk here is that at some unknown point, we really do hit the economy's capacity limits and instead of more jobs and wages, we just get inflation and higher interest rates. (Michael Nagle/Bloomberg News)

In tracking risks in the current economy, now is a good time to be on alert for two opposing human tendencies: alarmism and non-alarmism. The first calls for perspective. A whiff of inflation, for example, doesn't imply the return of the 1970s inflation monster. Same with interest rates.

There's also a bias that cuts in the other direction: non-alarmism, a.k.a. confirmation or status-quo bias. In this case, one must fearlessly sniff that whiff of inflation and try to evaluate its implications.

The discussion requires looking at pictures of some economic time-series, so let's jump in.

First, here's a great example of how historical perspective should dampen any alarmism. The St. Louis Fed recently tweeted an interesting picture of its index of stress in the financial system, which I show below in the pullout part of the figure (thanks to Somin Park for making all these great figures). You can see the spike at the end of the pullout series and the tweet points out that the index is at a 14-month high. That's useful information, worth keeping an eye on, so no dig at the bank (and one can fit only so much in a tweet).


(St. Louis Fed)

But a look at the full series provides perspective. In the broader scheme of things, the recent spike is a barely perceptible tick. Compared to stress levels in the last recession, it's barely on the radar. And, in fact, and this is important, even looking back at the pullout figure from the tweet, you see similar spikes that faded shortly thereafter.

But to really see the alarmism in the system right now, you must turn to inflation data. The overreaction started with the wage data from the last jobs report. Yes, it popped up a bit, but it's a jumpy series, and we should expect and welcome faster wage growth at this stage of the recovery, which, for the record, is in its ninth year. The concern was that wage growth would bleed into price growth, which would lead to lower corporate profit margins and higher interest rates.

Even though many links in that chain are shaky — the relationship between wage and price growth has weakened considerably in recent years — when the next inflation number came in above expectations, at 0.5 vs. 0.3 percent, alarm bells went off.

But again, context is required. The most informative gauge here — the one to which the Federal Reserve pays most attention — is the core index, year over year, which smooths out both monthly spikes and volatile movements in food and energy prices. The pullout in the figure below shows the monthly bump, but the yearly data show no spike at all, and you can easily see how low inflation remains relative to its sordid past.


(BLS)

Similarly — and this series is particularly important — interest rates have climbed in recent weeks, which again should be expected at this stage of the recovery, especially with a big slug of fiscal stimulus entering the system. But they too remain low by historical standards, with recent similar ups and downs.


(FRED database)

Now, let's flip to status-quo bias and ask if the alarmists are maybe onto something. Although economists cannot accurately assess the degree of slack left in the current economy, we know there's a lot less than there used to be. In that regard, the confluence of low unemployment, slightly faster nominal wage growth and the recent uptick in inflation all make sense. But what threats do they engender?

Faster price growth pushes back on paycheck buying power only if it surpasses nominal wage gains. I'd like to see both growing right now, with nominal wages growth outpacing inflation, especially for lower-paid workers. I recognize the investor class worries about that dynamic crimping corporate profits, but a) for crying out loud, profits have been crushing labor income for years, and b) that fat corporate tax cut will juice after-tax profits.

Higher interest rates could push back on some investing, but remember, the Fed was already raising rates and if they see the market doing their work for them, they'll have no reason to accelerate planned rate increases, at least assuming inflation remains "well-anchored." Here, too, the tax cut significantly lowers the after-tax cost of business investment.

End of the day, nothing alarming is going on in the national numbers, and every reason to press on with the expansion in the hopes that it finally reaches those who catch a break only in high-pressure labor markets. Who knows? Maybe if this keeps up, the black unemployment rate can close more of its four-point gap with the white rate.

That said, all these trends remain on the watch list, especially inflation and interest rates. The latter is of particular concern to me given the unusual fiscal experiment on which we've embarked. Between the tax cut and the spending deal, the government is throwing a whole lot more fiscal stimulus at the economy than it ever has at such low unemployment. In the near term, that's probably a good thing, as it could help reach the folks referenced above (though, especially re the tax cuts, I could have easily found much more direct ways to help them).

The real risk here is that at some unknown point, we really do hit the economy's capacity limits and instead of more jobs and wages, we just get inflation and higher interest rates. Moreover, if interest rates surpass growth rates, a relatively rare occurrence in the U.S. record, our public debt can start to grow quickly.

That, in turn, prompts two negative outcomes: much higher interest payments on the public debt and less perceived fiscal space to do what needs to be done to offset the next recession. If that's how this plays out, it will be ironic indeed. We'll have spent our fiscal stimulus in the recovery instead of the recession.

So stay tuned as I track these indicators, carefully balancing calmness and freak-outs.


Over at WaPo. I left out one figure/point due to space constraints. The other day when the CPI report came out slightly above expectations, as I discuss in the WaPo piece, a few freaker-outers actually started talking about 70's-style stagflation. So here's a graph of how we measured stagflation back in the day, using the "misery index," or unemployment + inflation. Not quite back to 70's levels, I'd say.

Sources: BLS






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Tuesday, February 20, 2018

Economic Scene: Come the Recession, Don’t Count on That Safety Net [feedly]

Economic Scene: Come the Recession, Don't Count on That Safety Net
https://www.nytimes.com/2018/02/20/business/economy/recession-safety-net.html

Republicans seek a leaner welfare system tying government benefits to hard work. But such benefits are worthless when there is no work to be had.

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