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Stiglitz: The Book of Jobs

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  • Stiglitz: The Book of Jobs

    The Book of Jobs
    Forget monetary policy. Re-examining the cause of the Great Depression—the revolution in agriculture that threw millions out of work—the author argues that the U.S. is now facing and must manage a similar shift in the “real” economy, from industry to service, or risk a tragic replay of 80 years ago.
    By Joseph E. Stiglitz Illustration by Stephen Doyle


    DOMINO THEORY The financial meltdown is the Depression parallel everyone notices. The more frightening parallel is everything else.
    It has now been almost five years since the bursting of the housing bubble, and four years since the onset of the recession. There are 6.6 million fewer jobs in the United States than there were four years ago. Some 23 million Americans who would like to work full-time cannot get a job. Almost half of those who are unemployed have been unemployed long-term. Wages are falling—the real income of a typical American household is now below the level it was in 1997.

    We knew the crisis was serious back in 2008. And we thought we knew who the “bad guys” were—the nation’s big banks, which through cynical lending and reckless gambling had brought the U.S. to the brink of ruin. The Bush and Obama administrations justified a bailout on the grounds that only if the banks were handed money without limit—and without conditions—could the economy recover. We did this not because we loved the banks but because (we were told) we couldn’t do without the lending that they made possible. Many, especially in the financial sector, argued that strong, resolute, and generous action to save not just the banks but the bankers, their shareholders, and their creditors would return the economy to where it had been before the crisis. In the meantime, a short-term stimulus, moderate in size, would suffice to tide the economy over until the banks could be restored to health.

    The banks got their bailout. Some of the money went to bonuses. Little of it went to lending. And the economy didn’t really recover—output is barely greater than it was before the crisis, and the job situation is bleak. The diagnosis of our condition and the prescription that followed from it were incorrect. First, it was wrong to think that the bankers would mend their ways—that they would start to lend, if only they were treated nicely enough. We were told, in effect: “Don’t put conditions on the banks to require them to restructure the mortgages or to behave more honestly in their foreclosures. Don’t force them to use the money to lend. Such conditions will upset our delicate markets.” In the end, bank managers looked out for themselves and did what they are accustomed to doing.

    Even when we fully repair the banking system, we’ll still be in deep trouble—because we were already in deep trouble. That seeming golden age of 2007 was far from a paradise. Yes, America had many things about which it could be proud. Companies in the information-technology field were at the leading edge of a revolution. But incomes for most working Americans still hadn’t returned to their levels prior to the previous recession. The American standard of living was sustained only by rising debt—debt so large that the U.S. savings rate had dropped to near zero. And “zero” doesn’t really tell the story. Because the rich have always been able to save a significant percentage of their income, putting them in the positive column, an average rate of close to zero means that everyone else must be in negative numbers. (Here’s the reality: in the years leading up to the recession, according to research done by my Columbia University colleague Bruce Greenwald, the bottom 80 percent of the American population had been spending around 110 percent of its income.) What made this level of indebtedness possible was the housing bubble, which Alan Greenspan and then Ben Bernanke, chairmen of the Federal Reserve Board, helped to engineer through low interest rates and nonregulation—not even using the regulatory tools they had. As we now know, this enabled banks to lend and households to borrow on the basis of assets whose value was determined in part by mass delusion.

    The fact is the economy in the years before the current crisis was fundamentally weak, with the bubble, and the unsustainable consumption to which it gave rise, acting as life support. Without these, unemployment would have been high. It was absurd to think that fixing the banking system could by itself restore the economy to health. Bringing the economy back to “where it was” does nothing to address the underlying problems.

    The trauma we’re experiencing right now resembles the trauma we experienced 80 years ago, during the Great Depression, and it has been brought on by an analogous set of circumstances. Then, as now, we faced a breakdown of the banking system. But then, as now, the breakdown of the banking system was in part a consequence of deeper problems. Even if we correctly respond to the trauma—the failures of the financial sector—it will take a decade or more to achieve full recovery. Under the best of conditions, we will endure a Long Slump. If we respond incorrectly, as we have been, the Long Slump will last even longer, and the parallel with the Depression will take on a tragic new dimension.

    Until now, the Depression was the last time in American history that unemployment exceeded 8 percent four years after the onset of recession. And never in the last 60 years has economic output been barely greater, four years after a recession, than it was before the recession started. The percentage of the civilian population at work has fallen by twice as much as in any post-World War II downturn. Not surprisingly, economists have begun to reflect on the similarities and differences between our Long Slump and the Great Depression. Extracting the right lessons is not easy.

    Many have argued that the Depression was caused primarily by excessive tightening of the money supply on the part of the Federal Reserve Board. Ben Bernanke, a scholar of the Depression, has stated publicly that this was the lesson he took away, and the reason he opened the monetary spigots. He opened them very wide. Beginning in 2008, the balance sheet of the Fed doubled and then rose to three times its earlier level. Today it is $2.8 trillion. While the Fed, by doing this, may have succeeded in saving the banks, it didn’t succeed in saving the economy.

    Reality has not only discredited the Fed but also raised questions about one of the conventional interpretations of the origins of the Depression. The argument has been made that the Fed caused the Depression by tightening money, and if only the Fed back then had increased the money supply—in other words, had done what the Fed has done today—a full-blown Depression would likely have been averted. In economics, it’s difficult to test hypotheses with controlled experiments of the kind the hard sciences can conduct. But the inability of the monetary expansion to counteract this current recession should forever lay to rest the idea that monetary policy was the prime culprit in the 1930s. The problem today, as it was then, is something else. The problem today is the so-called real economy. It’s a problem rooted in the kinds of jobs we have, the kind we need, and the kind we’re losing, and rooted as well in the kind of workers we want and the kind we don’t know what to do with. The real economy has been in a state of wrenching transition for decades, and its dislocations have never been squarely faced. A crisis of the real economy lies behind the Long Slump, just as it lay behind the Great Depression.

    For the past several years, Bruce Greenwald and I have been engaged in research on an alternative theory of the Depression—and an alternative analysis of what is ailing the economy today. This explanation sees the financial crisis of the 1930s as a consequence not so much of a financial implosion but of the economy’s underlying weakness. The breakdown of the banking system didn’t culminate until 1933, long after the Depression began and long after unemployment had started to soar. By 1931 unemployment was already around 16 percent, and it reached 23 percent in 1932. Shantytown “Hoovervilles” were springing up everywhere. The underlying cause was a structural change in the real economy: the widespread decline in agricultural prices and incomes, caused by what is ordinarily a “good thing”—greater productivity.

    At the beginning of the Depression, more than a fifth of all Americans worked on farms. Between 1929 and 1932, these people saw their incomes cut by somewhere between one-third and two-thirds, compounding problems that farmers had faced for years. Agriculture had been a victim of its own success. In 1900, it took a large portion of the U.S. population to produce enough food for the country as a whole. Then came a revolution in agriculture that would gain pace throughout the century—better seeds, better fertilizer, better farming practices, along with widespread mechanization. Today, 2 percent of Americans produce more food than we can consume.
    Continued ...

  • #2
    Re: Stiglitz: The Book of Jobs

    As always, a very cogent analysis.

    The TECI economy EJ has written about in the Post Catastrophe Economy is one way, but ultimately that, as well as Stiglitz's education/infrastructure variation, will be stillborn so long as the American political establishment remains unchanged.

    Comment


    • #3
      Re: Stiglitz: The Book of Jobs

      That article, plus Koo's article:
      http://rwer.wordpress.com/2011/12/12...8-richard-koo/

      basically sums up our current economy.

      The politicians stand in the way of solutions.

      Comment


      • #4
        Re: Stiglitz: The Book of Jobs

        I've tried to appraise our political situation to see how either of the two major parties could be sufficiently reformed to allow a major restructuring of the American economy.
        Like the Mugwumps of the late 1800s I'd be willing to vote for a Democratic candidate if he were honest, reasonable and willing to turn F.I.R.E upside down in order to get us out of this black hole.

        But I just don't see one. NO ONE in either party understands or is willing to face the disaster that we face, with the possible exception of Ron Paul, although his libertarian streak would likely allow the continued looting - not to mention the meat-ax approach to fiscal policy that would in the short run only make thing worse. Perhaps a LOT worse.

        Without a young, energetic anti-FIRE candidate in an upstart Third Party I just don't see any way out - until the entire economy implodes. And who knows what we'll get then.

        Comment


        • #5
          Re: Stiglitz: The Book of Jobs

          Vote for Bill - http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7gzbq-rZiIQ

          Comment


          • #6
            Re: Stiglitz: The Book of Jobs

            Originally posted by Raz View Post
            I've tried to appraise our political situation to see how either of the two major parties could be sufficiently reformed to allow a major restructuring of the American economy.
            Like the Mugwumps of the late 1800s I'd be willing to vote for a Democratic candidate if he were honest, reasonable and willing to turn F.I.R.E upside down in order to get us out of this black hole.

            But I just don't see one. NO ONE in either party understands or is willing to face the disaster that we face, with the possible exception of Ron Paul, although his libertarian streak would likely allow the continued looting - not to mention the meat-ax approach to fiscal policy that would in the short run only make thing worse. Perhaps a LOT worse.

            Without a young, energetic anti-FIRE candidate in an upstart Third Party I just don't see any way out - until the entire economy implodes. And who knows what we'll get then.
            huntsman? [another ignored candidate]
            from kuppy

            Originally posted by kuppy
            My Soap Box... (Sorry For Politics)

            I want to apologize in advance for stepping onto my soap-box here. Over the past few years, our government has invaded the private sector in such a way that the two are hard to differentiate and suddenly talking about investing means talking about politics. I hate talking about politicians without mentioning a way to profit from their idiocy, but I feel that readers should be exposed to a man who last week I barely knew existed.

            As you know, I have a rather morbid view of the US election process. The only sure thing is that unfortunately, someone will win the election next year and become our president. This is highly disappointing to most of us, as ‘None of the Above’ would win in a landslide. I for one, highly support that option as it would force both political parties to run candidates roughly judged as sane. Barring such an outcome, my view of the political process is that over time, my taxes will gradually increase in order to support both parties campaign platforms; namely to give free handouts to people that I’ve never met, and to bomb people that I largely have no gripes with. Naturally, a small group of special interest will guide our government towards both goals earning a healthy vigorish along the way. In middle-school science class, I learned that in a host-parasite relationship, the parasite is careful to never kill its host—clearly most of the political elite did not graduate from middle school because they are intent on killing our country.

            Fortunately, I have no political leanings except a strong hatred of both parties. I focus my attention on finding ways to profit off the unintended consequences of the laws that both parties draft. Excluding the occasional and humorous sex scandal, I prefer not to know too much about my politicians—otherwise I’d be disgusted to be an American. So when a good friend offered me a chance to go to his home for a speech by Jon Huntsman, I naturally was irritated. If you show attention to the machine, it feels that you support its actions. However, how often do you get to hear a former ambassador to China offer up his experiences in the form of a resume? Besides, there was an open bar and I’m a sucker for those.

            As a well-heeled analyst, before going to the event, I did some due diligence. Who is this Jon Huntsman and why should I care? That’s when it suddenly occurred to me that I didn’t know a thing about him as he’s been entirely ignored by the media. Upon some sleuthing however, I found that I rather like what Huntsman stands for.

            Suddenly, I had this strange feeling, this guy stands for what I believe in.

            -lower taxes and simplify the tax code http://jon2012.com/issues/jobs-economy-tax-reform

            -eliminate stupid regulations that make businesses uneconomic http://jon2012.com/issues/jobs-econo...ulatory-reform

            -increase free trade http://jon2012.com/issues/jobs-economy-trade

            -eliminate the concept of ‘too big to fail’ by eliminating Dodd-Frank http://www.jon2012.com/index.php/iss...nancial-reform

            -institute term limits so that politicians can make unpopular decisions without worrying about re-elections

            -stop going around the globe bullying smaller countries and wondering why they fight back

            The list goes on and on, and I’ve linked to some of his talking points above.
            More importantly, he seems capable of bridging the political impasse that has made it so that nothing can possibly happen in Washington. He was a Republican ambassador under Obama and that’s a telling achievement.

            Can Huntsman win? I don’t know. I’m not even sure that I fully support all that he stands for, but he’s the first candidate that I’ve seen on the national stage in years who I can at least partially support. As I’ve been telling friends, he is Ron Paul with a heavy dose of pragmatism.

            I don’t mean for AIC to become a political stumping grounds, so will end this piece here. However, a week ago, I didn’t know much about Jon Huntsman. If I was unaware, plenty of others are as well. I feel that I’ve done my part to bring some exposure to someone who I think can actually do a good job. With that, I’ll go back to my normal acerbic view of politics in general.

            Comment


            • #7
              Re: Stiglitz: The Book of Jobs

              Originally posted by Raz View Post
              I've tried to appraise our political situation to see how either of the two major parties could be sufficiently reformed to allow a major restructuring of the American economy.
              Like the Mugwumps of the late 1800s I'd be willing to vote for a Democratic candidate if he were honest, reasonable and willing to turn F.I.R.E upside down in order to get us out of this black hole.

              But I just don't see one. NO ONE in either party understands or is willing to face the disaster that we face, with the possible exception of Ron Paul, although his libertarian streak would likely allow the continued looting - not to mention the meat-ax approach to fiscal policy that would in the short run only make thing worse. Perhaps a LOT worse.

              Without a young, energetic anti-FIRE candidate in an upstart Third Party I just don't see any way out - until the entire economy implodes. And who knows what we'll get then.
              I agree. Implementing Stiglitz's recommendations would be impossible in today's America. The money allocated to the initiative would be siphoned off by FIRE and other corrupt and unproductive elements in our society. Without reform we'd have nothing to show for the dollars spent but the debt.

              Comment

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