More thoughtful than anything else I've seen to date. 


The Way Forward
http://www.newamerica.net/publications/policy/the_way_forward

Notwithstanding repeated attempts at monetary and fiscal stimulus since 2009, 
the United States remains mired in what is by far its worst economic slump 
since that of the 1930s.1  More than 25 million working-age Americans remain 
unemployed or underemployed, the employment-to-population ratio lingers at an 
historic low of 58.3 percent,2 business investment continues at historically 
weak levels, and consumption expenditure remains weighed down by massive 
private sector debt overhang left by the bursting of the housing and credit 
bubble a bit over three years ago.  Recovery from what already has been dubbed 
the “Great Recession” has been so weak thus far that real GDP has yet to 
surpass its previous peak. And yet, already there are signs of renewed 
recession.  It is not only the U.S. economy that is in peril right now. At this 
writing, Europe is struggling to prevent the sovereign debt problems of its 
peripheral Euro-zone economies from spiraling into a full-fledged banking 
crisis – an ominous development that would present an already weakening economy 
with yet another demand shock.  Meanwhile, China and other large emerging 
economies—those best positioned to take up worsening slack in the global 
economy—are beginning to experience slowdowns of their own as earlier measures 
to contain domestic inflation and credit-creation kick in, and as weak growth 
in Europe and the United States dampen demand for their exports.  

Nor is renewed recession the only threat we now face.  Even if a return to 
negative growth rates is somehow avoided, there will remain a real and present 
danger that Europe and the United States alike fall into an indefinitely 
lengthy period of negligible growth, high unemployment and deflation, much as 
Japan has experienced over the past 20 years following its own stock-and-real 
estate bubble and burst of the early 1990s.3  Protracted stagnation on this 
order of magnitude would undermine the living standards of an entire generation 
of Americans and Europeans, and would of course jeopardize America’s position 
in the world. 

Our economic straits are rendered all the more dire, and the just mentioned 
scenario accordingly all the more likely, by political dysfunction and 
attendant paralysis in both the United States and Europe.  The political 
stalemate is in part structural, but also is attributable in significant large 
measure to the nature of the present economic crisis itself, which has stood 
much familiar economic orthodoxy of the past 30 years on its head.  For despite 
the standoff over raising the U.S. debt ceiling this past August, the principal 
problem in the United States has not been government inaction.  It has been 
inadequate action, proceeding on inadequate understanding of what ails us.  
Since the onset of recession in December 2007, the federal government, 
including the Federal Reserve, has undertaken a broad array of both 
conventional and unconventional policy measures. The most noteworthy of these 
include: slashing interest rates effectively to zero; two rounds of 
quantitative easing involving the purchase of Treasuries and other assets, 
followed by Operation Twist to flatten the yield curve yet further; and three 
fiscal stimulus programs (including the 2008 Economic Stimulus Act, the 2009 
American Recovery and Reinvestment Act, and the 2010 Tax Relief, Unemployment 
Insurance Reauthorization, and Job Creation Act) and the 2008 Troubled Asset 
Relief Program to recapitalize the banks. These actions have undeniably helped 
stabilize the economy—temporarily. But as evidenced by continuing high 
unemployment and the weak and now worsening economic outlook, they have not 
produced a sustainable recovery.  And there is no reason to believe that 
further such measures now being proposed, including the additional tax relief 
and modest spending found in the administration’s proposed American Jobs Act – 
which  look all too much like previous measures – will be any more successful.  
Indeed, there is good reason to worry that most of the measures tried thus far, 
particularly those involving monetary reflation, have reached the limits of 
their effectiveness.  

The questions now urgently before us, then, are these:  First, why have the 
policies attempted thus far fallen so far short?  And second, what should we be 
doing instead? Answering these questions correctly, we believe, requires a more 
thorough understanding of the present crisis itself – its causes, its 
character, and its full consequences.  Regrettably, in our view, there seems to 
be a pronounced tendency on the part of most policymakers worldwide to view the 
current situation as, substantially, no more than an extreme business cyclical 
decline. From such declines, of course, robust cyclical recoveries can 
reasonably be anticipated to follow in relatively short order, as previous 
excesses are worked off and supply and demand find their way back into balance. 
And such expectations, in turn, tend to be viewed as justifying merely modest 
policy measures.

Yet as we shall show in what follows, this is not an ordinary business cycle 
downturn.  Two features render the present slump much more formidable than that 
– and much more recalcitrant in the face of traditional policy measures.

First, the present slump is a balance-sheet Lesser Depression or Great 
Recession of nearly unprecedented magnitude, occasioned by our worst 
credit-fueled asset-price bubble and burst since the late 1920s.4  Hence, like 
the crisis that unfolded throughout the 1930s, the one we are now living 
through wreaks all the destruction typically wrought by a Fisher-style 
debt-deflation.  In this case, that means that millions of Americans who took 
out mortgages over the past 10 to 15 years, or who borrowed against the 
inflated values of their homes, are now left with a massive debt overhang that 
will weigh down on consumption for many years to come.  And this in turn means 
that the banks and financial institutions that hold this debt are exposed to 
indefinitely protracted concerns about capitalization in the face of rising 
default rates and falling asset values. But there is more.  Our present crisis 
is more formidable even than would be a debt-deflation alone, hard as the 
latter would be.  For the second key characteristic of our present plight is 
that it is the culmination of troubling trends that have been in the making for 
more than two decades.  In effect, it is the upshot of two profoundly important 
but seemingly unnoticed structural developments in the world economy.   The 
first of those developments has been the steady entry into the world economy of 
successive waves of new export-oriented economies, beginning with Japan and the 
Asian tigers in the 1980s and peaking with China in the early 2000s, with more 
than two billion newly employable workers.  The integration of these 
high-savings, lower wage economies into the global economy, occurring as it did 
against the backdrop of dramatic productivity gains rooted in new information 
technologies and the globalization of corporate supply chains, decisively 
shifted the balance of global supply and demand.  In consequence, the world 
economy now is beset by excess supplies of labor, capital, and productive 
capacity relative to global demand.  This not only profoundly dims the 
prospects for business investment and greater net exports in the developed 
world — the only other two drivers of recovery when debt-deflation slackens 
domestic consumer demand.  It also puts the entire global economy at risk, 
owing to the central role that the U.S. economy still is relied on to play as 
the world’s consumer and borrower of last resort.   The second long term 
development that renders the current debt-deflation, already worse than a mere 
cyclical downturn, worse even than other debt-deflations is this: The same 
integration of new rising economies with ever more competitive workforces into 
the world economy also further shifted the balance of power between labor and 
capital in the developed world.  That has resulted not only in stagnant wages 
in the United States, but also in levels of income and wealth inequality not 
seen since the immediate pre-Great-Depression1920s.   For much of the past 
several decades, easy access to consumer credit and credit-fueled rises in home 
values – themselves facilitated by recycled savings from emerging economies’ 
savings – worked to mask this widening inequality and support heightening 
personal consumption.  But the inevitable collapse of the consumer credit and 
housing price bubbles of course brought an end to this pattern of economic 
growth and left us with the massive debt overhang cited above.  Government 
transfer payments and tax cuts since the crash have made up some of the 
difference over the past two years; but these cannot continue indefinitely and 
in any event, as we argue below, in times like the present they tend to be 
saved rather than devoted to employment-inducing consumer expenditure.  Even 
current levels of consumption, therefore, will henceforth depend on 
improvements in wages and incomes.  Yet these have little potential to grow in 
a world economy beset by a glut of both labor and capital.

Only the policymakers of the 1930s, then, faced a challenge as complex and 
daunting as that we now face. Notwithstanding the magnitude of the challenge, 
however, this paper argues that there is a way forward.  We can get past the 
present impasse, provided that we start with a better diagnosis of the crisis 
itself, then craft cures that are informed by that diagnosis.5  That is what we 
aim here to do.  The paper proceeds in five parts: 

Part I provides a brief explanatory history of the credit bubble and bust of 
the past decade, and explains why this bubble and bust have proved more 
dangerous than previous ones of the past 70 years.

Part II offers a more detailed diagnosis of our present predicament in the wake 
of the bubble and bust, and defines the core challenge as of the product of 
necessary de-levering in a time of excess capacity.  

Part III explains why the conventional policy tools thus far employed have 
proved inadequate – in essence, precisely because they are predicated on an 
incomplete diagnosis. It also briefly addresses other recently proposed 
solutions and explains why they too are likely to be ineffective and in some 
cases outright counterproductive.

Part IV outlines the criteria that any post-bubble, post-bust recovery program 
must satisfy in order to meet today’s debt-deflationary challenge under 
conditions of oversupply.

Part V then lays out a three-pillared recovery plan that we have designed with 
those criteria in mind.  It is accordingly the most detailed part of the paper. 
 The principal features of the recovery plan are as follows:
 

First, as Pillar 1, a substantial five-to-seven year public investment program 
that repairs the nation’s crumbling public infrastructure and, in so doing, (a) 
puts people back to work and (b) lays the foundation for a more efficient and 
cost-effective national economy.  We also emphasize the substantial element of 
“self-financing” that such a program would enjoy, by virtue of (a) massive 
currently idle and hence low-priced capacity, (b) significant multiplier 
effects and (c) historically low government-borrowing costs.

Second, as Pillar 2, a debt restructuring program that is truly national in 
scope, addressing the (intimately related) banking and real estate sectors in 
particular – by far the most hard-hit by the recent bubble and bust and hence 
by far the heaviest drags on recovery now.  We note that the worst 
debt-overhangs and attendant debt-deflations in history6 always have followed 
on combined real estate and financial asset price bubbles like that we have 
just experienced.   Accordingly, we put forward comprehensive 
debt-restructuring proposals that we believe will unclog the real estate and 
financial arteries and restore healthy circulation – with neither overly high 
nor overly low blood pressure – to our financial and real estate markets as 
well as to the economy at large.

Third, as Pillar 3, global reforms that can begin the process of restoring 
balance to the world economy and can facilitate the process of debt de-levering 
in Europe and the United States.  Key over the next five to seven years will be 
growth of domestic demand in China and other emerging market economies to (a) 
offset diminished demand in the developed world as it retrenches and trims back 
its debt overhang, and (b) correct the current imbalance in global supply 
relative to global demand.  Also key will be the establishment of an emergency 
global demand-stabilization fund to recycle foreign exchange reserves, now held 
by surplus nations, in a manner that boosts employment in deficit nations.  
Over the longer term, we note, reforms to the IMF, World Bank Group, and other 
institutions are apt to prove necessary in order to lend a degree of 
automaticity to currency adjustments, surplus-recycling, and global 
liquidity-provision.7

To read the full paper, click here.

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The Way Forward (PDF, 35 pp.)
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