The
collapse on Wall Street is now decimating Main Street,
Ocean Parkway, Mountain View Drive and I-80.Since
January the economy has shed 760,000 jobs. In September
alone, monthly mass layoff claims for unemployment
insurance jumped by 34 percent. General Electric,
General Motors, Chrysler, Yahoo! and Xerox have all
announced major layoffs, along with the humbled financial
titans Goldman Sachs and Bank of America. Fully one
quarter of all businesses in the United States are
planning to cut payroll over the next year. State
governments are facing a tax revenue shortfall of
roughly $100 billion in the next fiscal year, 15 percent
of their overall budgets. Because states have rules
requiring balanced budgets, they are staring at major
budget cuts and layoffs. The fact that the economy’s
overall gross domestic product (GDP) shrank between
July and September the first such decline since the
September2001 terrorist attacks only confirms the
realities on the ground facing workers, households,
businesses and the public sector.
The recession is certainly here, so the question now
is how to diminish its length and severity. A large-scale
federal government stimulus program is the only action
that can possibly do the job.
So far, our leaders in Washington have dithered. Treasury
Secretary Henry Paulson and Federal Reserve chair
Ben Bernanke continue improvising with financial rescue
plans, committing eye-popping sums of money in the
process. Paulson’s original program for the Treasury
to commit $700 billion in taxpayers’ money to purchase
“toxic” loans- the mortgage-backed securities held
by the private banks that are in default or arrears-
was at least partially shelved in favor of direct
government purchases of major ownership stakes in
the banks. But neither of Paulson’s strategies has
thus far helped to stabilize the situation, with global
stock and currency markets gyrating wildly and investors
dumping risky business loans in favor of safe Treasury
bonds. The crisis has even hit the previously staid
world of money market mutual funds, where the fainthearted
once could park their savings safely in exchange for
low returns. Money market fund holders have been panic-selling
since mid-September, dumping $500 billion worth of
these accounts.
To stanch a money market fund collapse, Bernanke announced
on October 21 that, on top of the Paulson bailout
plan, the Fed stands ready to purchase $540 billion
in certificates of deposit and private business loans
from the money market funds. This action is in addition
to two previous initiatives committing the Fed to
buy up, as needed, business loans from failing banks.
Until this crisis, the Fed had conducted monetary
policy almost exclusively through the purchase and
sale of Treasury bonds, rarely buying directly the
debts of private businesses or banks. But the pre-crisis
rules of monetary policy are out the window.
Even if some combination of Treasury and Federal Reserve
actions begins to stabilize financial markets in the
coming weeks, this will not, by itself, reverse the
deepening crisis in the nonfinancial economy. A rise
in unemployment in the range of 8 to 9 percent- upward
of 14 million people without work- is becoming an
increasingly likely scenario over the next year.
President-elect Obama as well as most members of the
newly elected Democratic-controlled Congress seem
to recognize the urgency of such a large-scale stimulus
program above and beyond any financial bailout program.
Even Bernanke, whose term of office continues through
January 2010, has offered his endorsement. But despite
the near consensus, questions remain, including: How
should the stimulus funds be spent? How large does
the stimulus need to be? Where do we find the money
to pay for it?
A Green Public-Investment Stimulus
Recessions create widespread human suffering. Minimizing
the suffering has to be the top priority in fighting
the recession. This means expanding unemployment benefits
and food stamps to counteract the income losses of
unemployed workers and the poor. By stabilizing the
pocketbooks of distressed households, these measures
also help people pay their mortgages and pump money
into consumer markets.
Beyond this, the stimulus program should be designed
to meet three additional criteria. First, we have
to generate the largest possible employment boost
for a given level of new government spending. Second,
the spending targets should be in areas that strengthen
the economy in the long run, not just through a short-term
money injection. And finally, despite the recession,
we do not have the luxury of delaying the fight against
global warming.
To further all these goals we need a green public-investment
stimulus. It would defend state-level health and education
projects against budget cuts; finance long delayed
upgrades for our roads, bridges, railroads and water
management systems; and underwrite investments in
energy efficiency including building retrofits and
public transportation as well as new wind, solar,
geothermal and biomass technologies.
This kind of stimulus would generate many more jobs-
eighteen per $1 million in spending- than would programs
to increase spending on the military and the oil industry
(i.e., new military surges in Iraq or Afghanistan
combined with “Drill, baby, drill”), which would generate
only about 7.5 jobs for every $1 million spent. There
are two reasons for the green program’s advantage.
The first factor is higher “labor intensity” of spending-
that is, more money is being spent on hiring people
and less on machines, supplies and consuming energy.
This becomes obvious if we imagine hiring teachers,
nurses and bus drivers versus drilling for oil off
the coasts of Florida, California and Alaska. The
second factor is the “domestic content” of spending-
how much money is staying within the US economy, as
opposed to buying imports or spending abroad. When
we build a bridge in Minneapolis, upgrade the levee
system in New Orleans or retrofit public buildings
and private homes to raise their energy efficiency,
virtually every dollar is spent within our economy.
By contrast, only 80 cents of every dollar spent in
the oil industry remains in the United States. The
figure is still lower with the military budget.
What about another round of across-the-board tax rebates,
such as the program the Bush administration and the
Democratic Congress implemented in April? A case could
be made for this in light of the financial stresses
middle-class families are facing. However, even if
we assume that the middle-class households will spend
all the money refunded to them, the net increase in
employment will be about fourteen jobs per $1 million
spent- about 20 percent less than the green public
investment program (the main reason for this weaker
impact is the lower domestic content of average household
consumption).
Also, it isn’t likely that the households would spend
all their rebate money. Just as with April’s rebate
program, households would channel a large share of
the money into paying off debts.
The Matter of Size
This is no time to be timid. The stimulus program
last April totaled $150 billion, including $100 billion
in house hold rebates and the rest in business tax
breaks. This initiative did encourage some job growth,
though as we have seen, the impact would have been
larger had the same money been channeled toward a
green public-investment stimulus. But any job benefits
were negated by the countervailing forces of the collapsed
housing bubble, the financial crisis and the spike
in oil prices. The resulting recession is now before
us. This argues for a significantly larger stimulus
than the one enacted in April. But how much larger?
One way to approach the question is to consider the
last time the economy faced a recession of similar
severity, which was in 1980–82, during Ronald Reagan’s
first term as president. In 1982 gross domestic product
contracted by 1.9 percent, the most severe one-year
drop in GDP since World War II. Unemployment rose
to 9.7 percent that year, which was, again, the highest
figure since the ’30s.
The Reagan administration responded with a massive
stimulus program, even though its alleged free-market
devotees never acknowledged as much. They preferred
calling their program of military expansion and tax
cuts for the rich “supply-side economics.” Whatever
the label, this combination generated an increase
in the federal deficit of about two percentage points
relative to the size of the economy at that time.
In 1983 GDP rose sharply by 4.5 percent. In 1984 GDP
growth accelerated to 7.2 percent, with Reagan declaring
the return to “morning in America.” Unemployment fell
back to 7.5 percent.
In today’s economy, an economic stimulus equivalent
to the1983 Reagan program would amount to about $300
billion in spending- roughly double the size of April’s
stimulus program, though in line with the high-end
figures being proposed in Congress. A stimulus of
this size could create nearly 6 million jobs, offsetting
the job-shedding forces of the recession.
Of course, the green public-investment stimulus will
be much more effective as a jobs program than the
Reagan agenda of militarism and upper-income tax cuts.
This suggests that an initiative costing somewhat
less than $300 billion could be adequate to fight
the job losses. But because the green public-investment
stimulus is also designed to produce long-term benefits
to the economy, there is little danger that we would
spend too much. Since all these investments are needed
to fight global warming and improve overall productivity,
the sooner we move forward, the better. Moreover,
under today’s weak job market conditions, we will
not run short of qualified workers.
How to Pay for All This?
Let’s add up the figures I have tossed around. These
include the $700 billion bank rescue operation being
engineered by the Treasury, the $540 billion with
which Fed chair Bernanke has pledged to bail out the
money market mutual funds, along with unspecified
additional billions to buy unwanted business debts
held by banks. On top of these, I am proposing $300
billion for a second fiscal stimulus beyond last April’s
$150 billion program. At a certain point, it is fair
to wonder whether we are still dealing with real dollars
as opposed to Monopoly money.
In fact, the whole program remains within the realm
of affordability, albeit approaching its upper bounds.
But major adjustments from the current management
approach are needed. In particular, the Federal Reserve
has to continue exerting control over the Treasury
on all bailout operations. That is, we need more initiatives
like Bernanke’s $540 billion program to stabilize
the money market mutual funds and less Treasury fumbling
with taxpayers’ money to buy either the private banks’
bad assets or ownership shares in the banks.
We need to recognize openly what has largely been
an unspoken fact about these bailout operations: that
the Federal Reserve has the power to create dollars
at will, while the Treasury finances its operations
either through tax revenues or borrowed funds (which
mean using taxpayer money at some later time to pay
back its debts with interest). The Fed does not literally
run printing presses when it decides to inject more
money into the economy; but its normal activity of
writing checks to private banks to buy the banks’
Treasury bonds amounts to the same thing. When the
banks receive their checks from the Fed, they have
more cash on hand than they did before they sold their
Treasury bonds to the Fed. Especially during crises,
there is no reason for the Fed to restrain itself
from making good use (though of course not overuse)
of this dollar-creating power.
The Fed is also supposed to be the chief regulator
of the financial system. Now is the time to make up
for Alan Greenspan’s confessed failures over twenty
years in this role. In exchange for the Fed protecting
the private financial institutions from collapse,
Bernanke must insist that the banks begin lending
money again to support productive investments, while
prohibiting them from yet another return to high-rolling
speculation. Special measures are also needed to keep
people in their homes.
The Deficit Looms
When the economy began slowing this year, the fiscal
deficit more than doubled, from $162 billion to $389
billion. We cannot know for certain how much the deficit
will expand. It could rise to $800 billion, $1 trillion
or even somewhat higher, depending on how the bailout
operations are managed. Of course, it would be utterly
self-defeating for the United States to run a reckless
fiscal policy, no matter how pressing the need to
fight the financial crisis and recession. But in the
current crisis conditions, even a $1 trillion deficit
need not be reckless.
Let’s return to the Reagan experience for perspective.
In 1983 the Reagan deficits peaked at 6 percent of
the economy’s GDP. With GDP now around $14.4 trillion,
a $1 trillion deficit would represent about 7 percent
of GDP, one percentage point higher than the 1983
figure.
Of course, the global financial system has undergone
dramatic changes since the 1980s, so direct comparisons
with the Reagan deficits are not entirely valid. One
change is that government debt is increasingly owned
by foreign governments and private investors. This
means that interest payments on that debt flow increasingly
from the coffers of the Treasury to foreign owners
of Treasury bonds.
At the same time, as one feature of the crisis, Treasury
bonds are, and will remain for some time, the safest
and most desirable financial instrument in the global
financial system. US and foreign investors are clamoring
to purchase Treasuries as opposed to buying stocks,
bonds issued by private companies or derivatives.
This is pushing down the interest rates on Treasuries.
For example, on October 15, 2007, a three-year Treasury
bond paid out 4.25 percent in interest, whereas this
past October 15, the interest payment had fallen to
1.9 percent. By contrast, a BAA corporate bond paid
6.6 percent in interest one year ago but has risen
this year to 9 percent. As long as the private financial
markets remain gripped by instability and fear, the
Treasury will be able to borrow at negligible interest
rates. Because of this, allowing the deficit to rise
even as high as 7 percent of GDP does not represent
a burden on the Treasury greater than what accompanied
the Reagan deficits.
There is, then, no reason to tread lightly in fighting
the recession, with all its attendant dangers and
misery. Indeed, severe misery and danger will certainly
rise as long as timidity- the path of least resistance-
establishes the boundaries of acceptable action. The
incoming Obama administration can take decisive steps
now to defend people’s livelihoods and to reconstruct
a viable financial system, productive infrastructure
and job market on the foundation of a clean-energy
economy.
November
10 , 2008.
This article appeared in the November 6, 2008 edition
of The Nation,
http://www.thenation.com/doc/20081124/pollin
and in Political Economy Research Institute (PERI),
University of Massachusetts, Amherst,
http://www.peri.umass.edu/fileadmin/pdf/other_publication_types/green_economics/Pollin-How_to_End_Recession--The_Nation_11-24-08.pdf
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