Keith, you're raising a very important question: is the current prolonged 
recession a matter of the business cycle or is it a matter of structural 
change?  If cyclical, Keynes can probably do a lot to fix it, but if structural 
we may be moving from the kind of economy we've lived in for much of the past 
century into something that is really quite different and that the simple 
application of Keynianism can't fix.  It's probably a mix of both, but I'm of 
the opinion that it is considerably more structural than cyclical.

If the problem is largely cyclical the kind of spend, spend, spend approach 
advocated by Krugman and Canada's Action Plan makes considerable sense.  In 
being essentially structural, however, the problem becomes far more difficult 
and may mean that countries that currently comprise the first world will have 
to accept giving way to emerging giants such as the BRIC and recognize that in 
many respects they really have slipped into the second world.  They may have to 
accept continuing large scale unemployment, declining incomes and levels of 
indebtedness even higher than those that prevail now.  Solutions will likely 
have to focus on trade deals and the continued growth of the multi-country 
production of goods and services where one country produces part of a good, 
others produce other parts and somewhere the whole thing is put together.   
This is of course already happening and America is still dominant but its 
dominance can't be considered permanent.  Much will depend on the evening out 
of cost structures, including wages.

Meanwhile, we have to be patient with the Rogoffs and Krugmans of our world.  
Nobody likes to think they're on a sinking ship.  And the ship may not be 
sinking yet, but somewhere out there the iceberg is patiently waiting.

Ed

  ----- Original Message ----- 
  From: Keith Hudson 
  To: RE-DESIGNING WORK, INCOME DISTRIBUTION, ,EDUCATION 
  Sent: Thursday, September 16, 2010 9:12 AM
  Subject: [Futurework] Why Rogoff isn't convincing


  A recent article, "Why America isn't working", by Kenneth Rogoff, ex-chief 
economist of the IMF, writing in Project-Syndicate.org, is so badly entitled 
that it almost amounts to trade mis-description. He describes where America is 
now with high unemployment. He then criticises Keynesian methods of trying to 
solve the problem. He then puts forward what can only be described as a 
Keynesian solution. Finally he leaves the reader dangling at the end wondering 
why Rogoff didn't actually explain why America isn't working.

  Rogoff never once mention automation or computerization. He never once 
mentions that the US government lost so much control over its own money that 
there were several times more of it available as consumer, corporate and 
derivatives credit than had ever been in circulation in the real world.

  If he were to admit these things then he would have to start to think about 
real solutions to the mess that now afflicts all of the Western world. He seems 
to think that because he and Carmen Reinhart have written a book about 
financial crises in the past 800 years then that qualifies him to have 
something to say about this one. The fact is that both of the main factors that 
have caused this one were simply not existent in any of the previous crises, 
not even that of the 1930s.

  Keith 

  <<<<<
  WHY AMERICA ISN'T WORKING

  Kenneth Rogoff

  As the US economy limps toward the second anniversary of the Lehman Brothers 
bankruptcy, anemic growth has left unemployment mired near 10%, with little 
prospect of significant improvement anytime soon. Little wonder that, with 
mid-term congressional elections coming in November, Americans are angrily 
asking why the government's hyper-aggressive stimulus policies have not turned 
things around. What more, if anything, can be done?

  The honest answer -- but one that few voters want to hear -- is that there is 
no magic bullet. It took more than a decade to dig today's hole, and climbing 
out of it will take a while, too. As Carmen Reinhart and I warned in our 2009 
book on the 800-year history of financial crises (with the ironic title This 
Time is Different), slow, protracted recovery with sustained high unemployment 
is the norm in the aftermath of a deep financial crisis.

  Why is it so tough to boost employment rapidly after a financial crisis? One 
reason, of course, is that the financial system takes time to heal -- and thus 
for credit to begin flowing properly again. Pumping vast taxpayer funds into 
financial behemoths does not solve the deeper problem of deflating an 
over-leveraged society. Americans borrowed and shopped until they were blue in 
the face, thinking that an ever-rising housing price market would wash away all 
financial sins. The rest of the world poured money into the US, making it seem 
as if life was one big free lunch.

  Even now, many Americans believe that the simple solution to the nation's 
problem is just to cut taxes and goose up private consumption. Cutting taxes is 
certainly not bad in principle, especially for supporting long-term investment 
and growth. But there are several problems with the gospel of lower taxes.

  First, total public-sector debt (including state and local debt) is already 
nearing the 119%-of-GDP peak reached after World War II. Some argue 
passionately that now is no time to worry about future debt problems, but, in 
my view, any realistic assessment of the medium-term risks does not permit us 
simply to dismiss such concerns.

  A second problem with tax cuts is that they might well have only a limited 
impact on demand in the short run, with the private sector hoarding a 
significant share of the funds to repair badly over-leveraged balance sheets.

  Last but not least, there is a fairness issue. By some measures, nearly half 
of all Americans do not pay any income tax already, so cutting taxes skews an 
already very unequal income distribution. Deferred maintenance on income 
equality is one of many imbalances that built up in the US economy during the 
pre-crisis boom. If allowed to fester, the political consequences could be 
severe, including trade protectionism and perhaps even social unrest.

  Those who think that the government should take up the slack in private 
spending point out that there is an abundance of growth-enhancing projects -- a 
point that should be obvious to anyone familiar with America's fraying 
infrastructure. Likewise, transfers to state and local governments, which have 
limited constitutional scope to borrow, would help slow down wrenching layoffs 
of teachers, firefighters, and police. Lastly, extending unemployment insurance 
in the wake of a once-in-a-half-century crisis should be a no-brainer.

  But, unfortunately, Keynesian demand management is no panacea, either. Nor 
can the government always be the employer of last resort. While tax cuts 
enhance long-term productivity, expanding the government sector is hardly a 
recipe for economic vitality. There are surely many useful activities for the 
government to undertake in a market economy, but a frenzied orgy of stimulus 
spending is not conducive to rational discussion of what they should be. And of 
course, there again is the matter of the soaring national debt.

  All in all, the G-20's policy of aiming for gradual stabilization of growth 
in government debt, bringing it into line with national-income growth by 2016, 
seems a reasonable approach to balancing short-term stimulus against 
longer-term financial risks, even at the cost of lingering unemployment.

  While America is facing the limits of fiscal policy, monetary policy can do 
more, as Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke detailed in a recent speech in 
Jackson Hole, Wyoming. With credit markets impaired, the Fed could buy more 
government bonds or private-sector debt. Bernanke also noted the possibility of 
temporarily raising the Fed's medium-term inflation target (a policy that I 
suggested in this column in December 2008).

  Given the massive de-leveraging of public- and private-sector debt that lies 
ahead, and my continuing cynicism about the US political and legal system's 
capacity to facilitate workouts, two or three years of slightly elevated 
inflation strikes me as the best of many very bad options, and far preferable 
to deflation. While the Fed is still reluctant to compromise its long-term 
independence, I suspect that before this is over it will use most, if not all, 
of the tools outlined by Bernanke.

  The bottom line is that Americans will have to be patient for many years as 
the financial sector regains its health and the economy climbs slowly out of 
its hole. The government can certainly help, but beware of pied pipers touting 
quick fixes.

  Kenneth Rogoff is Professor of Economics and Public Policy at Harvard 
University, and was formerly chief economist at the IMF.
  >>>>> 


  Keith Hudson, Saltford, England 



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