FYI

Jim Devine, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED] 
web: http://myweb.lmu.edu/jdevine/  

-----Original Message-----
From: James K. Galbraith 

Dear Friends,

Today in Reuters we read of Alan Greenspan's testimony to the Senate
Special Committee on Aging, wherein he makes a comment both true and
outrageous:

>Greenspan said most leading economists at the time had expected large
surpluses to stretch into the future... "I don't think that the issue is
a question of taking a wholly different view ... It turns out we were
all wrong (about the surplus forecasts)," Greenspan said, but added he
would take the same position again faced with similar circumstances.< 

http://www.reuters.com/newsArticle.jhtml?type=topNews&storyID=7909513 

It is true that "most leading economists" took this view, but some did
not. Attached below please find an op-ed in the Wall Street Journal of
March 3, 1999 -- six years ago -- by Paul Davidson and yours truly. You
will see that we warn, correctly, that the surpluses could not be
sustained, that the effort to do so would produce recession.

As our piece makes plain, Democrats are not less to blame than Mr.
Greenspan for fostering the contrary illusion.

Our piece also contained some pungent truths about Social Security,
which bear rereading. Note that in six years the standard estimate of
when the Trust Fund would be "exhausted" is now ten years later than it
was then, and the still more reasonable estimate of the CBO is now
twenty years later! Saving Social Security from types like Mr. Greenspan
-- who actually took pride today in his inability to learn anything --
remains a high priority.

The truth is, today's deficits no more threaten Social Security than
yesterday's surpluses protected it. Nor are cuts in the basic life
support of America's elderly either necessary or desirable for any
purpose, neither now or in the future.

And as for who is and who is not a "leading economist," it's pretty
clear that this criterion is unrelated to who was and who was not able
to analyze these issue correctly, back when it might have made a
difference!

Yours, with a measure of simmering frustration,

Jamie

http://users.ipfw.edu/bullion/E202/Articles/The_Dangers_of_Debt_Reductio
n_WSJ_March_3_1999.htm 

The Dangers of Debt Reduction Commentary

By Paul Davidson and James K. Galbraith. Mr. Davidson is a professor of
political economy at the University of Tennessee. Mr. Galbraith is
author of "Created Unequal: The Crisis in American Pay" (Free Press,
1998). He is a professor at the University of Texas's LBJ School of
Public Affairs and a senior scholar at the Levy Economics Institute.

March 3, 1999 

Wall Street Journal

Are drastic reductions in the federal debt a good idea? President
Clinton thinks so. He plans to allow budget surpluses to accumulate over
15 years, cutting the federal debt held by the public to a percentage of
total output not seen since 1917. But there are grave dangers in his
proposal.

This plan assumes that full employment will be maintained independent of
federal spending, which will be strictly restricted in order to create
surpluses. This assumption is foolhardy, for tight budgets depress
economic growth and raise unemployment. Japan's recent experience
illustrates the point: Strong economic growth plus a tight budget
strategy produced a budget surplus by 1990 that then led to a decade of
stagnation and recession. Europe, tied to tight budgets by treaty,
similarly faces stagnation and may be heading toward recession now.

Today, many believe that the Federal Reserve has a magical power to
maintain full employment, whatever the budget. But even assuming that
the Fed remains committed to full employment, its powers are limited,
particularly when interest rates are already low. Monetary policy can
easily spur growth by cutting, say, a 10% interest rate, but that's much
harder when rates are in the 5% range. This is another old lesson the
Japanese are relearning, as they push interest rates toward zero with
little effect.

The promised buy-down of the government's own debts, should it occur,
poses another set of dangers. U.S. government bonds are a safe asset,
completely free of default risk. Their vast abundance and the liquidity
of the Treasury market are stabilizing elements in world finance. Take
them away, and individual investors seeking safety and income will be
obliged to invest elsewhere. Private investors will be forced to seek
safety in hedging, which tends to destabilize financial markets. Worse,
when system crises occur, as happened in late 1998, the "flight to
quality" may no longer be toward U.S. government bonds and Treasury
bills. Instead, it could be toward another region's assets--such as the
euro.

The depressing effect of tight budgets means that the promised surpluses
will probably never materialize. But even if they did, it is incorrect
to assume that the ensuing debt reduction would produce a new pool of
"savings" for any private purpose. The expected debt reduction comes
from an excess of taxes over spending; the effect is to reduce private
financial wealth. Private savings are created when private incomes after
taxes exceed planned consumption. This cannot happen when taxes grossly
exceed government spending, as the president proposes.

But don't we need the surplus to save Social Security? No. The policy of
"saving the surplus" contributes nothing to the future of Social
Security. It is impossible for "savings" today to "pay" for pensions 20
years from now. Proposals to "fund" Social Security misunderstand the
basic fact that putting "funds" into the "trust fund" is redundant.
Congress, not the trust fund, controls benefit levels paid under Social
Security. The promises to pay are already written into law. The special
government bonds that the trust fund holds and that Mr. Clinton would
have the projected surpluses add to are mere symbols of that legal
commitment. So long as Congress leaves the law intact, benefits will be
paid whether or not a bond is held in the trust fund to be redeemed when
future benefit payments are met.

How will the benefit obligations be met? Exactly as if no trust fund
existed: first from payroll taxes; if those are insufficient, then from
other revenues; and finally from new outside borrowing. In the case of
pay-as-you-go from payroll taxes, the trust fund is obviously
unaffected. In the second case, a bond issued by the government to the
trust fund would first be repurchased and extinguished with general
revenues destined for pensions. This is a bookkeeping activity, with no
economic meaning. In the third event, a bond redeemed by the trust fund
would be, in effect, repackaged for sale to the public, with exactly the
same economic effect as if the government issued a new bond.

Worst-case official projections show a depleted trust fund by 2032. But
if the economy grows more rapidly than those projections assume, future
payroll taxes will cover future retirement outlays for much longer. In
that case, the redundancy of "saving the surplus" becomes even more
transparent: The surpluses may never be drawn. Indeed, the entire
perception that there is a Social Security "crisis" rests on implausibly
pessimistic assumptions about economic growth. Weak growth forecasts
generate the shortfalls that the reform proposals are supposed to meet.
The projections have already been revised upward repeatedly; as they
are, the supposed crisis recedes into the future.

What will it take to keep the economy growing? Continued low interest
rates, sure. But also we will need new government spending, and tax
relief for working families is a good idea. A balanced and growing
public and private economy is far more likely to enjoy stable and
sustained economic growth than one that relies wholly on either the
public or the private sector. And if the world economy needs deficit
spending in Japan, as even high U.S. Treasury officials now repeatedly
argue, why would anyone think huge surpluses in the U.S., which would
vastly offset any Japanese efforts, are a sound and sensible idea?

If the economy performs badly, the president's idea becomes even more
dangerous. In a slump, it is appropriate and necessary to run deficits--
large deficits--and to borrow to meet Social Security as well as other
public obligations.

On the supply side, the underlying economic goal of the president's plan
is to stimulate private spending at the expense of public priorities.
But our nation desperately needs improved public services in many
fields: public schools, universities, environment, transportation,
housing, health care, libraries, parks and amenities of all kinds. We
need better support and services for poor children, the disabled and
other needy citizens. These important goals are precluded by Mr.
Clinton's proposal to reduce the debt.

In sum, the policy to accumulate budget surpluses and buy down the
publicly held portion of the national debt is unlikely to succeed. If
attempted seriously, it will probably depress the economy and increase
unemployment. It is also unnecessary to preserve Social Security, and
actively inimical to other pressing public goals. Policy makers, the
press and professional economists should reject this simplistic idea. As
the late Robert Eisner titled his last essay, published a few weeks ago,
we must "Save Social Security From Its Saviors". 

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