Joe Scarborough is apparently feeling emboldened by his exchange with Paul Krugman on the Charlie Rose show and is doubling down on his confused anti-deficit tirades. He is back with an oped in the Post, co-authored with Jeffrey Sachs, who should know better.
The piece is a cornucopia of confusion, beginning with the first sentence:
Dick Cheney and Paul Krugman have declared from opposite sides of the ideological divide that deficits don’t matter, but they simply have it wrong.
I am not in the defense of Paul Krugman business, but surely Jeffrey Sachs knows that Paul Krugman does not argue that deficits do not matter as a general proposition. What Krugman has argued very vociferously is that deficits do not matter in an economy that is operating far below its potential, as is the case with the United States today. The Congressional Budget Office (CBO) projects that economy’s output will be more than 6 percent (@ $1 trillion) below potential this year. Projected 2013 output is almost 10 percent below the real level of output that CBO had projected in 2008 before it recognized the impact of the collapse of the housing bubble.
In a period of widespread unemployment and excess capacity, like the present, deficits cannot have the negative effect that they would if the economy were near full employment. In an economy near full employment the argument would be that deficits push up interest rates. Higher interest rates will have the effect of reducing investment. They will also tend to put upward pressure on the dollar. A higher valued dollar will make imports cheaper, causing us to buy more from abroad. It will also make our exports more expensive, leading us to sell less to foreigners. The result is an increase in our trade deficit.
On the Charlie Rose show Scarborough seemed to think he had hit a treasury trove by discovering that Krugman had warned of this crowding out effect when the government was running budget deficits in periods where the economy was arguably close to full employment. Perhaps he can’t recognize the difference, but is Jeffrey Sachs unable to distinguish the situation of the economy in 2005-2007 from the situation the economy faces today?
The piece then tells us that the stimulus did not do anything to boost the economy:
Not so long ago, Keynesians guaranteed that Obama’s stimulus plan would move the U.S. economy more quickly toward growth by providing full employment and lowering deficits. We both were skeptical from the start, for good reason. In May 2009, the White House forecast 4.6 percent growth in 2012, an unemployment rate of 6 percent and a budget deficit of $557 billion. The actual outcomes were much worse: growth of 2.3 percent, unemployment at 8.1 percent and a budget deficit of nearly $1.1 trillion.
Again, it is hard to believe that Sachs does not know that Keynesians, like Krugman and me, yelled at the top of our lungs that the stimulus package was too small at the time it was being debated. And the promise to get the economy back to full employment was based on a serious underestimate of the severity of the downturn, not an overestimate of the impact of the stimulus. Surely Sachs knows this.
In fact estimates from the Congressional Budget Office and independent analysts show the stimulus did pretty much exactly what was expected, it created 2-3 million jobs. The problem was that we needed 10-12 million jobs. Is Sachs completely unfamilair with this work?
We are then warned about the burden of the deficits and the debt:
Sadly, our concerns have been borne out. Public debt was around 41 percent of the gross domestic product in 2008. Today it is around 76 percent and still rising. Yet the economy continues to languish.
Nevertheless, a few hardy Keynesians urge the president to raise deficits still further. We respectfully disagree. Doubling down on this dubious policy will move the United States only more quickly towardexcessive indebtedness and a possible economic crisis.
Scarborough and Sachs (S&S) then tell us “Keynes worried about the long-term buildup of public debt.”
The last admonition seems especially inappropriate since the United Kindom’s publc debt was well over 100 percent of GDP when Keynes was advocating deficit spending in the 1920s and 1930s. As far as the burden of debt, it is worth noting that interest on the debt is near a post war low measured as a share of GDP. This is because the financial markets do not share the concerns of Scarborough and Sachs and are willing to lend large amounts of money to the United States at very low interest rates. This means that we are seeing very little burden from the debt.
Furthermore, even if we follow the deficit path projected by CBO, interest payments measured as a share of GDP will just be back to their Bush I era levels in a decade. That is not a trivial drain on the Treasury, but it is small compared to the loss of $1 trillion in output we are seeing each year, along with the lives devastated by the prospect of years of unemployment.
Also if S&S are concerned about the measure of debt, then we can easily make them happy by simply buying back debt at a discount when higher interest rates cause bond prices to fall. Any bond calculator will show that the price of the long-term bonds issued today at record low interest rates will plummet when interest rates rise, as is generally projected. (Certainly as predicted by S&S.)
If we buy these bonds back at 50 to 80 cents on the dollar in three or four years, we can shave hundreds of billions, possibly trillions off of our debt. This would be a pointless exercise since it would leave our interest payments unchanged, but it should appease the gods for people who worship debt to GDP ratios (a group that apparently includes S&S).
If we want to limit the amount of interest that is paid out to our children (interest payments are redistributional within a generation, not between generations) then we can have the Fed continue to hold much of the debt. Currently half of what we pay out in interest is refunded by the Fed each year. Congress could instruct the Fed to continue to hold its bonds and tighten up monetary policy through raising reserve requirements. Jeffrey Sachs knows this. (Foreign debt is an issue, but that is the result of the trade deficit, which is in turn the result of an over-valued dollar. If the value of the dollar does not change, cutting the deficit will not affect the nation’s indebtedness to foreigners, except insofar as it lower imports by reducing GDP.)
Finally, the piece contains arguments for cutting military spending and fixing the health care system. It is hard to believe that anyone who has read Krugman’s columns would think that this is a point of disagreement. The projected increases in health care costs is of course the source of our projected long-term deficit problems. The Obama administration certainly can be faulted for not doing more in both areas, but even the harshest Obama critic on these points would have to acknowledge that he would face enormous opposition from Congress in going further than he already has.
In sum, we have a lot more rope-a-dope here but very little by the way of substantive argument. This might be the sort of thing that Scarborough does for a living, but what is Sachs’ excuse?
Dean Baker is co-director of the Center for Economy and Policy Research. He also writes a regular blog, Beat the Press, where this post originally appeared.
Photo by Marylandstater under public domain




15 Comments

I watched much of the Charie Rose “debate” the other night. Joe kept dropping Robert Rubin’s over and over again as though Rubin was some sort of god (he is really a scam artist). Joe kept the same old tired GOP talking points that helped to get us into this mess.
No mention of Wall st crimes or reforms from Joe no mention of jobs creation just making “tough choices” w/SS Medicare and Medicaid. Joe said he worried about passing our debt to his kids. he might to worry more about leaving his kids a world with no jobs
I have followed Sachs closely since his work in Bolivia in the mid-80s. I would invite anyone to list a single contribution he has ever made to any country. Often, his work is unintelligible and riddled with inconsistencies
Sachs. No dramatic economic accolades outside of teaching. Joe Scarborough. Another lawyer to politician to TV personality.
Would you take your mechanic’s advice on whether you should have heart surgery? So why does this country continue to promote the ideas of non-economists telling us about the economy?
“Taxation is Sin.”
That’s a consequence of the 0th Commandment: “Thou shalt not tax.”
That’s how Genesis is read out in the Florida Panhandle.
What, exactly, is Scarborough’s interest in this issue (other than the obvious stroking of an oversized ego, of course)? Is this crackpot running for 2016 Veep, maybe? Free advertising five days-per-week, including an obsequious cast of grifters and sycophants, along with a co-host who clearly suffers from an advanced case of Stockholm Syndrome. Jeb-Joe, 2016. (Shudder.)
I can’t believe it’s only about the ego-stroking.
Scarborough reminds of George Will or Mr. Know it All. Let it be economics, environmental areas, terrorism, history, or whatever George was always there to provide his expertise. Now comes Joe.
Someone mentioned watching Charlie Rose show. Sorry guy what a waste of time. Charlie what a fake??
where was Scarborough during Bush era when the deficits started creeping up.
More money, more money, more money, more money… ?? methinks.
murdering someone & sucking Poppy’s dick…
Joe’s got Raskolnikov Syndrome. Not content with one thrill killing, he’s become more ambitious, and wants to inflict death on an entire generation.
I saw the Charlie Rose show that night and Scarborough didn’t understand two things most of all:
1. Krugman called Scarborough’s attacks ad hominem because Scarborough wanted to make the debate about Krugman and what Krugman said years ago rather than about fiscal policy.
2. As circumstances change, so do priorities. Thus, the change in what Krugman was saying ten years ago compared to what he has been saying the last four.
Thank you for making that point. It is one that Scarborough does not seem to understand. I doubt that he has the sophistication to understand your point about buying back bonds at a discounted rate when interest rates go up.
Speaking of the Bible and taxation, many conservative Christians probably don’t know enough about world history to understand why tax collectors were villains in the Bible. Thus, they say things like “taxation is theft” because back in Biblical times, it pretty much was. Jesus and his fellow Jews lived under Roman occupation. Most of the taxes that were collected were not spent on improving the lives of the people that paid the taxes. They were used to enrich Rome. Of course, you could make the same argument today about special interests, especially military contractors, drug companies and subsidized farming.
“Then the Pharisees went and plotted to entrap him in what he said. So they sent their disciples to him, along with the Herodians, saying, ‘Teacher, we know that you are sincere, and teach the way of God in accordance with truth, and show deference to no one; for you do not regard people with partiality. Tell us, then, what you think. Is it lawful to pay taxes to the emperor, or not?’ But Jesus, aware of their malice, said, ‘Why are you putting me to the test, you hypocrites? Show me the coin used for the tax.’ And they brought him a denarius. Then he said to them, ‘Whose head is this, and whose title?’ They answered, ‘The emperor’s.’ Then he said to them, ‘Give therefore to the emperor the things that are the emperor’s, and to God the things that are God’s.’ When they heard this, they were amazed; and they left him and went away.”—Matthew 22:15-22
It looks to me like Scarborough has either taken or been given the job of discrediting Krugman.
When I think of Joe Scarborough, which is almost never since I divorced myself from cable, I always think of my high school days. Most of the students did their thing and then got the hell out of there. And then there were the ass kissers and power suckups ( Charlie Rose ). Joe is the epitome of the combo package; an ass kisser and a power suckup. He hasn’t had an original idea or thought since puberty. His wife owns him like she owns a third pair of garden gloves; just in case. He’d learn German though, if he thought the power structure would be impressed that he could metaphrase verbatim, Mein Kamph. That Paul Krugman thought that he was entering into anything other than a slaughtering house with these two, proves the old saw. The smartest, most caring students in high school weren’t the most popular until they did their thing and got the hell out of there.