http://www.prwatch.org/node/12065

Pete Peterson Linked Economists Caught in Austerity Error

by Mary Bottari — April 18, 2013 - 11:59am
Topics: Economy
Projects: Real Economy Project
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A team of economists at the Political Economy Research Institute
(PERI) at UMass Amherst broke a huge story this week that was promptly
picked up by the New York Times, the Washington Post, the Financial
Times, and newspapers around the globe. The economists proved that the
essential underpinning "of the intellectual edifice of austerity
economics," as Paul Krugman put it, is based on sloppy methodology and
spreadsheet coding errors.

Reinhart-Rogoff Study Debunked


Kenneth Rogoff and Carmen Reinhart
Three years ago, Harvard economists Carmen Reinhart and Kenneth Rogoff
released a study that presented empirical evidence from 44 nations
over a 200 year time span to demonstrate that countries with a public
debt over 90 percent of GDP (the United States is at about 100
percent, Japan at 200 percent) have average growth rates one percent
lower than other nations.

Forty-four countries, 200 years, Harvard -- pretty convincing, huh?

Except it was wrong.

When the PERI team finally got a hold of the data used by Reinhart and
Rogoff, they uncovered gaping problems. They found that "coding
errors, selective exclusion of available data, and unconventional
weighting of summary statistics lead to serious errors that
inaccurately represent the relationship between public debt and GDP
growth." Adjusting for these errors, the Amherst team contends that
"the average real GDP growth rate for countries carrying a public
debt-to-GDP ratio of over 90 percent is actually 2.2 percent, not -0.1
percent."

It would all be a Massachusetts "Ivory Tower" kerfluffle if the
Reinhart-Rogoff study were not cited by practically everyone in
Washington, including Paul Ryan, Simpson-Bowles, and the entire "Fix
the Debt" crowd, to justify harmful cuts and a stalemate on stimulus
currently condemning millions to mass unemployment.

And it should come as no surprise that the economists have ties to
Wall Street billionaire Pete Peterson.

Study Used to Justify Harmful Cuts and High Unemployment

It is hard to understate the importance of the study. It has been
cited around the globe by academics, politicians, and the mainstream
media. In the U.S., it is one of Paul Ryan's favorite justifications
for his draconian Path to Prosperity budget, for GOP rejection of
further stimulus, and the Fix the Debt crowd's frenzied calls for
urgent action. President Obama is now on the austerity bandwagon,
enacting numerous cuts and proposing new cuts to programs like Social
Security in order to achieve a "Grand Bargain" on deficits. As a
consequence, mass unemployment is a new normal.

In Europe, "R&R's work and its derivatives have been used to justify
austerity policies that have pushed the unemployment rate over 10
percent for the euro zone as a whole and above 20 percent in Greece
and Spain. In other words, this is a mistake that has had enormous
consequences" for real people, says economist Dean Baker in a piece
called "How Much Unemployment Did Reinhart and Rogoff's Arithmetic
Mistake Cause?"

Time and time again, economists tried to replicate the Reinhart-Rogoff
results, but to no avail. Now, Thomas Herndon, Michael Ash, and Robert
Pollin show us why. One mistake, admitted by the authors and gaining
the most attention, is an Excel spreadsheet error. Check out the
screen shot of the year.

As the authors put it: "A coding error in the RR working spreadsheet
entirely excludes five countries, Australia, Austria, Belgium, Canada,
and Denmark, from the analysis. [Reinhart-Rogoff] averaged cells in
lines 30 to 44 instead of lines 30 to 49... This spreadsheet error...
is responsible for a -0.3 percentage-point error in RR's published
average real GDP growth in the highest public debt/GDP category."
Belgium, in particular, has 26 years with debt-to-GDP above 90
percent, with an average growth rate of 2.6 percent (though this is
only counted as one total point due to the weighting above).

Mother Jones dubbed it "the Excel Error Heard Round the World."

Pete Peterson's Fingerprints


It will come as no surprise that Reinhart and Rogoff have ties to Wall
Street billionaire Pete Peterson, a big fan of their work. Peterson
has been advocating cuts to Social Security and Medicare for decades
in order to prevent a debt crisis he warns will spike interest rates
and collapse the economy. (Peterson failed to warn of the actual
crisis building on Wall Street during his time at the Blackstone
Group.)

When Washington Post writer Suzy Khimm pointed out to Peterson that
the U.S. built significant deficits during the financial crisis but
maintained very low interest rates, Peterson responded that America
still needed to be on high alert: "you know [Kenneth] Rogoff and
[Carmen] Reinhart -- I've talked to them, and they say [debt crises]
are sudden, they're sharp, they're very substantial. The risk is
simply too big. At some point, if we lurch from crisis to crisis, then
confidence will decline on our economy in general."

As the Center for Media and Democracy detailed in the online report,
"The Peterson Pyramid," the Blackstone billionaire turned
philanthropist has spent half a billion dollars to promote this chorus
of calamity. Through the Peter G. Peterson Foundation, Peterson has
funded practically every think tank and non-profit that works on
deficit- and debt-related issues, including his latest astroturf
supergroup, "Fix the Debt," which has set a July 4, 2013 deadline for
securing an austerity budget.

Reinhart, described glowingly by the New York Times as "the most
influential female economist in the world," was a Senior Fellow at the
Peterson Institute for International Economics founded, chaired, and
funded by Peterson. Reinhart is listed as participating in many
Peterson Institute events, such as their 2012 fiscal summit along with
Paul Ryan, Alan Simpson, and Tim Geithner, and numerous other Peterson
lectures and events available on YouTube. She is married to economist
and author Vincent Reinhart, who does similar work for the American
Enterprise Institute, also funded by the Peterson Foundation.

Kenneth Rogoff is listed on the Advisory Board of the Peterson
Institute. The Peterson Institute bankrolled and published a 2011
Rogoff-Reinhart book-length collaboration, "A Decade of Debt," where
the authors apparently used the same flawed data to reach many of the
same conclusions and warn ominously of a "debt burden" stretching into
2017 that "will weigh heavily on the public policy agenda of numerous
advanced economies and global financial markets for some time to
come." (Note that not everyone associated with the Institute touts the
Peterson party line.)

Bankrupt Analysis


The authors have issued two rebuttals to the Amherst study. In their
latest, they object that anyone would think they were "misconstruing
analysis to support austerity" or a political agenda. Perhaps it had
to do with pieces like this one entitled "Too Much Debt and the
Economy Can't Grow" that warns against further stimulus at a time when
mass unemployment is wreaking devastation on the lives and livelihoods
of workers young and old.

Economists like Herndon, Ash, Pollin, Baker, and Krugman have never
bought the argument that economies can cut their way out of a crisis,
and now data from the Reinhart-Rogoff study, from numerous European
countries, from the IMF, and even from CMD's home state of Wisconsin
(now ranked an astonishing 44th in job creation), support their
contentions.

If only they had half a billion to spread the word.
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