Wednesday, February 18, 2009

It is still possible to pull out of this nosedive before hitting the ground with a terrible crash.

From the Guardian:

"
A credit crisis, not a morality play

The liquidationists are back – and just like in the 1930s they are economically counterproductive and morally evil

Facing the gravest economic crisis of his lifetime, the reaction of Andrew Mellon, the US treasury secretary, in 1929 was to treat the impending depression as a morality play. "Liquidate labour, liquidate stocks, liquidate the farmers, liquidate real estate … purge the rottenness out of the system. Higher costs of living and high living will come down. People will work harder, live a more moral life. Values will be adjusted, and enterprising people will pick up the wrecks from less competent people."

Mellon saw the Great Depression as an opportunity to teach the reckless a lesson. Resolving it required an adjustment in which bad debts were written down and bad debtors were written off. The last thing that was needed was more debt, which would lead only to an even bigger crisis. De-leveraging had to be allowed run its course.

Now in the run-up to the G7 finance ministers' summit in Rome last weekend, we had Giulio Tremonti, the Italian finance minister, doing his best Mellon impersonation. "If the problem is an excess of debt," Tremonti wrote in an Italian newspaper, "then the cure is not adding more debt, whether that debt is public or private." Evidently suffering, in the form of unemployment and lost incomes, must be what they must be so that de-leveraging can proceed.

It is not entirely fair to pick on Tremonti, since he is hardly alone in voicing this view. Liquidationism is widely heard in other European countries. (Can you say "Germany"?) In the US Congress, the Republicans opposed the Obama stimulus plan partly on strategic political grounds; they wanted the Democrats to be sole owners of the plan so that if the economy failed to recover quickly the majority could be blamed. But there was a strong liquidationist flavour to their arguments. Anything that smacked of more debt and spending was economically counter-productive and morally evil. Here too the current crisis is seen as a morality play.

This reading reflects a misunderstanding of both the crisis and its solution – a misunderstanding of the most dangerous sort. The crisis is a very serious shock that will cause unemployment to shoot into the double digits in virtually every OECD economy. Trillions of dollars of potential output will be lost. But there is no reason for it to turn into a lost decade, like in the US in the 1930s or Japan in the 1990s. An essential step for avoiding that is government action to replace the private spending that has collapsed.

Admittedly, more public spending is not a sufficient condition for avoiding a lost decade. Proper bank restructuring of a sort that the US, in particular, has not yet come forth with is also needed. But public spending to replace the private spending that has evaporated is also necessary. Without it no bank rescue can work, since the banks will have no customers. Without it a lost decade cannot be avoided.

To be sure, not every country is well placed to boost demand. Italy, not coincidentally, has good reason to proceed cautiously, with public debts in excess of 100% of GDP. But the US situation is different. With a public debt of 40% of GDP, the federal government can afford to borrow and spend. Certain European countries (can you say "Germany"?) are similarly in a position to take additional steps, although they showed unfortunately little inclination to do so at last weekend's summit.

No one wants to see the US public debt rise to 70% of GDP. No one wants to see future generations burdened with higher debts and taxes. But we have dug ourselves a very deep economic hole. Basic economic logic suggests spreading the costs of digging ourselves out over a period of years. This is what government debt is for. It is why governments accumulate debt in times of war. If we are serious about the welfare of our children, then the thing to do is to run budget surpluses once the slump is over, not to make the hole deeper.

The irony, of course, is that this logic should be most compelling to precisely those who are most concerned with excessive household indebtedness. No question but that US household indebtedness as a share of household incomes has to come down to more sustainable levels. But if household incomes are allowed to fall even faster than household debts, there will be no rebalancing and no end to the downward spiral. This is why a portion – but certainly not all – of the private debt that is written down must now be replaced with public debt.

So far, the first year of the current global crisis is almost exactly tracking the first year of the Great Depression. This is true of industrial production. It is true of trade. It is still possible to pull out of this nosedive before hitting the ground with a terrible crash. But not if our leaders treat the crisis as a mere morality play."

Me:

DonthelibertDem

19 Feb 09, 5:47am (1 minute ago)

While you say that the government must spend, I say that it must borrow. My problem with infrastructure spending is, quite frankly, it can't be spent well quickly. So, I suggested $100 Billion to begin with. We might need to spend more over time, but I don't agree with the idea of simply spending since I say that the key is borrowing. Spending on infrastructure does also signal confidence since we are spending on the future.
As a follower of Fisher, I believe that a major component of the crisis is the fear and aversion to risk. I suggested $100 Billion on targeted tax cuts to attack this problem.
Also to attack debt-deflation, I argued for a sales tax decrease to be phased out in the future. This would attack the depth of the loss in consumption, not encourage debt. $200 Billion here.
Finally, we should spend generously on social safety net spending, including aid to states for this purpose. It is this spending which should be generous.
I would spend more, but we do need to worry about the debt. Here, I agree with Buiter. We simply don't know at what point this will become a real problem, so it does limit the amount that we can borrow. I agree with Shiller that, under optimal circumstances, we should have spent more. Sadly, the last 8 years have seen a huge increase in the debt.
We should also nationalize some banks, and follow a QE plan like this:

http://www.nber.org/~wbuiter/helijpe.pdf

What we shouldn't do is prop up home prices. The losses are going to be real, the only way to stop them are massive subsidies, which could be better used for the items previously mentioned. A good idea would be a general housing subsidy for the needy.

I would also like to see a system of narrow/limited banks. Notice that my plan would borrow/spend government money, only in different ways than many in my party.

The idea of debt-deflation as a purgative is a recipe for massive unemployment and social problems, hardly likely to lead to a free market system. That has to be one of the worst social predictions on record.

The main point is that by focusing on spending, you give a bias toward infrastructure and pet projects that might or might not be useful, but do nothing to battle the fear and aversion to risk or drop in consumption by individuals. From my reading of Fisher, and Keynes for that matter, my ideas are more in line with theirs than the current plan just adopted. Like TARP, it is likely to be helpful, but poorly spent.

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