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Go Home Desperate Measures

ECONOMY OCTOBER 29, 2010

Desperate Measures

With Republicans poised to sweep into office and obstruct Obama's agenda, is there anything he can do to revive the economy over the next two years? Last week I wrote about the possibility that we’re in a Japan-style recession—a rare form of economic disease that’s largely unresponsive to conventional remedies, like lower interest rates. This type of malady—the fashionable term is “balance-sheet recession”—tends to follow a collapse in the price of housing or stocks, at which point people become so preoccupied with paying down debt that they refuse to borrow even on super-attractive terms. Consumer spending plummets, dragging the economy down with it, until the debt-repayment cycle runs its course. Devastatingly, that process took more than a decade in Japan, and the fear is that a similar fate might befall the United States.

The easiest way to confront this situation is, well, to pray that we’re not in a balance-sheet recession. Or, failing that, to hope that the disease is mild and most of the debt-repayment (economists call it deleveraging) is already behind us. As I explained last week, there’s some reason to think that’s the case. The model of consumer behavior favored by economists at the White House suggests the saving rate—the fraction of your paycheck you save—has risen about as high as it needs to in order to manage the debt from the recent bubble. From here on out, the thinking goes, consumer spending may not juice the economy the way it did in the 2000s. But it won’t weigh on it heavily either.

On the other hand, if we actually are in a Japan-style recession, the news is even grimmer than the economics would suggest. According to the economist Richard Koo, Japan only managed to keep its economy from shrinking into oblivion through massive government spending. But with Republicans almost certain to control the House of Representatives, a repeat of last year’s stimulus is highly unlikely. What then, is the Obama administration to do?

As it turns out, there are still a few viable options:

Shoot the hostage (i.e., kneecap your allies to finagle more government spending). It’s no secret that Democrats are keen to pass a major infrastructure package, which would have the dual benefit of supporting the economy in the short-term while making us more productive over the long-term. Pretty much everyone who studies these things agrees that our infrastructure is either badly outdated, in a state of disrepair, or both. (The American Society of Civil Engineers estimates that the country could use about $2.2 trillion worth of upgrades and repairs over the next five years.) But, of course, Democrats had zero luck passing a major infrastructure package after the initial stimulus in early 2009. It’s hard to believe they’re going to fare much better with a House Republican majority that’s constantly looking over its shoulder at pitchfork-wielding Tea Party activists. Particularly since several of these activists are on the verge of coming to Congress themselves.

Still, a deal on infrastructure spending may not be entirely out of reach, at least if the White House is ruthless enough. One idea along these lines comes care of David Shulman, a senior economist at UCLA’s Anderson Forecast center. Shulman proposes a several-hundred-billion dollar infrastructure package in which the administration agrees to suspend Davis-Bacon, the law requiring contractors for government-funded construction projects to pay locally prevailing wages, as deemed by the Labor Department. Conservatives complain that the law artificially inflates costs and is a sop to labor. (I have somewhat mixed feelings toward the law but am more sympathetic.)

Shulman would also have the administration fast-track environmental approval of construction projects—under current law, it can take months to assemble the various environmental-impact statements and reports, and there can be costly litigation along the way. Shulman recommends that the White House oversee an accelerated environmental review process and set up some provision for expediting judicial review. (The American Prospect’s Harold Meyerson hinted at some similar ideas back in May.)

Unions and environmentalists would howl, of course—in many cases for good reason. But that’s partly the point. (In fact, the louder the better.) If a spending package has the right opponents, then the conservative media-industrial complex may come around, bringing the GOP leadership along with it.

 

Strike a grand-bargain with Republicans on tax cuts. The administration tried to limit the portion of last year’s $800 billion stimulus that got allocated to tax cuts, the thinking being that tax cuts are less efficient as stimulus than government spending. This is true in normal times: People tend to save a large fraction of their tax cuts, while government spending works its way into the economy’s bloodstream more directly, at least if well-executed. But this tax cut/spending debate is largely beside the point during a balance-sheet recession. In that case, people refuse to spend until they’ve paid down debt. If you give them a tax cut that they end up mostly saving, you’ve still accelerated the debt payback and moved up the date when they’re willing to spend again.

The real problem with tax cuts is that the ones Republicans favor skew heavily toward the wealthy, whereas its lower- and middle-income people who are groaning underneath piles of debt. In order to get a tax-cut deal, the administration may have to lavish more goodies on the wealthy than would be ideal. But, given the alternative—again, think lost decade—that may be a reasonable price to pay.

One obvious basis for discussion here would be a proposal by Larry Lindsey, George W. Bush’s first White House economic adviser. Lindsey has spent the last 20 months urging a two-year halving of the payroll tax for both workers and businesses. This would save each of them about $1,200 on average, and cost about as much overall as the Obama stimulus. The benefit to workers is that it provides a nice chunk of cash for repaying debt. The benefit to employers is that it makes it cheaper to hire new workers—something that can’t hurt at a time of near double-digit unemployment.

In fact, the White House itself considered a business payroll-tax cut late this summer, but administration officials have told me they discarded it because they didn’t think it would be the most efficient use of government money. (The administration believes businesses have plenty of money to hire new workers if only they were motivated to do so.) But as part of a deal to get money to existing employees, cutting payrolls taxes for companies seems like a reasonable (and not morally offensive) price to pay.

 

Launch a massive, unilateral homeowner bailout. Keep in mind the reason spending plummets and saving rises during a balance-sheet recession: The weight of that huge helping of debt taken on during the boom years. To deal with this, the government can embark on a spending spree of its own (option 1) or hand consumers more money to spend and save (option 2). But maybe the most efficient solution gets right to the source of the problem—the debt itself. If there were a way to hack away big chunks of personal debt, Americans wouldn’t be obsessed with paying it off and could start spending again straight away.

By far the biggest source of household debt is, of course, houses. Mortgages represent about three-quarters of the total, according to the most recent numbers from the New York Fed—or about $9 trillion out of $12 trillion. If the government were able to slice $1 trillion off of this sum, it could dramatically accelerate the timeline for consumers to resume their spending. Keep in mind, after all, that household debt has only fallen $800 billion since the height of the crisis two years ago.

Better yet, there are actually two effects here—not just lowering the borrower’s overall debt, but also lowering his or her monthly payments. Suppose you owe $100,000 on a 30-year mortgage with a 5 percent interest rate. If the government winnowed your balance to $75,000, your monthly payments would fall from $537 to $403 per month, leaving you more than $1,500 extra to spend or save as you please each year. So the debt-reduction also works as conventional stimulus.

Now it’s true that congressional Republicans would never go for this. (You can imagine the White House pitch to GOP leaders: We hear what you’re saying about another $100 billion in spending. How bout $1 trillion for mortgage-debt relief?) The good news is that the administration could do it without congressional approval. Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac basically have an unlimited credit line with the U.S. Treasury, and the government has controlled Fannie and Freddie since it seized them in 2008. The mechanics would be hairy: How do you decide which mortgages to write-down? Do you only write-down mortgages Fannie and Freddie already own, or do you have Fannie and Freddie go out and buy new ones? If it’s the latter, do Fannie and Freddie eat the whole cost themselves, or do they split the losses with banks? Etc., etc. But the bottom line is that it can be done.

The far bigger obstacle is the politics. Suffice it to say, if you thought the bank bailout and the stimulus went down badly, then watch how the Tea Partiers react if the government spends a $1 trillion without so much as asking Congress. This is obviously why the administration quickly shot down rumors of a homeowner bailout when they cropped up this summer. And it’s probably why it will never happen. But before you sneer, ask yourself the following: Will Barack Obama be in better shape two years from now with the economy humming along and an apoplectic Tea Party movement, or with 9 percent unemployment and a slightly less apoplectic Tea Party movement?

I’m not saying I’d do this tomorrow—I’d wait another six months to see if we really are in a Japan-style recession. But, once you do the basic math, it doesn’t seem so crazy after all.

Noam Scheiber is a senior editor for The New Republic and a Schwartz Fellow at The New America Foundation.

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16 comments

Germany, went the path of austerity versus spendspendspend just posted today the lowest unemployment in 18 years. Recall they dinged Obama hard for this spending. Asia is largely out of this recession. The banks even in the US are definitely out of this recession and making record bonuses again. If a few more regions of the world start to show strong recovery, then the republicans will be able to make a very powerful case: 1) The US almost always exits recessions first 2) Yet many others that focused on spending have exited the recession 3) We were warned by other governments like Germany to focus on spending. They warned us, we ignored it. They are enjoying boom times right now. 4) If repubs were in charge, this would have lasted a year at most, like all our other recessions. Hell, 9/11 was $1T in economic damage, and that was over in 6 months. Who'd a though on 9/12? If things don't get better soon, the repubs will steamroll with the 4 talking points above. What the elites like Krugman argue sounds like gibberish to anyone that has ever managed a budget. Points 1..4 are readily explainable and make sense.

- seattleeng

October 29, 2010 at 1:05am

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I'll take window number two, the payroll tax holiday. That's been my hobbyhorse for over a year, and I'm not giving up now just because Scheiber has come around. My primary reason for supporing it: the payroll tax, not the income tax, is the tax lower to middle income folks actually pay (something like 80% of all taxpyers pay more in payroll taxes than in income taxes). Lindsey's proposal, that employees and employers share the holiday, is okay too; most economists (including those at CBO) believe that employees bear most if not all of the employers share of payroll taxes (in the form of reduced compensation and benefits). My secondary reason for supporting it: my second hobbyhorse, which is to reduce the cost of hiring folks (by not only reducing payroll taxes but ending the blockhead custom of having employers pay for health insurance). My third reason for supporting it: Scheiber is more likely to be elected President in 2012 than Congress is to pass a giant infrastructure spending bill or that Obama will "socialize" the cost of reducing housing debt. Not that I don't want Scheiber to be elected President in 2012 (although I'm not sure he would satisfy the minimum age requirement in the Constitution).

- rayward

October 29, 2010 at 8:02am

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A very useful article. Well done. I agree with ward on the Window#2 option. Personally I think it should be combined with shooting the hostage. At least it would be clear then who the hostage is.

- Robert Powell

October 29, 2010 at 9:40am

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I'd like to shoot the hostage as well, but that hostage is handy because it brings out the votes in an election year. I suppose shooting an environmental hostage would be OK if the EPA continues to aggressively regulate carbon and the WH pushes some kind of clean energy legislation that some Republicans can live with. But what about labor? They were already disheartened when Obama ignored Card Check and feel they had to fight like hell to keep most labor-negotiated health care plans tax-free (and still got smacked with taxes on some very generous plans). If you take away Davis-Bacon in exchange for Republican approval of highway work, how much more upset would labor (especially construction trades and Teamsters) be?

- wildboy

October 29, 2010 at 11:42am

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I don't know...it sounds like you're saying that Obama's choices are to either capitulate to Republicans or...capitulate to Republicans. The last option is a non-starter; Obama already tried something along these lines and the banks just weren't interested because there were better options for their bottom line. Strong-arming the refi with fannie and freddie may actually provoke an armed uprising, not to mention a Republican controlled House they may feel the need to start some witch-hunts and wait for something to pop up. The only real choice for the next two years is either get "lame-ducked" by the party of NO, or eliminate the filibuster and hope that enough arms can be twisted to get items through a Republican controlled House.

- GSpinks

October 29, 2010 at 1:24pm

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Seattle - pray tell, what exactly has Germany done that can be called austere? What spending did they cut? I can tell you - none (yet). Just because the GOP keep repeating itself does not mean it actually happened. http://mediamatters.org/research/201009100023 Germany instead greatly increased its government expenditure. Its current reasonably low (for the US, actually incredibly high for Germany) deficit is largely a function of increased exports rather than representing spending restraint. And interestingly enough, I remember you replying to questions about the effectiveness of the part of the stimulus that kept people in their jobs with the question about why we didn't do it for everyone. As it turns out, Germany went a lot further than the US in keeping people in their jobs through the Kurzarbeit program. What this means is that the labour force (and hence domestic demand) isn't decimated in the downturn and the workers and industries are ready to respond to an increase in demand quite fast. Hence the low unemployment. So, you actually like what Krugman and Obama have been proposing when it's allowed to be put into motion without Republican obstructionism? Good to know.

- Nari224

October 29, 2010 at 1:24pm

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Ruthless, Nari. But, modestly, Germany is not the USofA. Of the various Euros, they so far have made the best use of our defense umbrella-- by a significant margin. And the gestalt is fundamentally different. We had a chance for cooperative industrial policy like Germany's decades ago, but everybody decided to just take the money and run.

- Robert Powell

October 29, 2010 at 5:11pm

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Bob - no argument on any of your points, but they completely ignore (or gloss over) my point. The current conservative dogma (repeated over and over here right now) is that Germany cut, cut, cut and look how successful they've been. Problem is of course that it bears no reality to the truth.

- Nari224

October 29, 2010 at 5:35pm

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Wow. Aggressive action now by BHO facing loss of one or both Houses to do things that have very low stimulus multiplier effect gets accolades and "could be possible to do"--- after 18 months of timid actions with large nmajorities in both Houses. That's a lesser hope/possibility for future effective progressive policies than suggesting BHO and his fellow-traveling ineffectuals be replaced asap by Repub idiots if need be and hope for better luck in 2016, if not 2012.

- drofnats1

October 29, 2010 at 6:41pm

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If memory serves me right, there used to be a tax deduction for all interest, not just mortgage interest. A two-year tax deduction for interest (it could phase out for folks earning over $100,000 or some other limit) would have a direct effect of stimulating borrowing and spending, no? And it's a type of tax cut.

- LDuncan

October 29, 2010 at 9:52pm

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WP is reporting this morning that Obama is considering a deal with the Republicans that would include a temporary extension (maybe two years) of the Bush tax cut for people making over $250,000 per year together with a permanent extension of the Bush tax cut for everybody else. If it's true, Garry Wills is right: "omnidirectional placation".

- rayward

October 30, 2010 at 9:22am

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Nari224: "What spending did they cut?" Do you ever wonder why when a company ANNOUNCES they will lay people off their stock goes up? It's because the market is happy with a DIRECTION they have picked. The impact doesn't have to wait until the people have been laid off. Same with Germany. Make no mistake, there is a reason that 20,000 protested in the streets of Germany. It's because these cuts are real and deep. What Germany announced for a country of 80M people was a solid $100B in cuts over the next four years. In US terms, that'd be around $400B when adjusted to the size of the government's budget. Just a few % is often all it takes to convince the street you are serious.

- seattleeng

October 30, 2010 at 4:04pm

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Germany ALWAYS has a big trade surplus due to a dynamically strong manufacturing base, with the highest labor costs in the world. Germany can thus afford to make those budget cuts. The United States has not had a trade surplus since the year after the Gulf War, and has deliberately de-industrialized for more than thirty years. Hard to bring those jobs back when the myth of high labor costs persists. The U.S. needs more engineers and fewer lawyers. Tricky to now be thinking of new infrastructure spending when so many thought that was a bigger part of the original stimulus.

- K2K

October 30, 2010 at 7:38pm

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Seattle - so you don't disagree that Germany has actually cut any spending (yet)? Nor that they did engage is significant stimulus spending? And that they doubled their own deficit in doing so? So instead of saying "oh, actually they didn't engage in austerity" you start talking about things that are planned but are yet to happen? Last I checked, "...went the path of austerity..." is a use of the past tense. The US also (thanks to the current president) has a plan to reduce it's future deficits. You apparently don't agree that the plan will succeed, but the bond market apparently does.

- Nari224

October 31, 2010 at 8:50am

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Nari224: "As it turns out, Germany went a lot further than the US in keeping people in their jobs through the Kurzarbeit program." Absolutely right. Kurtzarbeit is a pretty hefty subsidy, constituting up to 67% of the wages of a foregone employee. It's a bit inconsistent for seattleeng to laud Germany for "austerity" when the nation's more generous programs helped keep its employment problem from winding up in the ditch (or a deeper ditch) to begin with. German unemployment went up only slightly over the financial crisis and never got above a seasonally adjusted 7.7% over the past two years. http://www.google.com/publicdata?ds=z9a8a3sje0h8ii_&met=unemployment_rate&idim=eu_country:DE&dl=en&hl=en&q=germany+unemployment+rate So the situation there may be a very different situation than what we have--and that's without any "austerity" measures imposed there. When the economy is doing better, measures to get the budget under control is both easier and perhaps more prudent. But our economy may not be where Germany's is, and so that tactic may not be prudent at this point. "Make no mistake, there is a reason that 20,000 protested in the streets of Germany. It's because these cuts are real and deep." I don't know if the cuts are real and deep, but in Europe I don't think it's that hard to get 20,000 to protest in the streets for just about anything. The numbers attending a rally hardly constitute economic data.

- dsimon

November 1, 2010 at 12:18am

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dsimon - right. The Germans traded stronger GDP growth (in terms of real GDP change Germany fell further than the US and has not recovered as well) for lower unemployment through deficit spending. This isn't rocket science.

- Nari224

November 1, 2010 at 1:34pm

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