Globalization

Event Tomorrow – Accelerating Job Creation & Innovation w/ Asst. Secretary Fernandez, Ask Jeeves Founder Garrett Gruener

As the American economy moves from a stage of catastrophic job losses to anemic job gains, it has become clear that new strategies are needed to accelerate job creation and innovation. Please join NDN and the New Policy Institute tomorrow at 12pm as we host a discussion on job creation and innovation with Assistant Secretary of Commerce for Economic Development John Fernandez, venture capitalist and Ask Jeeves founder Garrett Gruener, and New Policy Institute Senior Fellow for Innovation Dan Carol. At the event, we will overview the Economic Development Administration’s newly announced Jobs and Innovation Partnership, discuss real-world perspectives on innovation, and release The Acceleration Agenda, a new working paper authored by Dan Carol on speeding the creation of the jobs of the 21st century.

Accelerating Job Creation & Innovation
Wednesday, September 15 at 12:00 p.m.
NDN/New Policy Institute – 729 15th St NW, First Floor
Live webcast will begin at 12:15 p.m.
RSVP

Participants:

John Fernandez
Assistant Secretary of Commerce for Economic Development & Administrator, Economic Development Administration

Garrett Gruener
Founder, Ask Jeeves, Co-Founder and Director, AltaPartners, and NDN Advisory Board Member

Dan Carol
Senior Advisor for Innovation and Clean Economy, NDN and the New Policy Institute

Boehner Changes Position on Extension of Bush Tax Cuts

When asked about the extension of the Bush tax cuts this weekend on Face the Nation, House Minority Leader John Boehner said:

If the only option I have is to vote for those at $250,000 and below, of course I'm going to do that. 

This is of course a major change in Leader Boehner's position on the tax cuts, and it's a good one. I look forward to his vote in favor of the extension of the tax cuts for the middle class. As Simon just tweeted:

Should Speaker Pelosi immediately accept #Boehner's offer to cut a deal on Dem econ plan? Perhaps a face to face tomorrow between the 2?

I look forward to hearing about this meeting - it will be great to have the two parties working together to come up with reasonable economic policy. And, while Mitch McConnell doesn't see room for movement in the Senate, this leadership from the House side should help move things along. Plus, the cuts were passed the first time around by reconciliation, so I don't see a reasonable standard for requiring a super majority this time around.

The Economic Debate Continues: Avoiding Japan, Andy Stern Has a Plan, and Myths About the Bush Tax Cuts

A few interesting pieces this morning, as the economic debate intensifies:

  • Also on Japan, Sushil Wadhwani in the FT writes that we should learn the lessons of Japan, and avoid premature fiscal tightening in Europe and the U.S. 
  • Andy Stern, now with Georgetown’s Public Policy Institute, talks to Ezra Klein about his economic plan:

Job Sharing Program. 
Cost: $54 billion 
Pay-for: Loans to Unemployment Insurance (UI) Funds to be repaid with a small UI surtax starting in 2013 on all employers. 
Jobs created: 2.4 million

Infrastructure Bank. 
Cost: $30 billion 
Pay-for: One-time repatriation break for corporate earnings 
Jobs created: 8.4 million

Youth Employment Programs. 
Cost: $46.5 billion 
Pay-for: Financial Speculation Tax
Jobs created: 3.1 million jobs
Total $130.5 billion 11.8 million jobs 
Net Cost to Taxpayers = $0

Details of the Stern plan.

  • And Brookings' William Gale describes Five Myths About the Bush Tax Cuts. Draw your own conclusion; mine is that extending the tax cuts for the highest earners is awful economic and fiscal policy.

Time for a Mid-Course Correction in Economic Policy

The economic proposals unveiled this week by the Administration suggest that the President’s determination to target his policies for the long-term has led the White House to misread the economy today. Allowing firms to deduct their capital investments in the year they occur instead of slowly depreciating those costs, and expanding the R&D tax credit and making it permanent are measures that can help sustain growth once it returns, but they won’t lift the economy’s current faltering pace. To do that, they need a midcourse correction aimed directly at the economic distortions which brought down the economy and produced today’s abnormally slow and halting recovery. It’s time for presidential leadership and big initiatives, starting with the housing market.

Since 2009, when the White House famously forecast that strong growth would return this year and unemployment would top out at 8 percent, their program has relied on models and analyses that see the current period as part of a normal business cycle. If only that were so, because then the massive fiscal and monetary stimulus of the last 18 months would, indeed, have produced the robust V-shaped recovery they expected. But that isn’t the economic hand we’ve been dealt. Much like the sorry story of post-bubble Japan in the 1990s, the structural distortions in housing and finance which brought on our crisis remain largely unaffected by stimulus. While all that stimulus stopped our slide towards a depression, it was neither sufficiently large nor long-lasting to offset the structural problems.   

So, the banking system, still saddled with hundreds of billions of dollars in shaky mortgage-backed assets and fighting additional drag from falling values in commercial real estate and European debt, remains too weak and wary to resume normal lending to most businesses. The problems with housing have even more far-reaching effects for the recovery. With high unemployment dragging on – as it typically does following a financial crisis – housing foreclosures are stuck at three times normal levels, pulling down the value of most Americans’ homes. This continuing decline in housing values not only has left 23 percent of households with mortgages under water. It also continues to eat away at the net wealth of everyone who owns their own homes, producing a “negative wealth effect” that leaves most Americans, much like the banks, too financially weak and wary to resume normal spending.

Even if a second round of stimulus were possible politically, it wouldn’t cure these structural problems with any greater success than the first round. Until the administration and Congress tackle the forces holding down consumption spending and business lending – or wait another half-decade for this dismal cycle to run its course – the American economy will remain weak and unemployment high.  

A real opportunity here lies in a new approach to keep Americans in their homes and so help stabilize housing values. Subsidies for banks to rewrite troubled mortgages haven’t worked, because the approach glosses over the weakness of the banks and the way they conduct business. Even if these institutions were in better shape, very few bankers are willing to extend new credit to people who couldn’t keep up with their mortgages. Only a government can assume such risks.    

The best approach for this would be a new two part program aimed at housing and unemployment. The first part is a loan program, modeled on student loans, to help Americans with troubled mortgages. Those families could apply for five-to-ten year government loans to stave off foreclosures, with the repayment schedules linked to people’s incomes recovering. With many fewer foreclosures, housing values could stabilize and staunch the negative wealth effect now holding down consumption. The second part of the new program would reduce the cost to businesses of creating new jobs, by expanding and extending the administration’s modest cuts in an employer’s payroll taxes for new hires, the approach that CBO calls the most effective way to jumpstart job creation. Every new job will enable another family to earn the income needed to help keep up with their mortgage, further stabilizing housing values and so ultimately supporting consumption.

If the economy were poised to take off, the Administration’s proposals for another $50 billion in infrastructure spending and $200 billion in tax breaks for small businesses might help. Unhappily, that’s not the case. But the President has time to seize the opportunity to make a mid-course correction, and put in place the foundation for a strong recovery in, say, 2012.

Dueling in Cleveland: The Difference Between Ideas and Bromides

If you listen to John Boehner or take a look at any of his recent proposals on the economy, you’ll notice that they’re either not particularly serious – Repeal health care reform, fire Summers and Geithner – or are just not new – 2008 spending levels, full extension of the Bush tax cuts. What they signal is a genuine lack of seriousness and focus on political bromides on one hand, and a lack of new ideas on the other.

Let’s take a look at Boehner's ideas from today, as discussed on Good Morning America:

Idea 1 - Move next year’s non-security discretionary spending to 2008 levels. He doesn’t actually specify his cuts. I get four immediate points that make this idea laughable:

1) I don’t think you’ll find any economist who believes that the difference between 2008 levels and the current levels or next year’s levels are actually causing economic problems in the present. From an economic perspective, America’s deficit next year is relatively meaningless. Medium and long term deficits and debt are important – they’re what drives bond markets, inflation, etc – and to address those, you have to address entitlements and defense spending. 

2) Boehner says this change will save $100 billion – my math gets me to $8 billion ($530 in 2011 according the budget, $522 in 2008). Either way, next year’s deficit is over $1 trillion. So it’s relatively inconsequential savings.

3) President has already done something in this spirit, with his three year non-security discretionary spending freeze, so Boehner’s not making an argument that’s actually any different from the man he says is spending us off a cliff.

4) What was so great about the economy in 2008? Didn’t the worst economic downturn in over two generations start in 2008? Why should we do things like they were that year? Next thing Boehner’s going to tell us is that we should have the financial system we did in 2008. (Oh, wait.)

Idea 2 - Freeze current tax levels for the next two years. By this, he means extend the full Bush tax cuts, including for those making above $250,000/year. Keeping the full Bush tax cuts for two years more than eliminates any savings that his spending cut creates, so it’s clear that his interest is more in the tax cuts than in reducing deficits. Of course, this is not a new idea, it’s a really old idea. I haven’t heard an explanation as to why this tax cut, as opposed to, say, the ones the President is proposing.

Let’s take a look at the President’s ideas:

$50 billion in infrastructure – roads, bridges and runways – plus financing an infrastructure bank.

Expand and make permanent the R&D tax credit. 

Allow companies to fully deduct qualified capital investments through the end of 2011

Permanently extend the tax cuts for those making under $250,000.

Pass tax cuts and expand credit to small business.

Make the American Opportunity Tax Credit for college permanent. 

People may disagree with these ideas, or think there are better ones out there - the only criticisms I've really heard is that they’re too small (obviously not an argument from the right), and that they can’t pass Congress before the elections. The reality is, though, these are real ideas, and, while they are obviously offered in a political context, they are real policy initiatives and not bromides. Plus, of these ideas, the business tax credits and cuts, as well as the permanence of the tax cuts for the middle class, should in no way be objectionable to conservatives – in fact, the deduction of capital investments is a conservative favorite. 

So, here’s the reality. There is one set of real ideas, and another set of bromides. John Boehner said on Good Morning America that he was open to the President's ideas – that's almost certainly not the case two months before an election. What he has yet to do is produce a set of real ideas of his own.

 

For more, take a look at NDN's Analysis of the Boehner Plan.

Event: Accelerating Job Creation & Innovation with EDA's John Fernandez - Wednesday, Sept 15 @ NDN

On September 15, NDN and the New Policy Institute will host a discussion on new regional initiatives to accelerate economic growth, private entrepreneurship, and bottom-up job creation. Speakers will include US Assistant Secretary of Commerce and head of the Economic Development Administration John Fernandez, who will discuss his new Jobs and Innovation Partnership; Entrepreneur, investor, and Ask Jeeves founder Garrett Gruener, who will share his practical perspective on what makes new businesses succeed; and NDN Senior Fellow for Innovation and Clean Economy Dan Carol, who will discuss the New Policy Institute's new working paper, The Acceleration Agenda, which highlights low-cost ideas to go faster on job creation and the new innovation "software" we need to create the jobs of the 21st century.

Antiquated and silo'ed federal programs offering one-size fits-all economic solutions need an upgrade. This discussion will focus on the new policies and needed private sector partnerships that can drive smart, bottom-up economic development and turn global competition into regional economic opportunity for entrepreneurs, new businesses and everyday Americans.

Accelerating Job Creation & Innovation
Wednesday, September 15 at 12:00 p.m.
NDN/New Policy Institute Event Space
Live webcast will begin at 12:15 p.m.
RSVP

Simon on CNBC on the Estate Tax

Simon went on CNBC yesterday to discuss the Estate Tax, in part in response to former Treasury Secretary Robert Robin and investor Julian Robertson's op-ed in the Wall Street Journal calling on Congress to reinstate the estate tax.

I really have no idea where Kate Obenshain is getting her figures on the estate tax, especially the idea of it killing 1.4 million new jobs. Probably from the same reality as one that questions the idea that the economy is in a better place than it was 18 months ago.

Here's what the former Treasury Secretary has to say about the economic effects of the estate tax:

An estate tax can provide revenue—with little, if any, adverse supply-side economic impact—to fund deficit reduction, additional public investment or added assistance to those affected by the economic crisis. Used for public investment that has a rapid spend out, or applied to assistance for economically displaced citizens, the net effect will be to increase demand. That's because roughly 100% of the funds would be spent, while part of any large inheritance is highly likely to be used for savings or debt repayment. And either deficit reduction or public investment will better position our country for future economic success.

NDN Analysis: The Fiscal Impact of the New Boehner Economic Plan - Update 1

A fully-sourced pdf of this analysis can be found here.

Last week, NDN issued a fiscal analysis of the five point economic plan outlined by House Minority Leader John Boehner in a speech in Cleveland, Ohio. Since that time, clarifications regarding his spending plans and a new CBO analysis have made providing an update worthwhile. The following brief analysis examines the impact of John Boehner’s stated plans on the federal budget deficit and the national debt over the next ten years.  

The Fiscal Impact of the Boehner Plan

1. Fully Extend the Bush Tax Cuts.

Increase deficits and debt by $3.8 trillion over ten years. 

2. Have the president veto the Employee Free Choice Act, a carbon tax or cap and trade, and “any other tax increases on families and small businesses” if passed during a lame-duck session of Congress.

Unable to assess impact of hypotheticals, but the provision impairs ability to address deficits and debt, including the potential loss of $624 billion in revenue over ten years from a carbon regime. 

3. Health Care Agenda: Repeal the entire Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act/Repeal the provision in healthcare reform mandating that small businesses file IRS 1099 forms on purchases of over $600.

In his Cleveland speech, Boehner called for the repeal of what some call the “1099 mandate” as included in the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act in order to close the business tax gap. This would increase the deficits and debt by $17 billion over ten years per Congressional Budget Office estimate.  However, since our last analysis, the Congressional Budget Office has released an analysis of the costs of repealing the entire Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act. Boehner has previously referred to repealing this legislation as his “No. 1 priority.” Doing so would add $455 billion to the deficit over the next ten years. 

4. Reduce non-defense discretionary spending to 2008 levels.

In 2008, non-defense discretionary spending was approximately $522 billion.  Boehner’s office has stated it wants a “hard cap” on such spending and claims a total of $340 billion in savings over ten years, but does not document such savings. Our analysis reveals that, against current policy such a hard cap would actually yield a savings of $67 billion over ten years. Most of these savings come at the end of the decade. Against the President’s budget, which includes a three year freeze on non-security discretionary spending, savings are negligible. 

5. Resignations of the President’s economic team, starting with Secretary of the Treasury Geithner and National Economic Council Director Larry Summers.

The position of NEC Director is not Senate confirmed, so it is fair to estimate that it would take the Administration two weeks to fill that position. Estimating for the taxes paid on his $172,000 annual salary , two weeks without an NEC Director would save the Federal government between $5000 and $6000.

Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner makes an annual salary of $191,300.  Because he is Senate confirmed, it is safe to estimate that it will take two months for his confirmation. Therefore, two months without a Treasury Secretary would likely save the Federal government between $25,000 and $26,000. Therefore, these resignations amount to a fiscal impact of $30,000 - $32,000 of deficit reduction over the next two months.

Total Fiscal Impact of the Boehner Plan: Increase Deficits and Debt by roughly $4.188 trillion over ten years.

Related Posts:

Boehner Plan Raises All Sorts of Questions About GOP's Economic Arguments by Simon Rosenberg, 8/25/10

Why the Value of Your House Moved Global Markets This Week

This week’s housing news was a primer on globalization. U.S. existing home sales fell 27 percent in July, twice as sharp a drop as Wall Street analysts said to expect. (Of course, they’re the same geniuses who didn’t see their own meltdown coming, didn’t expect the long, deep recession that followed, and couldn’t figure out that the recovery would be slow and halting.) Right away, our stock markets sank by one to two percent – no surprise there – but we weren’t alone. On Wednesday morning, the financial news led with “European Stocks Drop on Dismal U.S. Home Sales Data” and “Most (Asian) Stocks Fall Amid Speculation on U.S. Home Sales Report.”

Why does a bad report on American home sales rattle investors a half-world away? To be sure, housing is an important piece of every U.S. recovery. And the world pays close attention to ours, since we remain by far both the world’s largest market for imports and the place where most foreign multinationals maintain their subsidiaries. This time, however, there’s more at stake. Housing is both a lynchpin for a full recovery from the financial crisis that pushed most of the world to the brink of depression; and the key to something better than our current stumbling expansion.

The link to finance is straightforward. Everybody remembers how Wall Street’s largest institutions swooned or crashed when the end of the housing bubble brought down hundreds of billions of dollars in mortgage-backed securities and the credit default swaps that backed them up. But when Washington stepped in to rescue most of them, it took out its own risky bet that a housing recovery would quickly stop the bleeding. So we never seriously considered what Sweden did so successfully in the early 1990s – and what we did ourselves to resolve the S&L crisis: Take over an insolvent Bear Stearns, AIG or Merrill Lynch, pull out the weak and failed assets, and sell the still-healthy stuff to new investors who would promptly reopen the institution under a new name. And the bailouts didn’t even require that these institutions put their books back in order by getting rid of the most risky housing-based assets which they still held. 

The catch is that if the housing market continued to deteriorate – as it did – more of those assets would decline in value or fail outright. Those losses, current and prospective, leave finance much less willing to lend to most other companies. And that means that strong business investment, which is a critical part of all healthy expansions, this time will follow a housing recovery, not lead it.

There’s more at stake in the current housing market than the pace of business investment. Some 70 percent of U.S. households are homeowners, which makes housing values the most important piece, by far, of most Americans’ wealth and economic security. So, the sharp drop in those values has made most of Americans poorer than they had been, and, unsurprisingly, people who feel poorer tend to spend much less. The health of the housing market, in short, now directly affects both business investment and consumer spending, and with them the outlook for the entire U.S. recovery. 

It is little wonder that world markets reacted badly to this week’s dismal U.S. housing report.  Beyond the 27 percent drop in existing home sales – and one day later, sales of new homes also fell sharply – nearly one-third of the houses that did sell were “distressed” properties. That means they were either in foreclosure or sold for less than their outstanding mortgages. Average home prices did inch up a little bit, but the only reason was that the end of the temporary tax credit for first-time homebuyers led to a particularly sharp fall in their purchases, which normally involve lower-priced homes. 

Nor are there signs of a real housing recovery anytime soon.  Foreclosures are still running at four times their normal levels – and nothing drives down a neighborhood’s housing prices and slows down sales more than nearby homes in foreclosure. On top of that, supply continues to way outpace demand: At current rates of home sales, it would take over a year to clear all of the homes already on the market today.

If we don’t take serious steps to finally turn around these conditions, the United States and much of the rest of the world will be looking at a weak expansion, or worse, for several more years.  One measure that could have a powerful effect would be steps to bring foreclosure rates down to normal levels. For example, congressional Democrats could advance a new program modeled on student loans for homeowners with mortgages in trouble. Homeowners who qualify could borrow the funds they need to stay in their homes, at a low interest rate, with no interest due the first year so long as they stay in the homes for at least two more years.  

Most Republicans will denounce it as just another “big government program.” Yet, without a housing recovery, the alternative is not only smaller government but also a smaller economy, because businesses can’t find loans, people can’t find jobs, and most consumers  can’t spend like they used to.

Boehner Plan Raises All Sorts of Questions About GOP's Economic Arguments

In a new study released by NDN today, we calculate that the plan released by John Boehner yesterday would add more than $3 trillion to the deficit over the next ten years.

That the new economic plan from the House Republican Leader explodes the deficit and does nothing meaningful to cut government spending raises very real questions about the Washington Republican Party's commitment to the promise of a new age of austerity and fiscal rectitutde Republican victories will bring.

I would also add that the utter lack of fiscal seriousness of this proposal - despite the very public positioning of the Republican Party today - recalls the economic recklessness of the recent conservative era in Washington which brought a decline in wages and benefits for the average American, an exploding structural deficit, the Great Recession/massive job loss and a global financial meltdown.  Boehner's new plan makes no effort to break from this horrendous legacy, and raises very real questions about the economic strategy of the GOP which must be answered by the GOP leader and all his candidates seeking the House. 

Of the many questions to be asked, there is a simple one all Republicans should answer now: "how exactly are you going to reduce the deficit over the next ten years?"

My guess is that not a single Republican running for major office could actually lay out a plan that would reduce the deficit over this time frame.  If anyone finds such a plan - rather than a rhetorical commitment to do so - please send it along.

PM Update - Sam Stein of the Huffington Post, and Jonathan Cohn of TNR have each written pieces today based on our study.  If you see any more let us know.  And feel free of course to spread this important study through your networks too.

Friday Update - Keith Olbermann talked about our study on the air last night, and a smart new Newsweek piece by Andrew Romano also references it.

Friday PM Update - CBO reports this week that if the health care bill passed this year is repealed, as Boehner proposed in his economic plan, it would add another $455 billion to the deficit over the next ten years, pushing Boehner's plan over the $4 trillion mark.

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