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A FORM OF LOOTING - Worst Government In History

 
 
Reply Tue 29 Jul, 2003 02:05 am
George A. Akerlof, Koshland Professor of Economics, 2001 Nobel Laureate in Economics gave the following interview to the online version (Spiegel online) of the German magazine "Der Spiegel":
Quote:


"A FORM OF LOOTING"

Das Akerlof-Interview im englischen Orginal
[The Akerlof interview in the original English version]

SPIEGEL ONLINE: Professor Akerlof, according to recent official projections, the US federal deficit will reach $455 billion this fiscal year. That's the largest ever in dollar terms, but according to the President's budget director, it's still manageable. Do you agree?
George A. Akerlof: In the long term, a deficit of this magnitude is not manageable. We are moving into the period when, beginning around 2010, baby boomers are going to be retiring. That is going to put a severe strain on services like Medicare, Medicaid and Social Security. This is the time when we should be saving.

SPIEGEL ONLINE: So it would be necessary to run a budget surplus instead?

Akerlof: That would probably be impossible in the current situation. There's the expenditure for the war in Iraq, which I consider irresponsible. But there's also a recession and a desire to invigorate the economy through fiscal stimulus, which is quite legitimate. That's why we actually do need a deficit in the short term - but certainly not the type of deficit we have now.

SPIEGEL ONLINE: Because it's not created by investment, but to a large extent by cutting taxes?

Akerlof: A short-term tax benefit for the poor would actually be a reasonable stimulus. Then, the money would almost certainly be spent. But the current and future deficit is a lot less stimulatory than it could be. Our administration is just throwing the money away. First, we should have fiscal stimulus that is sharply aimed at the current downturn. But this deficit continues far into the future, as the bulk of the tax cuts can be expected to continue indefinitely. The Administration is giving us red ink as far as the eye can see, and these permanent aspects outweigh the short-term stimulatory effects.

SPIEGEL ONLINE: And secondly, you disagree with giving tax relief primarily to wealthier Americans. The GOP argues that those people deserve it for working hard.

Akerlof: The rich don't need the money and are a lot less likely to spend it - they will primarily increase their savings. Remember that wealthier families have done extremely well in the US in the past twenty years, whereas poorer ones have done quite badly. So the redistributive effects of this administration's tax policy are going in the exactly wrong direction. The worst and most indefensible of those cuts are those in dividend taxation - this overwhelmingly helps very wealthy people.

SPIEGEL ONLINE: The President claims that dividend tax reform supports the stock market - and helps the economy as a whole to grow.

Akerlof: That's totally unrealistic. Standard formulas from growth models suggest that that effect will be extremely small. In fact, the Congressional Budget Office (CBO) has come to a similar conclusion. So, even a sympathetic treatment finds that this argument is simply not correct.

SPIEGEL ONLINE: When campaigning for an even-larger tax cut earlier this year, Mr. Bush promised that it would create 1.4 million jobs. Was that reasonable?

Akerlof: The tax cut will have some positive impact on job creation, although, as I mentioned, there is very little bang for the buck. There are very negative long-term consequences. The administration, when speaking about the budget, has unrealistically failed to take into account a very large number of important items. As of March 2003, the CBO estimated that the surplus for the next decade would approximately reach one trillion dollars. But this projection assumes, among other questionable things, that spending until 2013 is going to be constant in real dollar terms. That has never been the case. And with the current tax cuts, a realistic estimate would be a deficit in excess of six trillion.

SPIEGEL ONLINE: So the government's just bad at doing the correct math?

Akerlof: There is a systematic reason. The government is not really telling the truth to the American people. Past administrations from the time of Alexander Hamilton have on the average run responsible budgetary policies. What we have here is a form of looting.

SPIEGEL ONLINE: If so, why's the President still popular?

Akerlof: For some reason the American people does not yet recognize the dire consequences of our government budgets. It's my hope that voters are going to see how irresponsible this policy is and are going to respond in 2004 and we're going to see a reversal.

SPIEGEL ONLINE: What if that doesn't happen?

Akerlof: Future generations and even people in ten years are going to face massive public deficits and huge government debt. Then we have a choice. We can be like a very poor country with problems of threatening bankruptcy. Or we're going to have to cut back seriously on Medicare and Social Security. So the money that is going overwhelmingly to the wealthy is going to be paid by cutting services for the elderly. And people depend on those. It's only among the richest 40 percent that you begin to get households who have sizeable fractions of their own retirement income.

SPIEGEL ONLINE: Is there a possibility that the government, because of the scope of current deficits, will be more reluctant to embark on a new war?

Akerlof: They would certainly have to think about debt levels, and military expenditure is already high. But if they seriously want to lead a war this will not be a large deterrent. You begin the war and ask for the money later. A more likely effect of the deficits is this: If there's another recession, we won't be able to engage in stimulatory fiscal spending to maintain full employment. Until now, there's been a great deal of trust in the American government. Markets knew that, if there is a current deficit, it will be repaid. The government has wasted that resource.

SPIEGEL ONLINE: Which, in addition, might drive up interest rates quite significantly?

Akerlof: The deficit is not going to have significant effects on short-term interest rates. Rates are pretty low, and the Fed will manage to keep them that way. In the mid term it could be a serious problem. When rates rise, the massive debt it's going to bite much more.

SPIEGEL ONLINE: Why is it that the Bush family seems to specialize in running up deficits? The second-largest federal deficit in absolute terms, $290 billion, occurred in 1991, during the presidency of George W. Bush's father.

Akerlof: That may be, but Bush's father committed a great act of courage by actually raising taxes. He wasn't always courageous, but this was his best public service. It was the first step to getting the deficit under control during the Clinton years. It was also a major factor in Bush's losing the election.

SPIEGEL ONLINE: It seems that the current administration has politicised you in an unprecedented way. During the course of this year, you have, with other academics, signed two public declarations of protest. One against the tax cuts, the other against waging unilateral preventive war on Iraq.

Akerlof: I think this is the worst government the US has ever had in its more than 200 years of history. It has engaged in extraordinarily irresponsible policies not only in foreign and economic but also in social and environmental policy. This is not normal government policy. Now is the time for people to engage in civil disobedience.

SPIEGEL ONLINE: Of what kind?

Akerlof: I don't know yet. But I think it's time to protest - as much as possible.

SPIEGEL ONLINE: Would you consider joining Democratic administration as an adviser, as your colleague Joseph Stiglitz did?

Akerlof: As you know my wife was in the last administration, and she did very well. She is probably much better suited for public service. But anything I'll be asked to do by a new administration I'd be happy to do.

SPIEGEL ONLINE: You've mentioned the term civil disobedience a minute ago. That term was made popular by the author Henry D. Thoreau, who actually advised people not to pay taxes as a means of resistance. You wouldn't call for that, would you?

Akerlof: No. I think the one thing we should do is pay our taxes. Otherwise, it'll only make matters worse.

Questions asked by Matthias Streitz

link to 'Spiegel online'

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Thomas
 
  1  
Reply Tue 29 Jul, 2003 03:02 am
That's a very impressive interview -- thanks for posting that! Readers of Paul Krugman's New York Times columns will not learn anything surprising, but it's nice to hear it from the mouth of a Nobel laureate. I really really hope that Americans wake up to reality before the election!
0 Replies
 
Ceili
 
  1  
Reply Tue 29 Jul, 2003 04:00 pm
Compelling article.
Thanks Walter
Ceili
0 Replies
 
cobalt
 
  1  
Reply Tue 29 Jul, 2003 04:40 pm
Walter - thank you! I've been studying economics lately as it seems I need to brush up on this single, most important issue that will determine the results of the next presidential election. There was a reference to Krugman that rang a bell in my recent research, so here I present the May Rolling Stone interview conclusion. Not far different than your article, eh?

Quote:

KRUGMAN: If the president gives 100 speeches saying, "Leave no child behind," and then actually fails to come up with the money, how many people actually know this? That's their specialty: the disconnect. And what you might say is, "Well, why don't we have news reports that say, ?'Here's what President Bush said, and here's what he actually did'" And the answer would be: If they did that, there would be howls about the liberal-media bias.

DANA: Why is the media so afraid of that? Can't they say, "We're just reporting the facts"?

KRUGMAN: There's a lot of pressure not to pursue these things. It's personal and it's commercial, and unpleasantness lurks for those who try to make an issue of these things ?- you are now accused of being unpatriotic. Remember that the scandal machinery that was running full tilt against Clinton and his people is now ready to be used against anyone who criticizes Bush and his people.

DANA: Right now, we are basking in the afterglow of military triumph. How do you view the war in Iraq from an economic perspective?

KRUGMAN: If it really was a pilot project for a whole series of wars, then we're talking real money. But the $20 billion we've spent so far is pocket change for the U.S. government. In terms of the economics, the main concern I'd have about the war right now is that it ruptured the rule-based system of international treaties and international financial arrangements, all basically set up by the United States to make the world economy run. All of that kind of goes by the board if you have the United States deciding that, when it chooses, the rules don't apply to itself. International-trade negotiations appear to be collapsing. Relations with a lot of Latin American countries have already collapsed. Bolivia apparently is descending into chaos, with radical groups on the rise. On the one hand, it's only a small, mountainous country in the middle of nowhere ?- so who cares? Except that's what we said about Afghanistan, too. So if you want to think about what's going to happen to the U.S. economy in the next two or three years, the war in Iraq is not going to change that much one way or the other. But these rather boring budget discussions, and the fiscal crises of states, and the possible failure to come to grips with corporate governance ?- those are going to be the things that are going to dominate the domestic political scene.

DANA: How serious is the problem of corporate governance?

KRUGMAN: Well, take a look at the numbers. There are two ways of measuring corporate profits. One is direct, just by looking at the profit statements that companies report. The other is indirect ?- you can estimate corporate profits out of the way the gross domestic product is put together. Usually, they move together. Starting about 1997, they diverged. The GDP-based estimates flattened out, while the reported profits by companies rose another forty percent. I think that's evidence that you had an epidemic of cooking the books throughout the corporate sector. While none of these are likely to be as extreme as Enron or WorldCom, there's reason to believe that there's lots and lots more where that came from.

DANA: It's tough to predict the future, but would you be willing to look into the crystal ball?

KRUGMAN: I'd say that America is probably going to be a place where, if you have a family of kids and you lose your job, serious misery may be staring you in the face. It's likely that you will find that there either is nothing like Medicaid, or the restrictions are extremely severe, so you have to be in dire poverty before you can get any sort of medical care for these kids. So either you have to be rich enough to afford medical care, or you have to be, basically, in the poorhouse. So if your elderly mother needs a hip replacement, you may well find that either you have to impoverish yourself to pay for it, or she'll have to do without. Taxes will likely go way up ?- particularly for working families. There'll be a lot of fees. Even now some school districts are charging for use of the school bus. Basically, if you're making $200,000 a year, taxes will be pretty low, and life can be good. But should you find yourself, through whatever misfortune, making $30,000 or $20,000 a year, it's going to be real ?- you want to think Charles Dickens. It's going to be poverty of a kind that we don't think of as happening to people in America. If you look at the things that are actually being severely underfunded now, the biggest burden seems to fall on children. We're stripping away programs that provide that basic floor for medical care and for nutrition. I'll bet we're going to see a substantial rise in infant mortality and more low-birth-weight infants. We'll see more children dying because their illnesses were untreated. It's gonna be a pretty harsh place. You can come back to me in fifteen years and see if this is right.


Originally published, 5.29.03
0 Replies
 
Acquiunk
 
  1  
Reply Tue 29 Jul, 2003 04:59 pm
First of all they don't call it the dismal science for nothing. Secondly Krugman's predictions assume a total collapse of the electorial process. The american political system has proven to have great resilience and regenerative powers. Bush may be another Warren Harding or Herbert Hover but the present situation does not preclude another Franklin Roosevelt.
0 Replies
 
cicerone imposter
 
  1  
Reply Tue 29 Jul, 2003 05:13 pm
You know, bond prices have taken a steep hit during the past week, but I'm still very confident about my decision to increase our holdings in bonds. The stock market is held up by gas and thin air, and the only place that can go is below ground level. On top of all that, the real estate values are too high and leveraged only by mortgages which will eventually go into bankruptcy for lack of jobs. I'm going to stick with cash, annuities, and bonds over equities for the foreseeable future. c.i.
0 Replies
 
BillyFalcon
 
  1  
Reply Thu 31 Jul, 2003 02:18 pm
Walter, Thanks for the interview.
0 Replies
 
gravy
 
  1  
Reply Thu 31 Jul, 2003 03:55 pm
Thank you Walter for a very informative post of an impressive interview
0 Replies
 
 

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