-
The Fed's Risky Course
Tweet Share on Facebook January 29, 2009 CommentAndy Busch of BMO Capital Markets is as concerned about the Fed monetizing federal debt as I am:
The actions by Ben Bernanke and the Fed will ensure that a recovery by the economy will not be choked off just as it begins. However, there are dangers to this policy and the monetization that may occur. The discussion of a Bad Bank and the $1-2 trillion funding of this bank is where we need to watch. The current plan being discussed is going to utilize some of the new TARP money and then issue government bonds to fund the rest.
My belief is that the Federal Reserve will be called upon to buy some of this paper and thus monetize debt. Printing money to pay for programs was done with success during WWII. Doing it today is entirely different. There is no war and there are no price controls.Should the Fed actively engage in US government debt monetization they run the risk of dramatically increasing the money supply, driving down the value of the dollar, and forcing interest rates higher which would choke off a recovery.
-
Obama Adviser: Stimulus Plan is 'Totally Impractical'
Tweet Share on Facebook January 28, 2009 Comment (28)This is a classic CapCom that got lost in the post-election shuffle but is relevant for today, I think:
When Barack Obama's pick for budget chief, Peter Orszag, ran the Congressional Budget Office, here is what it had to say about a stimulus plan almost exactly like the one Obama is now proposing (bold is mine):
"Practically speaking, however, public works involve long start-up lags. Large-scale construction projects of any type require years of planning and preparation. Even those that are "on the shelf" generally cannot be undertaken quickly enough to provide timely stimulus to the economy. For major infrastructure projects supported by the federal government, such as highway construction and activities of the Army Corps of Engineers, initial outlays usually total less than 25 percent of the funding provided in a given year. For large projects, the initial rate of spending can be significantly lower than 25 percent.
Some of the candidates for public works, such as grant-funded initiatives to develop alternative energy sources, are totally impractical for countercyclical policy, regardless of whatever other merits they may have. In general, many if not most of these projects could end up making the economic situation worse because they would stimulate the economy at the time that expansion was already well under way."
Also here is an analysis of the new CBO report on the slow-motion Obama stimulus plan from the Tax Foundation:
According to CBO, the plan includes $604 billion in new spending and $212 billion in tax cuts for a total cost of $816 billion over the 2009 to 2019 period. While supporters of the plan claim that it must be enacted soon to get government cash into the economy, only 15 percent (or $93 billion) of the spending will occur during this fiscal year which ends in October. Only 37 percent of the spending would occur in FY 2010, which means that roughly half of the plan's spending will occur in FY 2011 and beyond. The economy is going to be well back to health on its own by the time any of this takes effect.
While economists differ on whether Keynesian demand-side spending can boost economic growth in the short run as much as it hurts in the long run, even the most ardent advocates would agree that the plan spends too little in the short run to make much of a difference. CBO estimates that GDP will total $28.8 trillion over the next two years but the plan spends $318 billion during the same period -- just 1.1 percent of GDP. This is like pouring a teaspoon into the ocean.
On the tax side, only about 36 percent of the $212 billion in tax cuts will benefit taxpayers this year and the rest will benefit them next year. To make matters worse, the tax provisions are heavily weighted toward "refundable" tax credits for families which are little different from the ineffective tax rebate checks Congress approved in 2008.
-
Obama: Is Bank Nationalization Off the Table?
Tweet Share on Facebook January 28, 2009 Comment (92)Bond market guru David Goldman of the marvelous Inner Workings blog thinks so:
What convinced the Obama administration not to play Dr. Frankenstein with the banking system? The collapse of the British pound and the soaring cost of insuring against a British default must have gotten someone’s attention. The sharp backup in US Treasury term yields despite an equally sharp fall in US equity market, moreover, must have alerted some in Washington that the credit of the US Treasury was not impregnable. The worst thing about bank nationalization is NOT that the government will do a bad job of banking. Everyone does a bad job at banking. The worst thing is that it places untold trillions of dollars of new liabilities on the shoulders of a federal government that already is borrowing well over $1 trillion a year.
Me: You can also toss the rising cost of sovereign debt insurance into the mix as well. But I am not sure that the First Bad Bank of the United States option is any better.
-
Monetization Mania: Federal Reserve Ready to Start Buying Treasuries
Tweet Share on Facebook January 27, 2009 Comment (1)Goldman Sachs says the Fed is ready to to bring out the Daisy Cutter of monetary tools:
In our view, it is highly likely that the Federal Reserve will eventually decide to purchase longer-term Treasuries. First, even a 0% nominal federal funds rate is likely to look much too high by 2010 if our forecasts for inflation and the unemployment rate are roughly on the mark ... Fed officials will therefore have to pedal harder and harder to “mimic” the effects of cuts in short-term interest rates via unconventional monetary policy options, and buying longer-term government securities is one of the most conventional of these unconventional options.
Might this have some negative impact down the road? As the saying goes, "We'll jump off that bridge when we get to it." But take note of this recent analysis by currency guru Alex Merk:
After all, the massive stimuli under way should be highly inflationary; but if the Fed helps to engineer that markets cannot price inflation into bond prices, there has to be a valve. This valve, in our view, will be the U.S. dollar; we cannot see the dollar hold up in face of the types of intervention that are under way and that we see play out. Incidentally, a substantially weaker dollar may be exactly what Fed Chairman Bernanke wants. He has repeatedly praised Roosevelt for going off the gold standard during the Great Depression to allow the price level to adjust to the pre-1929 level; this is Fed talk for praising the pursuit of inflationary policies. His only criticism has been that he didn't act fast enough. ... In the U.S., these days, most of the deficit is financed abroad; the U.S. is lucky that at least the debt is U.S. dollar denominated so that it can, at any time, repay its debt by simply printing more money. However, the value that foreigners may place on the U.S. dollar may be substantially less the more inflationary the policies are the U.S. is pursuing.
Does this all have anything to do with the Obama administration's decision to send the national debt soaring with both a giant stimulus package and another bank bailout? Here is what the St. Louis Fed says about debt monetization:
Today, as in the immediate post-World War II period, the phrase “monetizing the debt” means money growth induced by attempts to moderate the effects of rapidly growing gover-nment debt on interest rates.
-
10 Reasons to Whack Obama's Stimulus Plan
Tweet Share on Facebook January 27, 2009 Comment (121)Some people are going to oppose President Obama's ginormous stimulus package just because they're on a different political team. But when you look at the economic evidence, it sure seems like an economic recovery package that's heavy on government spending and light on tax cuts is just the opposite of what we should be doing right now. Try this closing argument on for size:
1) A 2005 study by Andrew Mountford and Harald Uhlig "analyzed three types of policy shocks: a deficit-financed spending increase, a balanced budget spending increase (financed with higher taxes) and a deficit-financed tax cut, in which revenues increase but government spending stays unchanged. We found that a deficit-spending shock stimulates the economy for the first 4 quarters but only weakly compared to that for a deficit-financed tax cut." In other words, FDR vs. Clinton vs. Reagan, Reagan wins.
2) Harvard economist Robert Barro looked at the multiplier effect of World War II military spending -- supposedly the Mother of All Stimulus Plans and found that "wartime production siphoned off resources from other economic uses — there was a dampener, rather than a multiplier." Barro prefers eliminating the corporate income tax to massive government spending.
3) Alberto Alesina of Harvard and Luigi Zingales of the University of Chicago want to adress the fear and confidence issue by creating "the incentive for people to take more risk and move their savings from government bonds to risky assets. There is no better way to encourage this than a temporary elimination of the capital-gains tax for all the investments begun during 2009 and held for at least two years."
4) An initial CBO analysis found that a mere $26 billion out of $274 billion in infrastructure spending, just 7 percent, would be delivered into the economy by next fall. An update determined that just 64 percent of the stimulus would reach the economy by 2011.
5) University of Chicago economist and Nobel laureate Gary Becker doubts whether all this stimulus spending will do much to lower unemployment: "For one thing, the true value of these government programs may be limited because they will be put together hastily, and are likely to contain a lot of political pork and other inefficiencies. For another thing, with unemployment at 7% to 8% of the labor force, it is impossible to target effective spending programs that primarily utilize unemployed workers, or underemployed capital. Spending on infrastructure, and especially on health, energy, and education, will mainly attract employed persons from other activities to the activities stimulated by the government spending. The net job creation from these and related spending is likely to be rather small. In addition, if the private activities crowded out are more valuable than the activities hastily stimulated by this plan, the value of the increase in employment and GDP could be very small, even negative."
6) Christina Romer, the new head of the Council of Economic Advisers, coauthored a paper in which the following was written about taxes: "Tax increases appear to have a very large, sustained, and highly significant negative impact on output. Since most of our exogenous tax changes are in fact reductions, the more intuitive way to express this result is that tax cuts have very large and persistent positive output effects." And former Bush economic adviser Lawrence Lindsey tack on this addendum: "The macroeconomic benefits of tax cuts can be two to three times larger than common estimates of the benefits related to spending increases. The relative advantage of tax cuts over spending is even clearer when the recession is centered on the household balance sheet."
7) Economists Susan Woodward and Robert Hall find that the multiplier effect from infrastructure spending maybe just 1-for-1, less than that 3-to-1 ratio for tax cuts that Romer found: "We believe that the one-for-one rule derived from wartime increases in military spending would also apply to increases in infrastructure spending in a stimulus package. We should not count on any inducement of higher consumption from the infrastructure stimulus."
8) Economist John Taylor thinks it better to let the Federal Reserve deal with the short-term problems in the economy, while fiscal policy should attend to long-term issues: "In the current context of the U.S. economy, it seems best to let fiscal policy have its main countercyclical impact through the automatic stabilizer ... It seems hard to improve on this performance with a more active discretionary fiscal policy, and an activist discretionary fiscal policy might even make the job of monetary authorities more difficult. It would be appropriate in the present American context, for discretionary fiscal policy to be saved explicitly for longer-term issues, requiring less frequent changes. Examples of such a longer-term focus include fiscal policy proposals to balance the non-Social Security budget over the next ten years, to reduce marginal tax rates for long run economic efficiency, or even to reform the tax system and Social Security."
9) Massive stimulus didn't work in the Great Depression. As this Heritage Foundation study notes: "After the stock market collapse in 1929, the Hoover Administration increased federal spending by 47 percent over the following three years. As a result, federal spending increased from 3.4 percent of GDP in 1930 to 6.9 percent in 1932 and reached 9.8 percent by 1940. That same year-- 10 years into the Great Depression--America's unemployment rate stood at 14.6 percent." Same goes for Japan and its Great Stagnation of the 1990s.
10) Olivier Blanchard, the chief economist of the International Monetary Fund, coauthored a paper which found "that both increases in taxes and increases in government spending have a strong negative effect on private investment spending."Bottom line: There is another model out there. One that worked in 2003, 1997 and 1981. But will America use it?
Sources:
1) http://sfb649.wiwi.hu-berlin.de/papers/pdf/SFB649DP2005-039.pdf
2) http://online.wsj.com/article/SB123258618204604599.html
3) http://online.wsj.com/article/SB123249646698200289.html
5)http://www.becker-posner-blog.com/archives/2009/01/on_the_obama_st.htm
6)http://www.econ.berkeley.edu/~cromer/RomerDraft307.pdf
7)http://woodwardhall.wordpress.com/2008/12/11/measuring-the-effect-of-infrastructure-spending-on-gdp/
8)http://www.stanford.edu/~johntayl/Papers/Reassessing+Revised.pdf
9) http://www.heritage.org/research/economy/bg2222.cf
10) http://www.mitpressjournals.org/doi/abs/10.1162/003355302320935043?cookieSet=1&journalCode=qjec
11) http://www.weeklystandard.com/Content/Public/Articles/000/000/015/951hvyxc.asp?pg=
-
The 25 People Who Screwed Up the World
Tweet Share on Facebook January 27, 2009 Comment (18)Who are the 25 people most responsible for screwing up the global economy? The Guardian takes a (somewhat U.K.-centric) shot at identifying them:
1) Alan Greenspan, chairman of US Federal Reserve 1987- 2006
2) Mervyn King, governor of the Bank of England
3) Bill Clinton, former US president
4) Gordon Brown, prime minister
5) George W Bush, former US president
6) Senator Phil Gramm
7) Abby Cohen, Goldman Sachs chief US strategist
8) Kathleen Corbet, former CEO, Standard & Poor's
9) "Hank" Greenberg, AIG insurance group
10) Andy Hornby, former HBOS boss
11) Sir Fred Goodwin, former RBS boss
12) Steve Crawshaw, former B&B boss
13) Adam Applegarth, former Northern Rock boss
14) Dick Fuld, Lehman Brothers chief executive
15) Ralph Cioffi and Matthew Tannin, Bear Stearns
16) Lewis Ranieri, mortgage finance guru
17) Joseph Cassano, AIG Financial Products
18) Chuck Prince, former Citi boss
19) Angelo Mozilo, Countrywide Financial
20) Stan O'Neal, former boss of Merrill Lynch
21) Jimmy Cayne, former Bear Stearns boss
22) Christopher Dodd, chairman, Senate banking committee (Democrat)
23) Geir Haarde, Icelandic prime minister
24) The American public
25) John Tiner, FSA chief executive, 2003-07
Me: I think it goes a little light on Congress. No teflon for Clinton. Where's Robert Rubin? Where's Barney Frank? Bush tried to reign in Fannie and Freddie. Where is Franklin Raines?
-
Sarah Palin Shoots for 2012 Bid for President: Report
Tweet Share on Facebook January 27, 2009 Comment (40)Sarah "Sara America" Palin is gearing for a presidential bid in 2012, says Cindy Adams. With a personal PAC and everything. This is what I wrote a few months back:
Palin starts with megacelebrity, a Saturday Night Live-proof magnetic personality, and a crawl-across-broken-glass base in the party among women and social conservatives. During the campaign, she has revealed some core principles: a desire to cut taxes, cut spending, win wars, and kill terrorists. A good start with GOP-ers, I would assume. But clearly she needs to flesh out her thinking a smidgen. To start that process, perhaps she should spend 2009 and 2010 reading one book a month, 24 total, on economics and foreign policy in preparation for her 2011 announcement. Here are two dozen off-the-top-of-my-head picks:
1) The Looming Tower: Al Qaeda and the Road to 9-11 by Lawrence Wright. There is no better book about the rise of militant Islam and the threat it poses to western civilization.
2) The End of Prosperity: How Higher Taxes Will Doom the Economy--If We Let It Happen by Arthur Laffer, Stephen Moore, and Peter Tanous. A timely and cogent analysis of the risks posed to the U.S. economy by the abandonment of Reaganomics.
3) Of Paradise and Power: America and Europe in the New World Order by Robert Kagan. Shows what a fool’s errand it is to expect our Old Europe NATO allies to support our 21st-century foreign policy goals.
4) The Way the World Works by Jude Wanniski. Why are taxes such a critical element to economic performance? The late Wanniski puts their role in historical context in this seminal work of supply-side economics.
5) The Writing on the Wall: Why We Must Embrace China as a Partner or Face It as an Enemy by Will Hutton. We’re all in this together, folks, and shepherding China to full-scale democratic capitalism is critical to our economy and national security.
6) An Army of Davids: How Markets and Technology Empower Ordinary People to Beat Big Media, Big Government, and Other Goliaths by Glenn Reynolds. Lays out how technology is making Big Anything an endangered species. And, no, the bailout doesn’t change that.
7) Surprise, Security, and the American Experience by John Lewis Gaddis. Explains that the Iraq war and pre-emptive military action are firmly rooted within the American foreign policy experience.
8) Rational Exuberance: Silencing the Enemies of Growth and Why the Future Is Better Than You Think by Michael Mandel. Mandel expertly illustrates the importance of technology-led innovation and productivity growth to America’s economic future. Growth is good.
9) Great Powers: America and the World After Bush by Thomas P.M. Barnett. This one isn’t out yet, but Barnett has a great track record. His general thesis: Expanded globalization and economic connectedness, with an assist from the U.S. military from time to time for security, can create a more peaceful and prosperous world.
10) The Growth Experiment: How the New Tax Policy Is Transforming the U.S. Economy by Lawrence B. Lindsey. A forgotten classic on the power of the Reagan tax cuts. It shouldn’t be.
11) The Empty Cradle: How Falling Birthrates Threaten World Prosperity and What to Do About It by Philip Longman. Why pro-natalist policies are important to U.S. economic growth and how they can be constructed.
12) Crisis of Abundance: Rethinking How We Pay for Health Care by Arnold Kling. Though you would never know it from reading and viewing the MSM, there are free-market approaches to healthcare reform. This is a great place to start.
13) Winning the Oil Endgame by Amory B. Lovins. Washington elites love to act like energy independence is a fantasy. Lovins shows it isn’t.
14) Grand New Party: How Republicans Can Win the Working Class and Save the American Dream by Ross Douthat and Reihan Salam. Not only a great history of the American conservative movement but a blueprint for a more family-focused GOP.
15) Cowboy Capitalism: European Myths, American Reality by Olaf Gersemann. Why big-government Old Europe hasn’t found the magic economic formula.
16) The Pro-Growth Progressive: An Economic Strategy for Shared Prosperity by Gene Sperling. The liberal approach to economic growth. If Obama wins, expect more than a few of the ideas in this book to pop up.
17) The Moral Consequences of Economic Growth by Benjamin M. Friedman. Why good growth helps makes good societies. That’s right--economists, at least some of them, are doing the Lord’s work.
18) The Third Century: America's Resurgence in the Asian Era by Joel Kotkin. This was written in 1988, but its insights about America and what makes us great are still relevant.
19) The Audacity of Hope: Thoughts on Reclaiming the American Dream by Barack Obama. Know your opponent, of course.
20) The World Is Curved: Hidden Dangers to the Global Economy by David Smick. Thoroughly lays out the risks to globalization and the prosperity it brings.
21) American Abundance: The New Economic & Moral Prosperity by Lawrence Kudlow. A hymn to everything that is right and good with America and democratic capitalism.
22) The Power of Productivity: Wealth, Poverty, and the Threat to Global Stability by William W. Lewis. Why are some nations rich and others not? It’s all about productivity. This book is a must-read on the topic.
23) On the Wealth of Nations: Books That Changed the World by P. J. O'Rourke. A funny dissertation on the ur-economics book.
24) Dutch: A Memoir of Ronald Reagan by Edmund Morris. It is the best book on Ronaldus Maximus out there.
-
Iran Nukes: Nuclear Weapons Material This Year
Tweet Share on Facebook January 27, 2009 Comment (10)Iran going nuclear? This from the International Institute for Strategic Studies:
As Iran nears the point – probably sometime in 2009 – of producing enough low enriched uranium for a nuclear weapon if it is further enriched, the question of how Iran can be stopped from having the Bomb will become increasingly urgent. ... For nearly two decades, Western strategy on the Iran nuclear issue emphasised denial of supply. Since 2002, there has also been a demand-side dimension to the strategy, aimed at changing Iran’s cost–benefit calculations through inducements and pressure. But the failure of these policies to prevent Iran from coming close to achieving a nuclear-weapons capability has promoted suggestions for fallback strategies that would grant legitimacy to uranium enrichment in Iran in exchange for intrusive inspections and constraints on the programme.
Me: The Obama White House would probably be happy at this, since it more than likely takes the military option off the table and accelerate progress toward some of "grand bargain" with Mullahocracy in Tehran. Hopefully the goal is use greater economic/political/cultural openess to change the regime from within. (Read Tom Barnett's blog for more on the "soft kill."
-
Obama's Topsy-Turvy Stimulus Plan
Tweet Share on Facebook January 27, 2009 Comment (4)Again, my take on the Obama stimulus package: I think it needs to be flipped around. Instead of two-thirds spending and one-third (kinda-sorta) tax cuts, it should two-thirds real tax cuts (lower individual, corporate and capital gains rates) and a third for needed infrastructure like the energy grid and such. Economist Stephen Entine in the WSJ today makes a similar case:
To be sure, some infrastructure projects might pass that cost-benefit test (perhaps electric grid modernization, or unclogging strategic rail bottlenecks). Some might keep worthwhile construction going on projects that states might otherwise cancel. But the pork projects on the governors' and mayors' wish lists serve no national purpose.
Ultimately, labor and capital must shift from declining industries and areas to expanding ones -- but intercepting people as they make the shifts and parking them in government projects for a year just delays the adjustment. And the debt and future taxes raised in the process become permanent burdens that shrink private output and income forever after. We need a permanent improvement in the production climate.
What would help? A lower corporate tax rate, as well as a permanent extension of the 2008 expensing provisions and the 2003 dividend and capital gains and top marginal income tax rates.
-
Goldman Sachs: Economy Looks Bad for 2010. Sorry, Democrats.
Tweet Share on Facebook January 26, 2009 Comment (4)Democratic incumbents might want to factor this economic analysis from Goldman Sachs into their 2010 midterm election expectations:
Turning to individual regions, we expect US GDP to contract by 1.6% in 2009. Growth should turn positive by the middle of the year, provided the new administration successfully implements the proposed US$825bn two-year fiscal stimulus package. We expect growth to improve to 1.2% in 2010.
Me: If this forecast turns out to be anywhere close to being accurate, you are going to have one mess of angry voters going to the polls. With trillions of dollars being spent , and Dems controlling the White House and Congress, "Blame Bush" isn't going to cut it.
