Opinion | The Economic Mistake the Left Is Finally Confronting
https://www.nytimes.com/2021/09/19/opinion/supply-side-progressivism.html
(via Instapaper)

Ezra Klein

The Economic Mistake the Left Is Finally Confronting

Sept. 19, 2021

Send any friend a story

As a subscriber, you have 10 gift articles to give each month. Anyone can read 
what you share.


By

Opinion Columnist

The words “supply side” are coded, in American politics, as right wing. They 
summon the memory of Arthur Laffer’s curve, the history of Republicans 
promising that cutting taxes on the rich will encourage the nation’s dispirited 
John Galts to work both smarter and harder, leading economies to boom and 
revenues to rise. This has made it vaguely disreputable to worry about the 
supply side of the economy. It’s as if the nonsense of phrenology had made it 
sordid for doctors to treat disorders of the brain.

But look closely and you can see something new and overdue emerging in American 
politics: supply-side progressivism.

Many of progressivism’s great dreams linger on the demand side of the ledger. 
Universal health care promises insurance that people can use to buy health 
care. Food stamps give people money for food. Housing vouchers give them money 
for rent. Pell Grants give them money for college. Social Security gives them 
money for retirement. The child tax credit gives them money to care for their 
children. The minimum wage and the earned-income tax credit give workers more 
money. A universal basic income would give everyone more money.

This is the driving theory of most of the progressive policy agenda, most of 
the time: give people money or a moneylike voucher they can use to buy 
something they need or even just want.

I don’t mean, in any way, to diminish the importance of those policies. There 
is little Democrats could do that will help as many people right now as making 
the expanded child tax credit permanent. The rumblings that it may be allowed 
to expire or be restricted to those who pay federal income taxes, are worrying. 
If Democrats do nothing else this session, they should delete the expiration 
date from the biggest anti-poverty legislation they’ve passed since the Great 
Society.

But progressives are often uninterested in the creation of the goods and 
services they want everyone to have. This creates a problem and misses an 
opportunity. The problem is that if you subsidize the cost of something that 
there isn’t enough of, you’ll raise prices or force rationing. You can see the 
poisoned fruit of those mistakes in higher education and housing. But it also 
misses the opportunity to pull the technologies of the future progressives want 
into the present they inhabit. That requires a movement that takes innovation 
as seriously as it takes affordability.

The first problem is explored in “Cost Disease Socialism,” a new paper by the 
center-right Niskanen Center. “We are in an era of spiraling costs for core 
social goods — health care, housing, education, child care — which has made 
proposals to socialize those costs enormously compelling for many on the 
progressive left,” Steven Teles, Samuel Hammond and Daniel Takash write.

There are sharp limits on supply in all of these sectors because regulators 
make it hard to increase supply (zoning laws make it difficult to build 
housing), training and hiring workers is expensive (adding classrooms means 
adding teachers and teacher aides, and expanding health insurance requires more 
doctors and nurses) or both. “This can result in a vicious cycle in which 
subsidies for supply-constrained goods or services merely push up prices, 
necessitating greater subsidies, which then push up prices, ad infinitum,” they 
write.

The paper is largely an appeal to Republicans to rethink their approach. 
Instead of focusing on “backward-looking deficit reduction strategies based on 
budgetary gimmicks or dead-on-arrival cuts to existing entitlements,” the 
authors urge conservatives to tackle costs directly. Too often, Republican 
proposals to cut government spending are just shell games that shift costs onto 
individuals. The conservative enthusiasm for moving Medicare beneficiaries onto 
(often more expensive!) private plans “risks being little more than an 
accounting trick — a purely nominal change in ‘who pays’ that would do little 
to address the underlying sources of cost growth.” Preach!

It would be nice to have the Republican Party the Niskanen Center imagines, one 
more focused on making a decent life affordable than on making vaccination 
optional, and I wish it well in its effort to white paper it into existence. 
For now, though, it’s Democrats who are starting to take supply-side concerns 
seriously.

But before we get to that, I want to widen the definition of “supply,” a dull 
word within which lurks thrilling possibilities. Supply-side progressivism 
shouldn’t just fix the problems of the present; it should hasten the advances 
of the future. A problem of our era is there’s too little utopian thinking, but 
one worthy exception is Aaron Bastani’s “Fully Automated Luxury Communism,” a 
leftist tract that puts the technologies in development right now — artificial 
intelligence, renewable energy, asteroid mining, plant- and cell-based meats, 
and genetic editing — at the center of a postwork, postscarcity vision.

“What if everything could change?” he asks. “What if, more than simply meeting 
the great challenges of our time — from climate change to inequality and aging 
— we went far beyond them, putting today’s problems behind us like we did 
before with large predators and, for the most part, illness? What if, rather 
than having no sense of a different future, we decided history hadn’t actually 
begun?”

Bastani’s vision is bracing because it insists that those of us who believe in 
a radically fairer, gentler, more sustainable world have a stake in bringing 
forward the technologies that will make that world possible. That is a 
political question as much as a technological one: The same technologies could 
become accelerators of inequality and want if they’re not embedded in 
thoughtful policies and institutions. But what Bastani sees clearly is that the 
world we should want requires more than redistribution. It requires inventions 
and advances that render old problems obsolete and new possibilities manifold.

Climate change is the most pressing example. If the Biden administration gave 
every American a check to transition to renewables, the policy would fail, 
because we haven’t built that much renewable capacity, to say nothing of the 
supply chain needed to deploy and maintain it. In a world where two-thirds of 
emissions now come from middle-income countries like China and India, the only 
way for humanity to both address climate change and poverty is to invent our 
way to clean energy that is plentiful and cheap and then spend enough to 
rapidly deploy it.

Or take health care. House and Senate Democrats are squabbling over dueling 
policies to let Medicare set the prices it pays for drugs. Europeans and 
Canadians pay far less for the same prescription drugs that we buy, and so 
House Democrats want to let Medicare set the maximum prices of at least some 
drugs at 120 percent of what our peer countries pay. Senate Democrats, 
according to STAT, seem to be moving toward directing Medicare to set prices 
based on what the Veterans Health Administration pays, which is lower than 
before but still higher than abroad. (It’s darkly comic that neither chamber 
has simply taken the position that Americans shouldn’t pay more than Canadians 
for prescription drugs.)

The counterargument here is frustrating but important. Yes, Americans overpay 
compared to peer countries for drugs. But truly curing, managing or preventing 
disease is of extraordinary value to humanity. Pfizer and Moderna will make 
billions from their coronavirus vaccines, but they’ve created trillions of 
dollars in economic value by unfreezing economies, to say nothing of the lives 
saved. It is true that European countries free-ride off the high cost we pay 
for drugs, because it’s the U.S. market that drives innovation. But that 
doesn’t mean we’d be better off paying their prices, if that meant new drug 
development slowed. We don’t just want everyone to have health insurance in the 
future. We want them to be healthier, freed from diseases and pain that even 
the best health insurance today cannot cure or ease.

To this, progressives will note that pharmaceutical companies pump money into 
me-too drugs, spend gobsmacking amounts on advertising and administration, and 
make billions and billions in profits. And they’re right. It’s ludicrous to say 
that the pharmaceutical system we have now is oriented toward innovation. It’s 
oriented toward profit; sometimes that intersects with innovation and sometimes 
it doesn’t.

Too often, though, progressives let their argument drop there. They need to 
take the obvious next step: We should combine price controls with new policies 
to encourage drug development. That could include everything from more funding 
of basic research to huge prizes for discovering drugs that treat particular 
conditions to more public funding for drug trials. Years ago, Bernie Sanders 
had an interesting proposal for creating a system of pharmaceutical prizes in 
which companies could make millions or billions for inventing drugs that cured 
certain conditions, and those drugs would be immediately released without 
exclusive patent protections. Focusing on the need to make new drugs affordable 
while ignoring the need to make more of them exist is like trimming a garden 
you’ve stopped watering.

But this is a lesson progressives are, increasingly, learning. This is clearest 
on climate. Much of the spending in the Biden agenda is dedicated to increasing 
the supply of renewable energy and advanced batteries while building the supply 
of carbon-neutral transportation options. Democrats have realized that markets 
alone will not solve the climate crisis. And the same is true for much else on 
the progressive docket.

In a blog post, Jared Bernstein, a member of President Biden’s Council of 
Economic Advisers, and Ernie Tedeschi, a senior policy economist for the 
council, framed the Biden agenda as “an antidote for inflationary pressure” 
because much of it expands the long-term supply of the economy.

“The transportation, rail, public transit and port investments will reduce 
efficiency-killing frictions that keep people and goods from getting to markets 
as quickly as they should,” they wrote. “The child and elder care investments 
will boost the labor supply of caretakers. The educational investments in pre-K 
and community college will eventually show up as higher productivity as a 
result of a better-educated work force.”

A list like this could go on. It’s not clear whether it’ll be in the 
reconciliation bill, for instance, but Biden has proposed an expansive plan to 
increase housing supply in part by pushing local governments to end 
exclusionary zoning laws. And in California, that’s exactly what’s happening, 
as I wrote a few weeks back. A decade ago, progressives talked often of making 
housing affordable, but they didn’t talk much about increasing housing supply. 
Now they do. That’s progress.

I don’t think these various policies have cohered into a policy faction, a way 
progressives think of themselves, at least not yet. But I’d like to see that 
happen. Political movements consider solutions where they know to look for 
problems. Progressives have long known to look for problems on the demand side 
of the economy — to ask whether there are goods and services people need that 
they cannot afford. That will make today fairer, but to ensure tomorrow is 
radically better, we need to look for the choke points in the future we 
imagine, the places where the economy can’t or won’t supply the things we need. 
And then we need to fix them.

The Times is committed to publishing a diversity of letters to the editor. We’d 
like to hear what you think about this or any of our articles. Here are some 
tips. And here’s our email: [email protected].

Follow The New York Times Opinion section on Facebook, Twitter (@NYTopinion) 
and Instagram.



Sent from my iPhone

-- 
-- 
Centroids: The Center of the Radical Centrist Community 
<[email protected]>
Google Group: http://groups.google.com/group/RadicalCentrism
Radical Centrism website and blog: http://RadicalCentrism.org

--- 
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups 
"Centroids: The Center of the Radical Centrist Community" group.
To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send an email 
to [email protected].
To view this discussion on the web visit 
https://groups.google.com/d/msgid/RadicalCentrism/D3F4A95D-6ECF-4DBE-9DF8-90E5E63E33B1%40radicalcentrism.org.

Reply via email to