We can hope…

> “the answer has to be some form of what Ezra Klein calls “supply-side 
> progressivism” and Derek Thompson calls “the abundance agenda”. America isn’t 
> dealing with a crisis of jobs right now; we’re dealing with a crisis of costs”



The wreck of Bidenomics

https://noahpinion.substack.com/p/the-wreck-of-bidenomics

via Instapaper



The wreck of Bidenomics
https://noahpinion.substack.com/p/the-wreck-of-bidenomics
(via Instapaper)


It really pains me to have to write this post.

I had high hopes for Bidenomics. The combination of the Covid emergency, 
Chinese competition, and general American anger at long years of stagnation and 
inequality felt like they might motivate this country to get up off its butt 
and do something to improve the situation. And it felt like Biden’s people had 
a good, cohesive program for improving the situation, which I thought would be 
fairly effective. I wrote:

The tenor, pace, and scope of Biden’s economic programs proposals, and the 
muted nature of the ideological opposition, suggest that we’ve entered a new 
policy paradigm — much as when FDR took office in 1933 or Ronald Reagan in 1981…

The Biden program is multifaceted — it includes things like support for unions, 
environmental protection, student debt cancellation, immigration, and a bunch 
of other stuff. But it would be wrong to characterize his program as merely a 
grab bag of long-time Democratic policy priorities. Three approaches stand out 
above the maelstrom:

Cash benefits

Care jobs

Investment…

Cash benefits were at the center of the COVID relief bill that already passed…A 
child allowance [is] basically a pilot universal basic income program for 
families…

The new “infrastructure” bill includes tens of billions of dollars a year for 
long-term in-home care for disabled and elderly people…

The third pillar of Bidenomics is investment — government investment, and 
measures to encourage private investment. The former includes tens of billions 
a year in new research spending, massive construction of new green energy 
infrastructure like electrical grids and charging stations, retrofits of 
existing infrastructure (e.g. lead removal from pipes), and repair of existing 
infrastructure like roads and bridges.

15 months later, it’s looking like my optimism was unwarranted. Yes, FDR and 
Reagan both accomplished much less than they wanted (their policy revolutions 
were completed by their successors). But they accomplished something, at least 
— FDR the New Deal, and Reagan a giant tax cut and anti-union policies. In 
comparison, Biden’s two legislative achievements have been:

1) A Covid relief bill that was marginally smaller than Trump’s, and

2) An infrastructure bill that was good and necessary but really just plugged a 
hole from the previous decade of disinvestment.

Now Joe Manchin has announced that he will let essentially nothing more of 
substance pass the Senate. And with Republicans likely to take back at least 
one house of Congress in this year’s midterm elections, it looks likely that 
this will be the final word on Bidenomics. That doesn’t mean Biden’s presidency 
will be a failure — there’s still the Ukraine war, executive-branch regulation, 
and so on. But economically, this is a legacy that would be mediocre even in 
normal times. It’s definitely a lot less than Obama managed. And it’s far short 
of what the initial rush of successes seemed to foretell.

Why I’m now pessimistic about Bidenomics

Legislative frustration by itself doesn’t spell final doom for Bidenomics as an 
idea. FDR and Reagan’s agendas were both carried to fruition by successors — 
and by leaders from the opposition party who felt the need to triangulate. 
Eisenhower and Nixon made large and substantive contributions to the New Deal 
package of policies, while Jimmy Carter and Bill Clinton arguably carried out 
more of the Reagan Revolution than Reagan himself. But I’m not as optimistic 
that this will happen with Bidenomics, for one simple reason: Popularity.

Here’s the 1932 election map:


Source: 270towin
FDR pulled off four thumping victories in a row, and in the process swept his 
party to large Congressional majorities:


In other words, Eisenhower and Nixon got with FDR’s program in part because it 
seemed like it had been validated by economic and military success, but also 
partly because they felt they had to in order to win elections. The same was 
true with Reaganomics. Here’s a map of Reagan’s reelection in 1984, in which 
the Democratic candidate won only a single state:


Source: 270towin
This was why Bill Clinton (and to a large extent, Barack Obama) felt the need 
to triangulate.

Joe Biden’s victory, however, was by a slim margin:


Source: 270towin
A bit of the narrowness is due to the Electoral College and the differing 
geographical distribution of partisan votes across eras. But the popular vote 
was also much closer in 2020 than in the FDR and Reagan elections. And Biden 
didn’t score anywhere near the sort of dominant Congressional majority that FDR 
scored (but which Reagan, notably, failed to garner).

Moreover, it doesn’t look as if what Biden has done will be a big enough 
success that future Presidents from either party feel a need to follow in his 
footsteps. Employment is very high in America, but inflation is rampant and 
real wages are falling — as a result, consumer sentiment is about as low as it 
was during the Great Recession.


And this has, predictably, led to Biden’s approval rating trending relentlessly 
downward, until by now it’s even lower than Donald Trump’s was at a similar 
point:


This isn’t a legacy future leaders from either party are going to seek to 
emulate; it’s a legacy that they’ll try to run away from. Biden looks a lot 
more likely to be the “next Carter” than the “new FDR” or the “Reagan of the 
left”.

Manchin is bad, but Bidenomics just didn’t catch fire

The easiest explanation for the failure of Bidenomics is simply that there was 
one recalcitrant Senator, Joe Manchin, who personally refused to allow it to 
succeed. And in some narrow sense, it’s true. With a 50-50 partisan split in 
the Senate, and Republicans unwilling to break ranks to support Biden’s Build 
Back Better bill, Manchin could essentially dictate economic policy. Many 
pundits and legislators believed they could craft some compromise that would 
meet Manchin’s demands, but it is now pretty clear that no such compromise was 
ever really on the table.

But the failure actually goes a lot deeper than Manchin. One reason is that 
what I thought of as the first pillar of Bidenomics — cash benefits — turned 
out not to be as popular as many had hoped. The idea was that because the 
expanded child allowance was quasi-universal, it would garner broad support 
like Social Security did. Initial broad support for the policy seemed to 
validate that hope. But then, surprisingly, most Americans didn’t want to make 
the child benefit permanent. Whether that’s because Americans are in a stingy 
mood, or because they believe that government benefits should come with work 
requirements, or because they’re worried about the inflationary effects of cash 
benefits is not yet clear. But what is clear is that cash benefits failed to 
get the broad popular buy-in that FDR’s social insurance or Reagan’s tax cuts 
secured.

Climate investment ran into a similar problem. Despite accelerating heat waves, 
wildfires, and floods, Americans place a pretty low priority on climate action:

David Wallace-Wells @dwallacewells
“Just 1% of voters named climate change as the most important issue facing the 
country, far behind worries about inflation and the economy. Even among voters 
under 30, the group thought to be most energized by the issue, that figure was 
3%.” As the Planet Cooks, Climate Stalls as a Political IssueJoe Manchin’s 
rejection of a compromise climate bill tells a familiar story: Voters and 
politicians put a higher premium on immediate issues, such as inflation and the 
economy, giving politicians a pass on global warming.nytimes.com
July 17th 2022

171 Retweets497 Likes
If people just don’t want what you’re selling, it won’t happen, even if it’s a 
good idea.

Is Bidenomics fit for purpose?

But there’s a third big reason Bidenomics failed, and it’s that substantial 
parts of the program didn’t actually address the needs of the nation as much as 
I thought they would. As the British say, key elements of Bidenomics turned out 
not to be “fit for purpose”.

First, care jobs. A big pillar of Biden’s agenda was the “care economy” — the 
idea that as manufacturing jobs get automated away, people will move en masse 
into health care, eldercare, education and child care. In fact, this has 
already been the trend for many decades now. So Biden wanted to speed the 
transition along, to ensure mass employment with good wages.

But the thing was, the U.S. didn’t really seem to need that sort of a push. The 
economy seems to have done a good job at restoring mass employment on its own, 
with the prime-age employment rate — the best single measure of labor market 
health — bouncing back to about 80% after every downturn.


As for wages, these have become a bit less unequal in the last decade. Since 
the mid-2010s, wages in the bottom half of the distribution have outpaced wages 
in the top half, with the lowest quartile seeing the biggest percentage gains:


The common progressive belief that inequality trends upward without a big 
corrective push by the government may simply be false, at least as far as wage 
income is concerned. The mild but consistent improvement here could have taken 
away some of the impetus for a big push to create care jobs.

It’s worth noting here that I always thought the “care economy” was by far the 
weakest of the three pillars of Bidenomics. It basically shovels government 
subsidies at industries that are already vastly overpriced, which will increase 
their cost to users (and just about everyone is a user of health care, child 
care, and eldercare). In other words, it provides jobs and wage boosts to the 
few but at the expense of higher costs for the many. So I was always wary of 
making this part of the agenda.

A pillar I did strongly believe in — and still do, really — is cash benefits. 
Cash is far simpler to administrate than welfare with means tests and work 
requirements. It catches all kinds of people who fall through the cracks of 
more targeted systems. If it’s done in a more universal way, it avoids many of 
the perverse incentives of means-tested programs. Not all the research supports 
cash benefits, but a lot of it does. I still think cash has the potential to 
become the future of our welfare state.

The problem here is the macroeconomic situation. In the Great Depression, our 
economic problem was unemployment, as it also was during most of the Obama 
administration. In 2022 our problem is definitely inflation. And whether or not 
the cash benefits handed out during Covid were a major cause of the current 
inflation, it’s definitely true that cash benefits are inflationary. This is 
because poorer people spend a lot more of their income than rich people, so 
giving poor people a bunch of money means a boost in spending, whether or not 
you pay for it with taxes on rich people. If you don’t pay for it with taxes, 
and just borrow to pay for the benefits, it’s even more inflationary.

That doesn’t mean cash benefits are a bad idea; it just means that we have to 
get inflation under control before we start doling out a lot more of them. In 
fact, we sort of did this in the 90s; with inflation having been conquered in 
the 80s by Paul Volcker, Bill Clinton felt safe in expanding the EITC (a form 
of cash-based welfare), which contributed to the increasing progressivity of 
the U.S. fiscal system during that decade (Clinton’s assertion that “the age of 
big government is over” was just marketing B.S.).

An inflationary economy simply isn’t the kind of thing the progressive economic 
policy package was designed to deal with. The playbook inherited from FDR and 
the New Dealers, which is now embraced by the aptly-named Roosevelt Institute 
and many of the other progressives advising Biden on economics, is all about 
fighting depressions. It’s about mobilizing big government to take over when 
the free market has failed, pumping up aggregate demand, providing jobs, 
boosting wages, and carrying out needed investment.

The investment part of that is still vitally important (and would be 
deflationary in the medium term due to increased capacity). But the other two 
pillars — a big push for care jobs and a big increase in cash benefits — look 
more suited to 2009 than to 2022. (This is not to say that small-government 
Reaganomics is the answer to inflation either, of course; in fact, it probably 
didn’t even help reduce inflation in the 80s!). An economic program comprised 
of one-third stuff we really do need, and two-thirds stuff that looks out step 
with the biggest economics problems facing the nation right now, is not likely 
to catch fire.

So why didn’t Democrats see this, and prioritize the investment piece of 
Bidenomics, shelving the other two pieces until inflation comes down? Well, 
some definitely tried to do that, paring down the BBB bill to mostly just the 
climate pieces (which Manchin then killed), and talking up the disinflationary 
benefits of investment. But it was too little, too late; BBB had spent much of 
its life as a giant grab bag of giveaways to the Democratic party’s 
kaleidoscopic collection of competing interest groups (the most ridiculous 
being a hideously expensive tax cut for upper-income people in high-tax 
states). That lack of leadership and focus certainly played a part in 
Bidenomics’ eventual downfall.

The way forward

All of this leaves us with the big question: Where do we go from here? As I see 
it, the answer has to be some form of what Ezra Klein calls “supply-side 
progressivism” and Derek Thompson calls “the abundance agenda”. America isn’t 
dealing with a crisis of jobs right now; we’re dealing with a crisis of costs, 
both in the macroeconomic inflation sense, and in the long term 
everything-costs-too-damn-much sense. Making life less expensive for regular 
Americans is a mission that fits the times we’re in.

Government investment — and encouragement of increased private investment — has 
got to be a big part of this. High-quality infrastructure and public goods like 
R&D funding are important for boosting growth in real incomes. And a big push 
for abundant green energy — whose costs are already lower than fossil fuels and 
falling by the day — is key to making all kinds of things cheaper.

It’ll also mean a big push for cheap housing and better transit. That will 
include lots of upzoning and other deregulation, but also a push for 
government-constructed housing. The YIMBY movement shows the way ahead here; 
with cities all around the country following coastal hubs into unaffordable 
territory, this needs to be a nationwide movement.

It will also mean establishing a national health insurance system. This should 
not be an expansive single-payer system like the plan advanced by Bernie 
Sanders, focused on eliminating out-of-pocket costs; instead, it should be a 
system where the government pays some portion of every medical bill and leaves 
the rest to private insurance. That’s the system used in Japan and South Korea, 
and it’s very good at keeping costs down, because the monopsony power of the 
national insurer allows it to negotiate down prices for all services.

I believe this sort of progressive agenda would win broad support. Progressive 
policy advisors, think-tankers, and pundits should move away from the idea of 
providing mass employment, and toward the idea of providing mass abundance. 
Bidenomics is dead, but that doesn’t mean progressive economic policy is dead. 
We don’t have to repeat the 1980s here. Progressives just need to pivot, and 
offer America more of what it needs today instead of more of what it needed in 
1933.

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