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ECONOMY: How Not to Fix the Economy
By Michael J. Boskin
Bailouts, protectionism, higher tax rates, new spending—these are
supposed to help? By Michael J. Boskin.
Six years into the expansion that followed the 2001 recession, the post-Y2K
collapse of the stock market bubble, and the terrorist attacks, the economy
is slowing and the risk of recession growing rapidly. After robust growth in
mid-2007 of more than 4 percent, a sharp deceleration is unfolding. At best,
we will narrowly skirt recession; at worst, we may already have entered one,
given the inclination of the data to be revised. The risk of recession is already
well over 30 percent, high enough that everyone should have a Plan B.
Headwinds are buffeting the economy: the collapse (from an unsustainable
level) in housing construction; difficult credit conditions centered
in but not limited to the subprime mortgage market; high energy
prices; and falling home prices. All are taking a toll on the financial
markets. With housing prices declining after growing far faster than
incomes and rents, the booster shot to consumption from mortgage
refinancing has slowed, and the wealth effect is turning negative. (Fortunately,
most homeowners still have capital gains on their homes.) The
possibility of avoiding recession depends on what might be called the
“sector rotation gamble”: the hope that a pickup in net exports will
cushion a likely slowdown in consumption and that capital spending
will hold up fairly well.
There are some positive forces. Relatively more rapid growth abroad and
the lower dollar are helping net exports. I expect growth abroad to slow as
well. The notion that the rest of the world’s economies are now decoupled
from the U.S. economy is overstated, and many of them have their own
problems. A period of ambiguity and anxiety, with oscillating economic
indicators, should be expected.
Subprime mortgages are unlikely to be the end of the story. The same
people who will struggle with their mortgages have credit cards, the
receivables from which are also collateralized.
Neither the direct effect of the subprime interest resets nor the direct
financial losses related to subprime lending are sufficient, even in combination,
to cause a recession. For example, if 2 million households facing
subprime resets reduced their consumption 25 percent, total consumption
would decrease 0.3 percent. The consumption drag must extend far more
broadly (perhaps because of declining home prices and high energy prices)
to be a major macroeconomic event, as opposed to distress confined to a
narrow group. And the $300 billion investor loss estimate from the mortgage
crisis (as calculated by the Organization for Economic Cooperation
and Development), which constitutes just half of 1 percent of net worth,
might cause another small decline in consumption and investment. In a
$14 trillion economy, such losses can be absorbed, but as much other
financing is delayed (commercial and industrial lending and commercial
paper outstanding are both down sharply), the harm will spread to the general
economy and its firms and workers. That is what economic policy
should aim to mitigate.
In the subprime case, collateralized subprime mortgages, increasingly
originating with no income verification, little if any down payment, and
very low starting teaser rates and therefore a “put” on the loan, were marketed
as relatively safe bundles. The financial firms failed to adequately
identify, price, and hedge the risk. Top executives at leading banks said they
had not even heard of some of these complex structures before off-balancesheet
loans went bad. Borrowing short in the commercial paper market and
lending long to little or no equity might work for a while, but the risk should have been clear. The lack of transparency and risk management
caused financial markets to lose confidence. Of course, subprime mortgages
are unlikely to be the end of the story. For example, the same people who
will struggle with mortgage interest resets have credit cards, the receivables
from which are also collateralized. And prime mortgages and other nonmortgage
lending are troubled.
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What is the proper role of economic policy in dealing with these problems?
Workouts, not bailouts. Treasury Secretary Henry Paulsen’s approach
of convening mortgage servicers, originators, and investors to establish voluntary
standards that facilitate constructive private sector workouts makes
far more sense than taxpayer bailouts or the new regulatory proposals floating
around Congress. But Paulsen should insist that it is voluntary, not
imposed. The worst idea is a broad interest rate and/or foreclosure freeze
for all borrowers, which would throw into question the very sanctity of private
contracts and thus deter investment in these instruments, making them
more expensive in the future.
Ben Bernanke’s Fed has the delicate and difficult task of preventing
recession while limiting the risk of subsequent inflation. The Fed led
by Alan Greenspan brilliantly combated recession and ensured against
deflation by quickly lowering the Fed funds rate to 1 percent and keeping
it low; however, by eventually raising rates very slowly, even after
the surge from the 2003 tax cut, it extended and worsened the speculative
excess.
Among the dubious proposed solutions: soft- or hard-core protectionism,
higher marginal tax rates, uncapping Social Security taxes, a bevy of new
spending programs, and refundable tax credits.
The Fed will and should be lowering rates to combat recession risks,
although credit conditions will limit any stimulus. But its actions and communications
must reinforce the commitment to price stability so as to
maintain confidence and credibility. The worst outcome would be the small
but real possibility of future inflation pressure.
Even worse policies could be just around the corner. Calls for protectionism
and for more regulation and higher taxes on upper-income earners and capital are emanating from Capitol Hill and the campaign trail.
Some of these calls are even demonizing globalization and corporate America.
This doesn’t build confidence in the future of the economy. It was this
poisonous policy mix (along with the Fed’s mistakes) that turned a bad
downturn into the Great Depression.
At a debate among the economic advisers to the presidential candidates
in Washington in November, the advisers to the Clinton, Obama, and
Edwards campaigns lauded soft- or hard-core protectionism, higher marginal
tax rates, uncapping Social Security taxes, a bevy of new spending programs,
and refundable tax credits for every perceived problem, and argued
that the Bush tax cuts were the cause of all economic ills. That represents
bad economics and even worse history.
The worst idea is a broad interest rate or foreclosure freeze for all
borrowers, which would throw into question the very sanctity of private
contracts and thus deter investment.
The fundamental flaw in that approach is the unwarranted assumption
that it would help the middle class. Of course, it would create some temporary
relief, but at the cost of lower future wages from the depressed capital
formation and a risk of dependency on ineffective, inefficient
government programs. The Europeans’ mediocre economic performance
attests to the danger of high taxes and bloated social-welfare spending,
which in little more than a generation have driven down their standard of
living 30 percent relative to the United States.
Revoking the 2001 and 2003 top marginal tax rate reductions, uncapping
Social Security taxes, and adding the proposal by House Ways and
Means Chairman Charles Rangel for an additional 4.6 percent tax rate on
adjusted gross income as part of his AMT fix would triple the federal taxes
on dividends, almost double the tax on capital gains, and sharply reduce
work and investment incentives. The combined top marginal tax rate
(including California state taxes) would reach almost 70 percent, back to
the ruinous levels of the 1970s.
The tax share of GDP, already somewhat above the historical average,
rises automatically in normal economic times and is scheduled to reach about 20 percent—a level reached only during wars, bad inflation, or bubbles—
in a few years. It would reach about 24 percent in a couple of decades
because of real bracket creep, the alternative minimum tax, the expiration
of the tax cuts, and other factors.
The long boom of the past quarter-century was fostered by low inflation
and low tax rates. Sound policy requires stringent control of spending
growth and calls for large legislated tax reductions focused on marginal personal
and corporate income tax rates. That change is essential for long-term
growth. It should be legislated now to help restore confidence and investment
in the future, especially as the economy weakens, above and beyond
whatever short-run fiscal stimulus may be enacted.
This essay appeared in the Wall Street Journal on November 13, 2007.
Available from the Hoover Press is Remaking Capitalism and Its Discontents: The Adam Smith Address, by Michael J. Boskin. To order, call 800.935.2882 or visit www.hooverpress.org.
Michael J. Boskin is a senior fellow at the Hoover Institution and the T. M. Friedman Professor of Economics at Stanford University. He is also a research associate at the National Bureau of Economic Research, serves on several federal advisory panels, and advises heads of state, finance ministries, and central banks around the world. Among other posts, he served as chairman of the President's Council of Economic Advisers from 1989 to 1993.
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