Who else thinks the President’s speech didn’t include any plans to create the 29 million full-time jobs for the dis-employed? Please raise your hand!
About jobs he said:
”We can help big factories and small businesses double their exports, and if we choose this path, we can create a million new manufacturing jobs in the next four years.”
”If you choose this path, we can cut our oil imports in half by 2020 and support more than 600,000 new jobs in natural gas alone.”
And, except to say he wants time to finish the job, that’s it! Over the next 4 years the economy will probably need another 4 million jobs just to employ new entrants into the job market, and not even to reduce that 29 million dis-employment figure. So he needs 33 million new full-time jobs to get to full employment, and he’s talking about 1.6 million in his acceptance speech. What planet is he living on?
Maybe, like Herbert Hoover, if he keeps saying prosperity is just around the corner, and does almost nothing to make it happen, then he thinks his beloved private sector will quit generating profits from financial manipulation and start creating jobs at a living wage. I think we’ve seen this movie; and it doesn’t end happily for working Americans.
The President had a lot more to say about deficits, then about jobs; showing that he lives in a fantasy world of faux problems:
”You can choose a future where we reduce our deficit without sticking it to the middle class. Independent experts say that my plan would cut our deficits by $4 trillion. And last summer, I worked with Republicans in Congress to cut billions in spending because those of us who believe government can be a force for good should work harder than anyone to reform it, so that it’s leaner, and more efficient, and more responsive to the American people.”
But why reduce our deficit at all? Have we got an inflation problem? Does either the level of our debt at $16 T, or our debt-to-GDP ratio of more than 100 percent either impair our ability to deficit spend in the future, or to pay off the debt without either taxing or borrowing? The answers to these questions are: There’s no reason to do it; No, and No! Here’s more from O:
“I want to reform the tax code so that it’s simple, fair, and asks the wealthiest households to pay higher taxes on incomes over $250,000, the same rate we had when Bill Clinton was president; the same rate we had when our economy created nearly 23 million new jobs, the biggest surplus in history, and a whole lot of millionaires to boot.
I love higher taxes on the wealthy, as much as the next person. I wouldn’t mind going back to the marginal tax rates of World War II and the inheritance tax rates of Harry Truman’s times. But does anyone really think that the same tax rates we had under Bill Clinton really caused the 23 million new jobs during his Administration; so that if we want to have that kind of job growth again, we really must have Clinton’s tax rates? Give me a break!
We know that the prosperity of the 1990s was primarily fueled by debt bubbles, and had little to do with Clinton’s higher tax rates. In fact, his surpluses, coupled with the Internet bust, produced the recession he bequeathed to Bush 43, a recession that was ameliorated, but never really ended for most working people by Bush’s deficit spending.
“Now, I’m still eager to reach an agreement based on the principles of my bipartisan debt commission. No party has a monopoly on wisdom. No democracy works without compromise. I want to get this done, and we can get it done. But when Governor Romney and his friends in Congress tell us we can somehow lower our deficits by spending trillions more on new tax breaks for the wealthy, well, what’d Bill Clinton call it? You do the arithmetic, you do the math.”
The problem, Mr. President, is that there’s more than arithmetic involved here, which is why the Bill Clinton/Jack Lew surpluses produced that recession at the end of their term, the one that played a part in Al Gore’s defeat. The economy is dynamic. If you try to cut deficit spending or run surpluses by raising taxes and cutting Government spending, then you had better estimate what impact that’s going to have on non-Government, including private, savings and investment, and the trade balance; because cutting deficit spending can lead to a net reduction or elimination in net savings and investment, as well as a reduction in the trade deficit.
Then the President told us what he wouldn’t do to cut the deficit:
“I refuse to go along with that. And as long as I’m President, I never will.
“I refuse to ask middle class families to give up their deductions for owning a home or raising their kids just to pay for another millionaire’s tax cut.
“I refuse to ask students to pay more for college; or kick children out of Head Start programs, to eliminate health insurance for millions of Americans who are poor, and elderly, or disabled, all so those with the most can pay less.
“I’m not going along with that.
“And I will — I will never turn Medicare into a voucher.
“No American should ever have to spend their golden years at the mercy of insurance companies. They should retire with the care and the dignity they have earned. Yes, we will reform and strengthen Medicare for the long haul, but we’ll do it by reducing the cost of health care, not by asking seniors to pay thousands of dollars more. And we will keep the promise of Social Security by taking the responsible steps to strengthen it, not by turning it over to Wall Street.”
I’m glad for all these refusals and lines in the sand. He’s told us what he won’t do to make things even easier for the wealthy; but as Digby says, that doesn’t mean he won’t trade some or all of these things, for tax hikes on the wealthy. Tax hikes on the rich will please people wanting greater fairness; but that will be cold comfort for people whose safety net benefits are traded away for a smidgeon of greater fairness.
There’s also another thing he hasn’t told us. Maybe someone will make him do it in the debates. And that is what he plans to do to solve that 29 million jobs problem. That question is a really interesting one considering that he plans for the US Government to average $400 Billion in deficit reduction over the next 10 years. That is really, really a bad idea, because in doing that he’s pretty much condemning the US to a stagnant economy with perpetually high unemployment for the next 10 years, giving us a 14 year period of high unemployment, Obama’s “new normal” legacy to future generations.
Why do I say that? Well let’s look at some basic macroeconomics from Bill Mitchell:
”The basic income-expenditure model in macroeconomics can be viewed in (at least) two ways: (a) from the perspective of the sources of spending; and (b) from the perspective of the uses of the income produced. Bringing these two perspectives (of the same thing) together generates the sectoral balances.
“From the sources perspective we write:
GDP = C + I + G + (X – M)
which says that total national income (GDP) is the sum of total final consumption spending (C), total private investment (I), total government spending (G) and net exports (X – M).”
That is, X is exports and M is imports. So, if X is greater than M, we have what is colloquially called a “trade surplus”; but if M is greater than X then we have a “trade deficit,” which is what the United States has enjoyed for many years. I say enjoyed, because people in other nations send us goods, real wealth, and we send them electronic bits of information called US Dollar electronic credits. Seems like we’d have the better of that kind of deal, if we had sense enough to employ the people put out of work by our persistent trade deficit on things that are valuable for people living here in the United States.
However, that aside, we should note that the US seems to be running a trade deficit of 4% of GDP right now. We’ll see shortly the importance of this number. Bill continues:
“From the uses perspective, national income (GDP) can be used for:
GDP = C + S + T
which says that GDP (income) ultimately comes back to households who consume (C), save (S) or pay taxes (T) with it once all the distributions are made.
Equating these two perspectives we get:
C + S + T = GDP = C + I + G + (X – M)
So after simplification (but obeying the equation) we get the sectoral balances view of the national accounts.
(I – S) + (G – T) + (X – M) = 0
That is, the three balances have to sum to zero.”
So, we have an investment/savings balance, a Government spending/tax balance, and a foreign trade (exports/imports) balance. The sum of these balances must equal zero, and this is true by definition alone. It is what economists call “an accounting identity.” Are accounting identities always “true”?
They are always “true” in the sense that they are logically valid. But reasoning from them can result in false conclusions, because 1) the wrong data is correlated to the one or more of the terms of the identity, or 2) further reasoning about the causal relations among the terms in an identity may give false conclusions, and/or 3) reasoning about the dynamics relating the terms in an identity over time may be in error.
If we want the private sector to collectively save, then S must be greater than I, and we must have an investment/savings balance deficit, or, in other words the private sector as a whole must be accumulating nominal financial wealth within some time period.
If we want to import more than we export, then M must be greater than X, and we must have a “trade deficit”, which means that US entities as a whole must be accumulating more goods and services from abroad and must be sending more dollars into accounts at the Federal Reserve owned by foreign entities than they are receiving from them in return for our own exports.
Notice here, that the USD provided to foreign nations when we run a trade deficit, go into their accounts at the Federal Reserve. They never do leave this country. So, don’t listen to people who constantly tell you that our trading dollars are going overseas. They’re not. They’re in our own central bank.
Lastly, according to the model, if we want the private sector to collectively save, and if we want it to collectively spend more on foreign goods and services than it receives in nominal financial wealth for our goods and services, then the Government sector will have to spend more than it taxes. That is, it will have to run a deficit in the Government balance to accommodate the savings and import desires of the private sector by replacing the leakage in aggregate demand that savings and more imports than export represent. But just how much of a deficit will the Government sector need to make sure that the balance called for in the model happens without decreasing savings or reducing the size of our trade deficit?
Well, I said earlier that we’re running roughly a 4% of GDP trade deficit in the US. We also know that the private sector needs to save to repair household balance sheets after the disaster of the financial crisis of 2008, coupled with the housing crash. Let’s say that US private savings desires are currently 6% of GDP, a reasonable estimate given behavior over the past few years.
Then, we’re saying that we want (I – S) to be – 6% of GDP and (X-M ) to be – 4% of GDP, which implies that we also want (G – T), the Government balance to be positive and equal to 10% of GDP. In other words, we’re saying that the Government ought to be running a budget deficit of $1.6 Trillion this fiscal year, which judging from how things are going is approximately $400 Billion more than we will actually be spending.
So, it should be clear that the Federal Government, far from running too large a deficit, is now running a deficit that is $400 Billion smaller than it should be to accommodate the desires of the private sector to import and save, and to replace the aggregate demand lost to savings and more imports than exports. Do you suppose this shortfall in the Government deficit spending we need could have anything to do with our stubbornly high unemployment rates?
Now, let’s say the Obama Administration compromises on a deficit reduction bill specifying $4 Trillion in Government deficit spending reductions over 10 years phased something like this: 8%; 8%, 6%, 6%, 6%, 4%, 4%, 3%, 3% and 2%, where the percents refer to the deficit spending levels as a percent of GDP. Then, there will be increasingly less space for private savings and imports.
No doubt the President would like to see a shrinking percentage of GDP spent on imports over the next decade because that means that the budget deficit can be smaller if private savings stay the same. But, it’s pretty clear that in the next two years, we won’t be able to shrink the trade deficit by even 1% of GDP or roughly $160 – $170 B annually.
So, that means that if we follow the plan for deficits I just stated, then the savings desires of the private sector can’t be accommodated at 6%, and household balance sheets won’t continue to build. As, deficits move down to 6% in 2015 – 17, imports will be squeezed further, as will savings. By the second half of the decade, both imports and savings will be subjected to very high downward pressure.
The result will be that our trading partners will resist efforts to re-balance trade. They will lower prices of their goods and services in an effort to maintain the balance. We, in turn, will also have to lower costs, and that probably means lower wages – a race to the bottom to continue to increase our levels of exports. That will feed back to domestic private savings, and also to aggregate demand here, which will both decrease; though maybe not by as much as demand will increase from the decrease in imports. Causality moves in conflicting directions and without rigorous modeling we can say what the overall increase in demand outcome will be.
In addition, the decreased space for savings will result in people seeking to save more and in increased economic conflict in the private sector with people and classes fighting over a shrinking pie. In the US currently, political power is arranged in such a way that an increasingly small group is able to direct nominal financial income its way by using the political system to its advantage.
So, austerity will mean that a very few wealthy people will grab the shrinking pie of savings, and more people will be faced with the choice of maintaining their consumption levels by going into debt, or maintaining their rate of savings by cutting back on consumption. This developing situation will be unsustainable; and the second half of the decade, after a period of a stagnating economy, will surely see a deepening depression, and a strengthened economic and political oligarchy.
That’s the scenario if things go smoothly with austerity policies being planned by the elite led by Peter G. Peterson and the President of the United States. However, it is likely that things will not go according to plan and that the politicians will not be able to maintain the deficit targets in any long-term deficit reduction plan. The reason is that if demand flags because people try to buck the program by imposing strict spending discipline on themselves, or if foreign demand for our exports flags so that export industries must cut employees, causing a weakening of demand here; then rising unemployment here will impact the automatic stabilizers like unemployment insurance food stamp benefits, and Medicaid, driving up deficits beyond the levels in the deficit reduction plan.
The experience of Europe tells us that ideological neo-liberal austerians will not then admit that they were wrong about austerity and the possibility of implementing a deficit reduction plan successfully. But that, instead, they will double-down on it, shrinking aggregate demand even more, and driving the economy down even further, as they have in every European nation where austerity is being tried.
What if the President, or Mr. Romney succeeds in making the “grand bargain” to raise a few taxes, and cut 3 times as much spending, including entitlements in the process of passing a long-term deficit reduction plan, and what happens if in the first three years the plan fails to meet its targets and also creates a new recession in our fragile economy?
Will the austerians then admit they were wrong and start paying attention to the sectoral balances and people’s needs? Or will political necessity prevent them from admitting error and force them to double- down on austerity because that is the only viable political choice? We know what they will do, because no politician ever admits they were wrong, until perhaps they’re thrown out of office, and not very frequently even then.
Look at Obama himself, it was apparent by the Fall of 2009, that his ARRA was too small to do the job of creating a full recovery. Did he and the Democrats admit it? Did they pull out all the stops to pass a jobs bills in the rest of 2009 and take care of their unfinished business? Or did they double-down on insisting that the stimulus worked, and move on increasingly to a health care bill that bailed out the insurance companies, and burned all their political capital, that coupled with the tepid recovery, lost them the election of 2010?
I think we know what will happen if President O wins on his “austerity grand bargain.” First, it will never succeed because it is inconsistent with what the sectoral balances tell us. And, second, when it doesn’t he will double-down and then plunge us into a worse recession than ever, and in 2016 an impoverished population will face at least four more years of looting by the 1%, and increasing poverty from the other corporatist party of the emerging plutocracy.
So, Mr. President, and Paul Krugman, don’t tell me we’re going to have both an economic recovery and a forced move towards a lower deficit over the next four years, because the sectoral financial balances model says, that without a new credit bubble, that will lead to an expansion of aggregate demand coming from rapidly increasing private debt, that will eventually burst and give us a new great financial crisis:
It just ain’t gonna happen.
(Cross-posted from New Economic Perspectives.)



24 Comments

Right on the nose. We all know what Obama’s plan is: offshore more jobs with the TPP, and oversee the creation of a national version of the “Georgia Works” indentured servitude program.
Thanks and rec’d.
Deficits are a zero-sum game. Unless the government’s deficit exceeds foreign sector’s surplus (our trade deficit), the private sector (that’s us) will have a deficit, i.e., we’ll have to borrow and/or dip into our savings to pay our taxes. The result is usually a depression or severe recession.
The problem goes back much further: all the way to the original hope and change: the “New Deal” which propped up this cyclical system of bubbles and crashes which otherwise would have been buried next to plantation slavery.
The only compromise FDR needed to make in order for the Democrats to swallow this giant sellout was to take anti-lynching measures off the table to satisfy the interests in the Southern delegations. As usual the genuine progressives were left out of the decision-making.
wigwam, I’d like to know WHAT savings you’re referring to. With interest rates as low as they are, people are foolish to save. Money is getting more worthless because it’s not worth much in interest to borrow. Debt has been turned into “toxic asset” when it’s really a debt just so that the rich look rich on paper.
All these highly degreed financial wonks are the best of the best and yet we still have a flailing economy. Everything they ever learned in the ivy leagues is clearly wrong. For instance, the claim that “inflation is under control”. Prices keep climbing and there’s not enough inflation to raise interest rates? Really?
I’m not buying that. The people who are saving these days are the ones rich enough to have Cayman bank accounts and they’re not interested in interest rates, but consider this: Just sitting on money invokes supply/demand mechanism…less supply via taxes starves a government into printing more money for circulation thus devaluing the currency collecting dust in Cayman.
No, I didn’t get a degree in finances, but IMHO I make more sense than the blokes who caused systemwide failure.
Hi Clara. Good question.
When economists use the term “savings” in this context, they mean (by definition) all income that doesn’t get spent on “consumption” or “investment,” which I realize isn’t a great deal of help. The best explanations for all of this stuff is found in this section of the Wikipedia’s entry on GDP. It has a good subsection of examples. (It’s where I learned what little I know about this stuff.)
Oops! My bad. Savings is simply income minus consumption. Investment is considered part of savings.
In 2008, when Obama and Hillary both put Ronald Reagan on their list of 10 best U.S. presidents ever , I thought they were just throwing a bone to righties, in the hopes of getting more votes. Next time, I’ll take one of my own favorite pieces of advice, namely, “assume nothing.”
Obama often talks derisively about “trickle down.” His actions say otherwise, though.
There is another possible solution, used by itself or in combination with LGID’s analysis:
The private sector 1% has accumulated increasing greater and greater wealth, through asset stripping & outright theft.
More progressive taxes, a large wealth tax and sever estate taxes (death duties) would readjust the balance of assets in the private sector, The 99% would be inclined to spend they increase money on consumption, so increasing demand and creating jobs.
There are a couple of items missing from LGID’s analysis:
1. Hyper inflation, as per Zimbabwe, can you explain this in terms of MMT?
2. The US prosperity in the ’50s and ’60s was offset by much less prosperity (especially in the UK). Was this due to payments on the War debt in from the UK to the US? How is this explained by MMT?
Shit.
When considering what is being said, one must consider the source. After considering the source, I wouldn’t give you a plugged nickel for whatever was said.
Zimbabwe had an agro-export economy so it’s no surprise that it crumbled when the United Kingdom block it from it’s export market.
Same thing happened to the Confederacy during the civil war when the Union Navy blockaded all trade with the confederacy.
And… much the same thing happened in Wiemar Germany. Unpayable war reparations meant that endless resources were exiting the country with nothing of value provided in return.
Scott Fullwiler has done such an analysis, but I don’t have the right references and don’t seem able to find them.
The Weimar Repubic and Zimbabwe are the common examples and were easily explained by their exceptional circumstances, e.g., the Treaty of Versailles in the case of the Weimar Republic.
par
The key inflation argument for the recent U.S. is the “stagflation” of the mid-to-late seventies, which brought Reagonomics to power. The MMT response seems to be that that was resource-push inflation as opposed to demand-pull inflation. The resource shortages being the failure of the anchovie harvest off the coast of Peru, which jacked up food prices, followed by the OPEC oil embargo of the U.S. for having saved Israel’s ass in the 1973 Yom Kippur war. And the key problem is that the Keynesians had no answer for the “stag” part of the “stagflation,” which led to the demise of the Keynesians and the ascendance of the thirty years of neoliberal Reaganomics.
I wish we did all know that. But I’m afraid most Americans don’t know that we’ve got to put a stop to races to the bottom. First, the elites ran one here in the states; then they moved global. People don’t benefit from inter-state competition. It only sucks up wealth to the very top.
Are you kidding? Do you think Henry Wallace, A. A. Berle, Rexford Guy Tugwell, Harold Ickes, Marriner Eccles, and Eleanor Roosevelt weren’t real progressives. Go read some New Deal history. We should only have a Green New Deal here. It would solve most of today’s problems.
Look above at the private sector savings/investment balance. Net savings exist when savings exceed investment. When there’s a trade deficit; then their can’t be net savings unless there’s a government deficit, as you say very, very frequently. But whether there are net savings or not doesn’t say anything about the distribution of those savings or savings leakage to the Cayman islands..
So, presumably, “net savings” is defined to be savings minus investment. Right?
In the sectoral financial balances model, yes!
Yes, I agree with you. In the wikipedia scholar survey rankings Reagan comes in at no. 17. Obama is tied for 14th with LBJ and Monroe. Clinton is tied for 20th with McKinley. My own view is that the rankings become dicey after the top 7, Lincoln, FDR, Washington, Jefferson, TR, Woodrow Wilson, Harry S. Truman.
I’m all for this Synoia; but not because we need the revenue. What we need is greater economic equality. Either we get it pretty soon or we can say goodbye to democracy. It’s us or them; we’ve got to limit their wealth or they will destroy our freedom!
On MMT treatments of inflation/hyperinflation, see:
here, here, here, here, and here.
There are also other links of note in the fiscal summit piece. On this:
Can’t speak for MMT. I’m getting better at it, but I’m certainly not one of the expert MMT economists. But here’s how I would explain things.
First, both the US and the UK were on the gold standard with respect to international trade, so neither had fully sovereign fiat currencies until the 1970s. Since the British had to pay back the US in dollars, a currency it had no control over, it had a tough road to hoe compared to the US. Second, the British had much more rebuilding to do than the US, and that continued to be a burden during the 1950s. Third, the UK had a more expensive welfare state than the US, and without a freely floating sovereign fiat currency system, it was much more of a burden than it would be later. And, of course, the US emerged from WWII as an unrivaled industrial, trade, and military power. Most of the rest of the world was prostrate. So, the fact that the US was much more prosperous than the UK in the 50s and 60s isn’t surprising and certainly in light of the above isn’t in conflict with MMT theory.
Btw, median wealth per adult in the UK today is twice what it is in the US.
Zimbabwe also destroyed its productive capacity by expropriating the property of the Dutch farmers and turning over their farms to people who didn’t know how to run them. The ability to produce dropped through the floor, and the money printed by Government exceeded the capacity of the economy to absorb it.
That would be a problem here in the US too, if the money printed added too much in net financial assets for the economy to absorb. But that won’t happen if the money is used to pay off debt and to cover deficit spending that amounts to no more than 10% or so of GDP.
See the references in my previous reply on MMT analyses.