No Return To Normal
Why the economic crisis, and its solution, are bigger than you think.
Barack Obama's presidency began in hope and goodwill, but its test will be its success or failure on the economics. Did the president and his team correctly diagnose the problem? Did they act with sufficient imagination and force? And did they prevail against the political obstacles-and not only that, but also against the procedures and the habits of thought to which official Washington is addicted?
The president has an economic program. But there is, so far, no clear statement of the thinking behind that program, and there may not be one, until the first report of the new Council of Economic Advisers appears next year. We therefore resort to what we know about the economists: the chair of the National Economic Council, Lawrence Summers; the CEA chair, Christina Romer; the budget director, Peter Orszag; and their titular head, Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner. This is plainly a capable, close-knit group, acting with energy and commitment. Deficiencies of their program cannot, therefore, be blamed on incompetence. Rather, if deficiencies exist, they probably result from their shared background and creed-in short, from the limitations of their ideas.
The deepest belief of the modern economist is that the economy is a self-stabilizing system. This means that, even if nothing is done, normal rates of employment and production will someday return. Practically all modern economists believe this, often without thinking much about it. (Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke said it reflexively in a major speech in London in January: "The global economy will recover." He did not say how he knew.) The difference between conservatives and liberals is over whether policy can usefully speed things up. Conservatives say no, liberals say yes, and on this point Obama's economists lean left. Hence the priority they gave, in their first days, to the stimulus package.
But did they get the scale right? Was the plan big enough? Policies are based on models; in a slump, plans for spending depend on a forecast of how deep and long the slump would otherwise be. The program will only be correctly sized if the forecast is accurate. And the forecast depends on the underlying belief. If recovery is not built into the genes of the system, then the forecast will be too optimistic, and the stimulus based on it will be too small.
Consider the baseline economic forecast of the Congressional Budget Office, the nonpartisan agency lawmakers rely on to evaluate the economy and their budget plans. In its early-January forecast, the CBO measured and projected the difference between actual economic performance and "normal" economic performance-the so-called GDP gap. The forecast has two astonishing features. First, the CBO did not expect the present recession to be any worse than that of 1981-82, our deepest postwar recession. Second, the CBO expected a turnaround beginning late this year, with the economy returning to normal around 2015, even if Congress had taken no action at all.
With this projection in mind, the recovery bill pours a bit less than 2 percent of GDP into new spending per year, plus some tax cuts, for two years, into a GDP gap estimated to average 6 percent for three years. The stimulus does not need to fill the whole gap, because the CBO expects a "multiplier effect," as first-round spending on bridges and roads, for example, is followed by second-round spending by steelworkers and road crews. The CBO estimates that because of the multiplier effect, two dollars of new public spending produces about three dollars of new output. (For tax cuts the numbers are lower, since some of the cuts will be saved in the first round.) And with this help, the recession becomes fairly mild. After two years, growth would be solidly established and Congress's work would be done. In this way, the duration as well as the scale of action was driven, behind the scenes, by the CBO's baseline forecast.
Why did the CBO reach this conclusion? On depth, CBO's model is based on the postwar experience, and such models cannot predict outcomes more serious than anything already seen. If we are facing a downturn worse than 1982, our computers won't tell us; we will be surprised. And if the slump is destined to drag on, the computers won't tell us that either. Baked into the CBO model we find a "natural rate of unemployment" of 4.8 percent; the model moves the economy back toward that value no matter what. In the real world, however, there is no reason to believe this will happen. Some alternative forecasts, freed of the mystical return to "normal," now project a GDP gap twice as large as the CBO model predicts, and with no near-term recovery at all.
Considerations of timing also influenced the choice of line items. The bill tilted toward "shovel-ready" projects like refurbishing schools and fixing roads, and away from projects requiring planning and long construction lead times, like urban mass transit. The push for speed also influenced the bill in another way. Drafting new legislative authority takes time. In an emergency, it was sensible for Chairman David Obey of the House Appropriations Committee to mine the legislative docket for ideas already commanding broad support (especially within the Democratic caucus). In this way he produced a bill that was a triumph of fast drafting, practical politics, and progressive principle-a good bill which the Republicans hated. But the scale of action possible by such means is unrelated, except by coincidence, to what the economy needs.
Three further considerations limited the plan. There was, to begin with, the desire for political consensus; President Obama chose to start his administration with a bill that might win bipartisan support and pass in Congress by wide margins. (He was, of course, spurned by the Republicans.) Second, the new team also sought consensus of another type. Christina Romer polled a bipartisan group of professional economists, and Larry Summers told Meet the Press that the final package reflected a "balance" of their views. This procedure guarantees a result near the middle of the professional mind-set. The method would be useful if the errors of economists were unsystematic. But they are not. Economists are a cautious group, and in any extreme situation the midpoint of professional opinion is bound to be wrong.
Third, the initial package was affected by the new team's desire to get past this crisis and to return to the familiar problems of their past lives. For these protégés of Robert Rubin, veterans in several cases of Rubin's Hamilton Project, a key preconception has always been the budget deficit and what they call the "entitlement problem." This is D.C.-speak for rolling back Social Security and Medicare, opening new markets for fund managers and private insurers, behind a wave of budget babble about "long-term deficits" and "unfunded liabilities." To this our new president is not immune. Even before the inauguration Obama was moved to commit to "entitlement reform," and on February 23 he convened what he called a "fiscal responsibility summit." The idea took hold that after two years or so of big spending, the return to normal would be under way, and the costs of fiscal relief and infrastructure improvement might be recouped, in part by taking a pound of flesh from the incomes and health care of the old.
The chance of a return to normal depends, in turn, on the banking strategy. To Obama's economists a "normal" economy is led and guided by private banks. When domestic credit booms are under way, they tend to generate high employment and low inflation; this makes the public budget look good, and spares the president and Congress many hard decisions. For this reason the new team instinctively seeks to return the bankers to their normal position at the top of the economic hill. Secretary Geithner told CNBC, "We have a financial system that is run by private shareholders, managed by private institutions, and we'd like to do our best to preserve that system."
But, is this a realistic hope? Is it even a possibility? The normal mechanics of a credit cycle do involve interludes when asset values crash and credit relations collapse. In 1981, Paul Volcker's campaign against inflation caused such a crash. But, though they came close, the big banks did not fail then. (I learned recently from William Isaac, Ronald Reagan's chair of the FDIC, that the government had contingency plans to nationalize the large banks in 1982, had Mexico, Argentina, or Brazil defaulted outright on their debts.) When monetary policy relaxed and the delayed tax cuts of 1981 kicked in, there was both pent-up demand for credit and the capacity to supply it. The final result was that the economy recovered quickly. Again in 1994, after a long period of credit crunch, banks and households were strong enough, even without a stimulus, to support a vast renewal of lending which propelled the economy forward for six years.
The Bush-era disasters guarantee that these happy patterns will not be repeated. For the first time since the 1930s, millions of American households are financially ruined. Families that two years ago enjoyed wealth in stocks and in their homes now have neither. Their 401(k)s have fallen by half, their mortgages are a burden, and their homes are an albatross. For many the best strategy is to mail the keys to the bank. This practically assures that excess supply and collapsed prices in housing will continue for years. Apart from cash-protected by deposit insurance and now desperately being conserved-the American middle class finds today that its major source of wealth is the implicit value of Social Security and Medicare-illiquid and intangible but real and inalienable in a way that home and equity values are not. And so it will remain, as long as future benefits are not cut.
In addition, some of the biggest banks are bust, almost for certain. Having abandoned prudent risk management in a climate of regulatory negligence and complicity under Bush, these banks participated gleefully in a poisonous game of abusive mortgage originations followed by rounds of pass-the-bad-penny-to-the-greater-fool. But they could not pass them all. And when in August 2007 the music stopped, banks discovered that the markets for their toxic-mortgage-backed securities had collapsed, and found themselves insolvent. Only a dogged political refusal to admit this has since kept the banks from being taken into receivership by the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation-something the FDIC has the power to do, and has done as recently as last year with IndyMac in California.
Geithner's banking plan would prolong the state of denial. It involves government guarantees of the bad assets, keeping current management in place and attempting to attract new private capital. (Conversion of preferred shares to equity, which may happen with Citigroup, conveys no powers that the government, as regulator, does not already have.) The idea is that one can fix the banks from the top down, by reestablishing markets for their bad securities. If the idea seems familiar, it is: Henry Paulson also pressed for this, to the point of winning congressional approval. But then he abandoned the idea. Why? He learned it could not work.
Paulson faced two insuperable problems. One was quantity: there were too many bad assets. The project of buying them back could be likened to "filling the Pacific Ocean with basketballs," as one observer said to me at the time. (When I tried to find out where the original request for $700 billion in the Troubled Asset Relief Program came from, a senior Senate aide replied, "Well, it's a number between five hundred billion and one trillion.")
The other problem was price. The only price at which the assets could be disposed of, protecting the taxpayer, was of course the market price. In the collapse of the market for mortgage-backed securities and their associated credit default swaps, this price was too low to save the banks. But any higher price would have amounted to a gift of public funds, justifiable only if there was a good chance that the assets might recover value when "normal" conditions return.
That chance can be assessed, of course, only by doing what any reasonable private investor would do: due diligence, meaning a close inspection of the loan tapes. On the face of it, such inspections will reveal a very high proportion of missing documentation, inflated appraisals, and other evidence of fraud. (In late 2007 the ratings agency Fitch conducted this exercise on a small sample of loan files, and found indications of misrepresentation or fraud present in practically every one.) The reasonable inference would be that many more of the loans will default. Geithner's plan to guarantee these so-called assets, therefore, is almost sure to overstate their value; it is only a way of delaying the ultimate public recognition of loss, while keeping the perpetrators afloat.
Delay is not innocuous. When a bank's insolvency is ignored, the incentives for normal prudent banking collapse. Management has nothing to lose. It may take big new risks, in volatile markets like commodities, in the hope of salvation before the regulators close in. Or it may loot the institution-nomenklatura privatization, as the Russians would say-through unjustified bonuses, dividends, and options. It will never fully disclose the extent of insolvency on its own.
The most likely scenario, should the Geithner plan go through, is a combination of looting, fraud, and a renewed speculation in volatile commodity markets such as oil. Ultimately the losses fall on the public anyway, since deposits are largely insured. There is no chance that the banks will simply resume normal long-term lending. To whom would they lend? For what? Against what collateral? And if banks are recapitalized without changing their management, why should we expect them to change the behavior that caused the insolvency in the first place?
The oddest thing about the Geithner program is its failure to act as though the financial crisis is a true crisis-an integrated, long-term economic threat-rather than merely a couple of related but temporary problems, one in banking and the other in jobs. In banking, the dominant metaphor is of plumbing: there is a blockage to be cleared. Take a plunger to the toxic assets, it is said, and credit conditions will return to normal. This, then, will make the recession essentially normal, validating the stimulus package. Solve these two problems, and the crisis will end. That's the thinking.
But the plumbing metaphor is misleading. Credit is not a flow. It is not something that can be forced downstream by clearing a pipe. Credit is a contract. It requires a borrower as well as a lender, a customer as well as a bank. And the borrower must meet two conditions. One is creditworthiness, meaning a secure income and, usually, a house with equity in it. Asset prices therefore matter. With a chronic oversupply of houses, prices fall, collateral disappears, and even if borrowers are willing they can't qualify for loans. The other requirement is a willingness to borrow, motivated by what Keynes called the "animal spirits" of entrepreneurial enthusiasm. In a slump, such optimism is scarce. Even if people have collateral, they want the security of cash. And it is precisely because they want cash that they will not deplete their reserves by plunking down a payment on a new car.
The credit flow metaphor implies that people came flocking to the new-car showrooms last November and were turned away because there were no loans to be had. This is not true-what happened was that people stopped coming in. And they stopped coming in because, suddenly, they felt poor.
Strapped and afraid, people want to be in cash. This is what economists call the liquidity trap. And it gets worse: in these conditions, the normal estimates for multipliers-the bang for the buck-may be too high. Government spending on goods and services always increases total spending directly; a dollar of public spending is a dollar of GDP. But if the workers simply save their extra income, or use it to pay debt, that's the end of the line: there is no further effect. For tax cuts (especially for the middle class and up), the new funds are mostly saved or used to pay down debt. Debt reduction may help lay a foundation for better times later on, but it doesn't help now. With smaller multipliers, the public spending package would need to be even larger, in order to fill in all the holes in total demand. Thus financial crisis makes the real crisis worse, and the failure of the bank plan practically assures that the stimulus also will be too small.
In short, if we are in a true collapse of finance, our models will not serve. It is then appropriate to reach back, past the postwar years, to the experience of the Great Depression. And this can only be done by qualitative and historical analysis. Our modern numerical models just don't capture the key feature of that crisis-which is, precisely, the collapse of the financial system.
If the banking system is crippled, then to be effective the public sector must do much, much more. How much more? By how much can spending be raised in a real depression? And does this remedy work? Recent months have seen much debate over the economic effects of the New Deal, and much repetition of the commonplace that the effort was too small to end the Great Depression, something achieved, it is said, only by World War II. A new paper by the economist Marshall Auerback has usefully corrected this record. Auerback plainly illustrates by how much Roosevelt's ambition exceeded anything yet seen in this crisis:[Roosevelt's] government hired about 60 per cent of the unemployed in public works and conservation projects that planted a billion trees, saved the whooping crane, modernized rural America, and built such diverse projects as the Cathedral of Learning in Pittsburgh, the Montana state capitol, much of the Chicago lakefront, New York's Lincoln Tunnel and Triborough Bridge complex, the Tennessee Valley Authority and the aircraft carriers Enterprise and Yorktown. It also built or renovated 2,500 hospitals, 45,000 schools, 13,000 parks and playgrounds, 7,800 bridges, 700,000 miles of roads, and a thousand airfields. And it employed 50,000 teachers, rebuilt the country's entire rural school system, and hired 3,000 writers, musicians, sculptors and painters, including Willem de Kooning and Jackson Pollock.
In other words, Roosevelt employed Americans on a vast scale, bringing the unemployment rates down to levels that were tolerable, even before the war-from 25 percent in 1933 to below 10 percent in 1936, if you count those employed by the government as employed, which they surely were. In 1937, Roosevelt tried to balance the budget, the economy relapsed again, and in 1938 the New Deal was relaunched. This again brought unemployment down to about 10 percent, still before the war.
The New Deal rebuilt America physically, providing a foundation (the TVA's power plants, for example) from which the mobilization of World War II could be launched. But it also saved the country politically and morally, providing jobs, hope, and confidence that in the end democracy was worth preserving. There were many, in the 1930s, who did not think so.
What did not recover, under Roosevelt, was the private banking system. Borrowing and lending-mortgages and home construction-contributed far less to the growth of output in the 1930s and '40s than they had in the 1920s or would come to do after the war. If they had savings at all, people stayed in Treasuries, and despite huge deficits interest rates for federal debt remained near zero. The liquidity trap wasn't overcome until the war ended.
It was the war, and only the war, that restored (or, more accurately, created for the first time) the financial wealth of the American middle class. During the 1930s public spending was large, but the incomes earned were spent. And while that spending increased consumption, it did not jumpstart a cycle of investment and growth, because the idle factories left over from the 1920s were quite sufficient to meet the demand for new output. Only after 1940 did total demand outstrip the economy's capacity to produce civilian private goods-in part because private incomes soared, in part because the government ordered the production of some products, like cars, to halt.
All that extra demand would normally have driven up prices. But the federal government prevented this with price controls. (Disclosure: this writer's father, John Kenneth Galbraith, ran the controls during the first year of the war.) And so, with nowhere else for their extra dollars to go, the public bought and held government bonds. These provided claims to postwar purchasing power. After the war, the existence of those claims could, and did, establish creditworthiness for millions, making possible the revival of private banking, and on the broadly based, middle-class foundation that so distinguished the 1950s from the 1920s. But the relaunching of private finance took twenty years, and the war besides.
A brief reflection on this history and present circumstances drives a plain conclusion: the full restoration of private credit will take a long time. It will follow, not precede, the restoration of sound private household finances. There is no way the project of resurrecting the economy by stuffing the banks with cash will work. Effective policy can only work the other way around.
That being so, what must now be done? The first thing we need, in the wake of the recovery bill, is more recovery bills. The next efforts should be larger, reflecting the true scale of the emergency. There should be open-ended support for state and local governments, public utilities, transit authorities, public hospitals, schools, and universities for the duration, and generous support for public capital investment in the short and long term. To the extent possible, all the resources being released from the private residential and commercial construction industries should be absorbed into public building projects. There should be comprehensive foreclosure relief, through a moratorium followed by restructuring or by conversion-to-rental, except in cases of speculative investment and borrower fraud. The president's foreclosure-prevention plan is a useful step to relieve mortgage burdens on at-risk households, but it will not stop the downward spiral of home prices and correct the chronic oversupply of housing that is the cause of that.
Second, we should offset the violent drop in the wealth of the elderly population as a whole. The squeeze on the elderly has been little noted so far, but it hits in three separate ways: through the fall in the stock market; through the collapse of home values; and through the drop in interest rates, which reduces interest income on accumulated cash. For an increasing number of the elderly, Social Security and Medicare wealth are all they have.
That means that the entitlement reformers have it backward: instead of cutting Social Security benefits, we should increase them, especially for those at the bottom of the benefit scale. Indeed, in this crisis, precisely because it is universal and efficient, Social Security is an economic recovery ace in the hole. Increasing benefits is a simple, direct, progressive, and highly efficient way to prevent poverty and sustain purchasing power for this vulnerable population. I would also argue for lowering the age of eligibility for Medicare to (say) fifty-five, to permit workers to retire earlier and to free firms from the burden of managing health plans for older workers.
This suggestion is meant, in part, to call attention to the madness of talk about Social Security and Medicare cuts. The prospect of future cuts in this modest but vital source of retirement security can only prompt worried prime-age workers to spend less and save more today. And that will make the present economic crisis deeper. In reality, there is no Social Security "financing problem" at all. There is a health care problem, but that can be dealt with only by deciding what health services to provide, and how to pay for them, for the whole population. It cannot be dealt with, responsibly or ethically, by cutting care for the old.
Third, we will soon need a jobs program to put the unemployed to work quickly. Infrastructure spending can help, but major building projects can take years to gear up, and they can, for the most part, provide jobs only for those who have the requisite skills. So the federal government should sponsor projects that employ people to do what they do best, including art, letters, drama, dance, music, scientific research, teaching, conservation, and the nonprofit sector, including community organizing-why not?
Finally, a payroll tax holiday would help restore the purchasing power of working families, as well as make it easier for employers to keep them on the payroll. This is a particularly potent suggestion, because it is large and immediate. And if growth resumes rapidly, it can also be scaled back. There is no error in doing too much that cannot easily be repaired, by doing a bit less.
As these measures take effect, the government must take control of insolvent banks, however large, and get on with the business of reorganizing, re-regulating, decapitating, and recapitalizing them. Depositors should be insured fully to prevent runs, and private risk capital (common and preferred equity and subordinated debt) should take the first loss. Effective compensation limits should be enforced-it is a good thing that they will encourage those at the top to retire. As Senator Christopher Dodd of Connecticut correctly stated in the brouhaha following the discovery that Senate Democrats had put tough limits into the recovery bill, there are many competent replacements for those who leave.
Ultimately the big banks can be resold as smaller private institutions, run on a scale that permits prudent credit assessment and risk management by people close enough to their client communities to foster an effective revival, among other things, of household credit and of independent small business-another lost hallmark of the 1950s. No one should imagine that the swaggering, bank-driven world of high finance and credit bubbles should be made to reappear. Big banks should be run largely by men and women with the long-term perspective, outlook, and temperament of middle managers, and not by the transient, self-regarding plutocrats who run them now.
The chorus of deficit hawks and entitlement reformers are certain to regard this program with horror. What about the deficit? What about the debt? These questions are unavoidable, so let's answer them. First, the deficit and the public debt of the U.S. government can, should, must, and will increase in this crisis. They will increase whether the government acts or not. The choice is between an active program, running up debt while creating jobs and rebuilding America, or a passive program, running up debt because revenues collapse, because the population has to be maintained on the dole, and because the Treasury wishes, for no constructive reason, to rescue the big bankers and make them whole.
Second, so long as the economy is placed on a path to recovery, even a massive increase in public debt poses no risk that the U.S. government will find itself in the sort of situation known to Argentines and Indonesians. Why not? Because the rest of the world recognizes that the United States performs certain indispensable functions, including acting as the lynchpin of collective security and a principal source of new science and technology. So long as we meet those responsibilities, the rest of the world is likely to want to hold our debts.
Third, in the debt deflation, liquidity trap, and global crisis we are in, there is no risk of even a massive program generating inflation or higher long-term interest rates. That much is obvious from current financial conditions: interest rates on long-maturity Treasury bonds are amazingly low. Those rates also tell you that the markets are not worried about financing Social Security or Medicare. They are more worried, as I am, that the larger economic outlook will remain very bleak for a long time.
Finally, there is the big problem: How to recapitalize the household sector? How to restore the security and prosperity they've lost? How to build the productive economy for the next generation? Is there anything today that we might do that can compare with the transformation of World War II? Almost surely, there is not: World War II doubled production in five years.
Today the largest problems we face are energy security and climate change-massive issues because energy underpins everything we do, and because climate change threatens the survival of civilization. And here, obviously, we need a comprehensive national effort. Such a thing, if done right, combining planning and markets, could add 5 or even 10 percent of GDP to net investment. That's not the scale of wartime mobilization. But it probably could return the country to full employment and keep it there, for years.
Moreover, the work does resemble wartime mobilization in important financial respects. Weatherization, conservation, mass transit, renewable power, and the smart grid are public investments. As with the armaments in World War II, work on them would generate incomes not matched by the new production of consumer goods. If handled carefully-say, with a new program of deferred claims to future purchasing power like war bonds-the incomes earned by dealing with oil security and climate change have the potential to become a foundation of restored financial wealth for the middle class.
This cannot be made to happen over just three years, as we did in 1942-44. But we could manage it over, say, twenty years or a bit longer. What is required are careful, sustained planning, consistent policy, and the recognition now that there are no quick fixes, no easy return to "normal," no going back to a world run by bankers-and no alternative to taking the long view.
A paradox of the long view is that the time to embrace it is right now. We need to start down that path before disastrous policy errors, including fatal banker bailouts and cuts in Social Security and Medicare, are put into effect. It is therefore especially important that thought and learning move quickly. Does the Geithner team, forged and trained in normal times, have the range and the flexibility required? If not, everything finally will depend, as it did with Roosevelt, on the imagination and character of President Obama.
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33 Comments so far
Show AllThis is the first time in my CommonDreams history that I have chosen to bypass all previous commentary so as to post that this article is the most important that CD has posted in a VERY LONG TIME.
For those of us familiar with Keynesianism, read between the lines.
The bailouts will not work. Any and all Credit Default Swaps based on "assets" they did not own need to be abrogated. That would be a start.
I hope to return. Any "return" at this point would be welcome.
Meanwhile, just a suggestion: the banking system should have been allowed to go bankrupt. It already is. It is just a matter of Time. Galbreath has hit the proverbial head of the nail. He follows a long and noble tradition. Krugman was too timid. Dean Baker was too formulaic. Michael Hudson is also right. The attempt to re-inflate the market is wrong-headed. It is a FALSE Keynesianism.
The System should have been allowed to go "bankrupt" many months ago, precisely when, I do not know, but some time prior to September 15. The crux was the Lehman failure, when insiders got hold of the System. The Congress should have seen through the three-page Paulson threat. All attempts at a "bailout" will not work. The bailouts will just prolong and increase the pain. The Systemn will collapse, regardless.
The Democrats, Pelosi and Reid, are equally corrupt here, and thus Obama is caught with his pants drawn up to his elbows.
The corruption is structural. Kudos to Spitzer and SLATE.
It is time for heavy lifting. We have lost the war. Our fiat Nixon currency is doomed. We need to say this and move on. This is the revolution. There is no "return" to "normalcy."
Also, tell the Defense Department that it is no longer business as usual. Take Pakistan, please.
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Commondreamers,
James K. Galbraith's essay is standard FDR and the Great Depression myth.
What Galbraith asks us to believe is that by digging the hole of our debts ever deeper, faster, we can extract ourselves from the depths that caused this crisis in the first place. Galbraith's logic and proposals are ludicrous, but his ideas fall right in-line with the tenets of Modernism and the noxious illusion of human progress.
At it's core, the present economic collapse was caused by the Federal Reserve's fractional banking system. And, with Bernanke's latest 1.2 trillion dollar giveaway, atop all the stimulus debt, expect hyper-inflation in 12 to 24 months.
You're free to ignore/twist history if you choose. Your CERTAINTY of Galbraith's 'ludicrous' logic is a common hallmark of the mentally challenged. Of course inflation will arrive at some point, but if you're betting on hyper-inflation, you're likely betting wrong.
"...This is plainly a capable, close-knit group, acting with energy and commitment. Deficiencies of their program cannot, therefore, be blamed on incompetence. Rather, if deficiencies exist, they probably result from their shared background and creed-in short, from the limitations of their ideas."
Simply on the face this is an incredulous statement of political savvy. That Mr. Galbraith insists "if deficiencies exist" due to "shared background" and the ringer "limitations of their ideas" is not incompetence, well, then perhaps corporate America should pay heed to his definition to the benefit of most working Americans. If I remember my higher education it was that singular concept of "shared background" that constructed the 'prosaic' mind and it's 'limited ideas.'
And, now, I am to forget and forgive to the tune, sour and off key and note, of trillions of dollars, when I would play hell to get disability because my employer had a pension and extracted no SS for 17 years of my life? Veteran, father, responsible all my life to get fucked by you assholes again. I'll go back to Vietnam...and sow seeds of hate.
Thank you Dr. Galbraith for summarizing the progressive alternative for reconstruction. I've been thinking lately that economics should consider the implicit trade-offs in our current "bigger is better" system. Does it make sense to forgo some of the economic "efficiency" of enormous enterprises in favor of many smaller institutions which would be more resilient and, yes, more "human-scale"?
I think it very well may. Mega-corporations suffer the same vulnerabilities as mega-fauna do: there are many fewer of them so a catastrophic mistake leading to the death of several threatens the survival of the entire species.
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and their position filled with a person that will represent their respective citizen’s wishes.
The I.T. requirements are:
For Citizen Central –we need a system that can accommodate three hundred fifty million people
A method of communicating to that number of people
A method for collecting that communication from the people and storing all of it
Creating a demographic questionnaire that will collect all the required variables
A software program that can organize and collate the data.
Personal information such as names, addresses, social security numbers, will be immediately dis-associated with the given data and only re-associated when there is a reason. For example a person with a disability, or someone out of a job, would be temporarily re-associated with the data and contacted if a new benefit was created for this specific group, then dis -associated again.
So giving personal information is optional, but is recommended for getting resources to the people that need or could use them. Everyone will have access to the data but no personal information will be accessible.
The only new technology needed would be a system of integrating the internet, cell phones, and television so that people with limited wide-band access would be able to use one of the three instruments available for communication.
An example, a person with a cell phone or regular phone could use the television to view the questionnaire then toggle the phone for inputting the data.
At least 95% of the people in the country have at least one of these devices, and provisions made for the other 5% so that they could participate.
The infrastructure for the citizen’s initiative would mimic that of citizen central.
The data needed to be collected would be a citizen’s name, zip code, and whether a person votes yes or no for the initiative. If a person voted no on an issue, would they be willing to compromise
This information will tell us who voted how they voted, and what district they come from. The appropriate congressperson and senator would know what the citizens of their district wanted and implement their wishes.
A person does not have to be a registered voter to participate. People that are homeless can use a shelter for an address.
That’s it; paragraphs have been added to the semi-original of the document to reach a broader group of people. I’m tired and its time to get this out into the airwaves.
I think you all can appreciate what will be needed if we collectively connect, a simple web-site will not do it.
I want to thank all of you who contributed in every which way, to make a better world, including me I hope.
From All Of Us To All Of you With Love
WE HAD 100 PEOPLE IN TWENTY FIVE CARS VISIT EVERY STATE
FROM WEST TO EAST. THEN BACK AGAIN FROM EAST TO WEST TO REFINE THE DATA WE COLLECTED
WE GOT SOME AMAZING PROPOSALS FROM PEOPLE. THAT INFORMATION AS WELL THE SPECIFIC LAWS WAITING TO BE INACTED FROM THESE PEOPLE WILL BLOW YOUR MIND.
WHAT GOOD IS IT, IF WE DON'T HAVE THE TOOLS TO PRESENT IT.
WE HAVE LOVE ,WE HAVE COMPASSION, WE HAVE INTELECT WE DON'T HAVE MONEY.
IF WE SOLD CITIZENS CENTRAL,WE WOULD BE MILLIONAIRES
WE NEED TO BE ABLE TO STORE 350,000,000 DEMOGRAPHIC PROFILES
THE CITIZEN INIT. NEEDS TO STORE A MINAMUN OF 1,000,000 NAMES.
WE DON'T HAVE TIME TO WASTE. THE LONGER WE WAIT THE MORE TRILLIONS WILL BE
GONE FROM OUR NATIONAL TREASURE,WITH NO ONE HAVING A CLUE WHERE THE MONEY WENT WHEN THE DUST SETTLES.
Can you really pay for all the programs Galbraith advocates - funding state and local governments, expanding medicare, massive infrastructure building, payroll tax holidays, etc., when you're already running giant deficits, spending $1 trillion / year on war and having already spent a trillion on so-called "bailouts"? Will people or governments really buy up that much American debt? Especially when we won't tax our own people to pay for it? Where will China, Japan, Saudi Arabia et al get the money to buy so much debt? Why aren't they better off using that money to expand/diversify their own economies and improve the lives of their people? Or can they do it all at the same time?
It just all sounds too good to be true. I'd like to see these employment programs, if they're good jobs. Maybe if we mega-tax the rich it becomes possible. Otherwise, I don't see how we can do it.
I believe Galbraith is saying that instead of paying "bailouts", the US should use that money for the programs Galbraith advocates. From the article,
"The choice is between an active program, running up debt while creating jobs and rebuilding America, or a passive program, running up debt because revenues collapse, because the population has to be maintained on the dole, and because the Treasury wishes, for no constructive reason, to rescue the big bankers and make them whole."
As to why the rest of the world want to continue lending the US money, he is saying that the rest of the world will want to continue to lend the US money, as long as the US continues to lead the world scientifically and technologically.As long as the US continues to develope ideas and concepts such as it did with computer science and the internet. In the future, this might be science and technology relating to energy, and climate change, though given how many Americans insist that global warming is a hoax, the US might not be a leader on this.
ignacio 12:41 am,
and maybe will pay for it in the fema camps...
it was the author (galbraith) who stated the war (ww2): delayed consumption, allowed the government control over the economy (fixed prices) as the government used war bonds as a way to balance it's books - helping the middle class in the long run.
but the author ignores the development of the institutionalized nature and intensity of MIC during the cold war and during vietnam and the intermingling of US death inc. w/ every other sector of our economy.
i was merely trying to emphasize the immoral state of our economy, i agree w/ you that it (militarism/imperialism) is an unsustainable model that brings governments/societies to their knees - the impacts on the poor especially as described by c s king (also the ussr is an interesting example or nazi germany).
war inc. will try to phantasmagoricaly create the money they need (war bonds anyone?/ how about hyper-inflation? or maybe a threat to arab kingdoms - give us the money or else...)
or the govt can just revert to old school autocratic methods of stealing any resources they need (government reclamation, overthrowing foreign governments) to maintain 'national defense' while taking the surplus labor and putting them in war factories at gunpoint (who needs money at this point).
as long as the boundaries of the united states contain natural resources and surplus labor, the empire will look for a way to extend it's power.
i didn't intend to distract the attention away from the economical minutia of our failed economy, i just found it odd that professor galbraith didn't factor the massive war expenditures into his essay, especially considering obama is maintaining american military expenditures.
i agree w/ you ignacio, american citizens will pay for it in the long run. how do you think we'll pay for it in euros, rubles or in yuan? is it time to learn mandarin or russian ?
of course all of us in the world pay for our imperialism/militarism with our tears....
...peace...
Someone commented:
"the war, that restored (or, more accurately, created for the first time) the financial wealth of the American middle class."
We continue to fool ourselves, these wars are ONLY profitable if someone ELSE pays for them, as in WWI and WWII, where the European countries lost their shirts and the USA came out on top, because THEY (Europeans)paid for them, and we (USA)ended up with all of the $$ from England, France, Russia, and Germany (yes Germany, we also sold them goodies for the war).
When YOU pay for your own wars, as in Korea, Vietnam, Iraq, and Afghan., you end up broke, because no one else is footing the bill, case in point USA today.
We squandered all the USA's bucks in shooting Yellow and Brown skinned folks, and now we are broke, and no one is going to pay for it in the end, but US !
I don't understand all he said, but I think its essence is that Geithner is behaving as though he still believes we live in a Supply-side economy. Throw tax dollars at the big fish, and eventually it'll trickle down to the rest of us in the form of loans. But that economy died. It died when the big fish took irresponsible bets with overleveraged funds and collapsed. Now Geithner is throwing tax money into a black hole, and the banks he's trying to keep alive will just take that money and use it on bonuses and crazy investment schemes, because they know/suspect they are dying anyway. Meanwhile, the few loans trickling out to the public aren't being taken, because people are scared and broke and aren't about to take on new debt.
This means that we now live in a Demand-side economy, where people will TAKE the loans being offered only once their personal finances recover and they're feeling bullish. And that's not going to happen for many years, 20 years according to Galbraith. In the meantime, public spending on infrastructure is the best way to keep people employed until better times return.
This is the first argument I've believed that suggests its best just to let the banks die. I guess I'm coming around to that argument.
If you had $100,000 in your 401(K) and invested in the S+P 500 in January of 2000, you would have lost 53% in the tech meltdown. It would have grown back to slightly more than $100,000 by the summer of 2008. From 2003 to 2008, the S+P, supported by a banking bubble, averaged more than 15% per year.
Since the summer of 2008, the S+P dropped abiout 65%. If we use the same 15% return, we will be back to square one ($100,000) in 7 years.
In other words ... we have no growth in 16 years.
This assumes a growth rate of 15% per year. Where is the new bubble to support this growth? Are we at a bottom now?
So, if you were 50 in the year 2000, there is a slight possibility that you may return to even in 16 years ...at age 66/67.
If the S+P averages 15% per year.
And your house just lost half its value.
And we continue to bail out the scumbags who engineered the greatest fraud in world history.
How will we afford our Viagra?
The solution to the economic problem is to pay people to produce something worthwhile. That, essentially, is what Roosevelt did, and it is what any healthy economy does.
There will be no 'recovery' - home ownership was the last resort of the 'bubble economy' - there are no other gimmicks left.
I read your entire comment (armybrat) nodding my head. The sentence above is the most cogent. I think you're exactly right. The sky is black with vultures and we beckon them to finish us off.
I agree that there will be no recovery. That's good. If people don't learn from past mistakes, most have no more money to invest.
There's always another bubble. It's just a matter of time. People want to invest in the next big thing. Do you want to miss out and be just another loser? OK, hold the criticism, but alot of people think this way.
I like this guy...must have learned to read in the 50's...
If the fascist ideology is so great - why do they have to keep lying about it? You'd think the 'best and brightest' would figure out that killing the Goose That Lays The Golden Eggs' is just plain STUPID. If fascism is so great - why did Hitler and Mussolini fail? How can the American people think that repeating this mistake is going to work - THIS TIME??? Obama chose fascist ideologues for his 'economic team' - what do you expect them to do? Admit that their whole lives were based on the lies they kept telling themselves? It's not going to happen. There will be no 'recovery' - home ownership was the last resort of the 'bubble economy' - there are no other gimmicks left. Most Americans have the bulk of their pitiful 'wealth' tied up in their homes - now that is gone, and trying to re-inflate the real estate bubble, or invent another one, is not going to solve the crisis of growing poverty - homelessness, joblessness, and lack of industry or infrastructure to rebuild an honest economy. There is no 'there' there anymore.
"Economics is a subject profoundly conducive to cliche, resonant with boredom. On few topics is an American audience so practiced in turning off its ears and minds. And none can say that the response is ill advised."
John Kenneth Galbraith
"Economics is extremely useful as a form of employment for economists."
John Kenneth Galbraith
"Few can believe that suffering, especially by others, is in vain. Anything that is disagreeable must surely have beneficial economic effects."
John Kenneth Galbraith
"In economics, hope and faith coexist with great scientific pretension and also a deep desire for respectability."
John Kenneth Galbraith
"In economics, the majority is always wrong."
John Kenneth Galbraith
"The great dialectic in our time is not, as anciently and by some still supposed, between capital and labor; it is between economic enterprise and the state."
John Kenneth Galbraith
"The only function of economic forecasting is to make astrology look respectable."
John Kenneth Galbraith
"The process by which banks create money is so simple that the mind is repelled."
John Kenneth Galbraith
"The salary of the chief executive of a large corporation is not a market award for achievement. It is frequently in the nature of a warm personal gesture by the individual to himself."
John Kenneth Galbraith
"The modern conservative is engaged in one of man's oldest exercises in moral philosophy; that is, the search for a superior moral justification for selfishness."
John Kenneth Galbraith
Think about WW2. The government put everyone to work fighting or building war material. NO cars were built and probably virtually no houses. This huge pent-up demand for vehicles, homes and appliances changed everything. If our laid-off factory and construction workers went to work for a few years building windmills, transmission lines, high speed trains and inner city transportion upgrades, America could eventually find itself sitting pretty.
a few quotes from the essay...
"Our modern numerical models just don't capture the key feature of that crisis-which is, precisely, the collapse of the financial system."
"something achieved, it is said, only by World War II."
"The New Deal rebuilt America physically, providing a foundation (the TVA's power plants, for example) from which the mobilization of World War II could be launched. But it also saved the country politically and morally,..."
"the war, that restored (or, more accurately, created for the first time) the financial wealth of the American middle class."
-------------------------------
-------------------------------
i agree that the stimulus package was an ineffective means to address the gaps that exist in our economy, yes we should spend money on public works to improve our lot and impose regulations and taxes upon the vultures.
i wish galbraith had flushed out the direct relationship to steady growth throughout the last 1/2 of the 20th century to america's continued reliance on militarism as a way to float our standard of living.
bloody wars and a culture of militarism coupled w/ illusions of global dominance saved the american economy. america properly walked on the stage of global military domination w/ our federal investments in the military (overthrowing governments on every continent, fighting wars of aggression and manufacturing armaments to supply proxy military regimes around the globe).
the efforts of roosevelt may have given us the ability to reach that vaulted status - but once the military-industrial-academic-congressional complex was set in place - it proceeded to dominate our consciousness in every way.
americans are uber nationalist at heart (notice how quickly they buy yellow ribbons and flag lapel pins) and it would be too tempting for any president (including obama who has left openings for military expansion in central asia) to use an international crisis as an excuse for a massive US response (911-pearl harbor - tel aviv's dissapeared).
this would fuse the spirit of the american public giving them a rational raison d'être for their suffering and service. it certainly 'saved' the country (drenched our hands in blood) in the past.
it also would extend powers to suppress the efforts of the left to organize as people become receptive to radical ideas as conditions worsen.
i don't believe american domination of the world through nuclear weaponary and support of military dictatorships saved the country morally. i don't believe america is a moral country.
http://www.warresisters.org/
{Beyond War, A New Economy is Possible - By Joanne Sheehan
On April 4, 1967, Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. gave his “Beyond Vietnam” speech in which he warned,
"We must rapidly begin the shift from a ‘thing-oriented’ society to a ‘person-oriented’ society. When machines and computers, profit motives and property rights are considered more important than people, the giant triplets of racism, materialism, and militarism are incapable of being conquered."
Coretta Scott King, just a few weeks after her husband’s death, said, “The bombs we drop on the people of Vietnam continue to explode at home with all of their devastating potential.” How true these words still are today, as people's homes (particularly those of people of color) are taken from them while bombs drop on others, as the materialism of corporations robs people of their jobs and their savings.}
...peace..
Thank you for an excellent response and thank the War Resisters League for all that they have done to promote peace.
The biggest difference between New Deal times and today is that we have 3 generations of Americans who have absolutely no concept of long-term thinking and planning.
The average marriage lasts only 11 years; average home ownership is 7 years; average same-job duration is under 6 years, etc.
Combine that with decades of instant gratification brain-warping, and an epidemic of conscienceless greedism, and it starts to get real hard to see any sort of light at the end of this dark tunnel...
"Combine that with decades of instant gratification brain-warping,..."
Television and other modern marvels of technology certainly contribute to the decline of intellectualism and the continuing disintegration of US civil society. The social fabric is being ripped to shreds as we sit here. I would say that rather than a tunnel, it is a black hole that the people of the US are entering.
Harvard's MBA program should offer a course on "Hey, wait, don't kill capitalism!" Heck, make it a whole new graduate program.
Past graduates have done their best to destroy the system: George Bush and the best and brightest on Wall Street. Time for a change, here at Harvard!
Topics:
Karl Marx on how capitalists will sell the rope with which to hang themselves--required course.
Signs that the system is going down: 20-somethings from Yale making 30 million a year on Wall Street. (only a year after graduating!)
Larry Summers saying unions are bad for employment.
Revolving door from the government to Wall Street and back again.
George Bush brought down 3 firms and several countries, including his own. Find out how he did it and then develop plans for a healthier alternative.
The Geithner-Summers Parasite Welfare Program is designed to continue channeling cash to the parasites because they are suffering from insufficient nourishment as a result of the host's maladies. Instead of nurturing the host, Geithner and Summers are determined to feed the parasites directly, ignoring the fact that such direct payments will be needed indefinitely unless the host recovers, and that the host will only continue to become more ill without some form of aid. All that matters to them is the health of their fellow parasites, and the host be damned.
Excellent analogy.
What he’s saying is that the system is broken and that the solution is to make the middle-class pay for it. And pay for it they are. The war against the American middle-class is already in full swing but unfortunately too many Americans don’t even know it. The American worker is in a global war against labor in other countries and even our soldiers are competing for jobs with private contractors. Outsourcing of jobs and H1B visas are the weapons being used against the America worker, both being fired by our own government.
Hoa binh
What??? Which article are you reading?
Eventually, probably years from now, the economy will recover. It will, however, be greatly diminished and I wonder how Americans are going to react to it? Most likely, not well. From that you can plausibly say that future George Wanker Bushes will blame it all on "socialists" and ride that fear, stupidity and resentment back into power and give us round two of the Reagan Revolution.