Economic Reporting Review
By Dean Baker

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OUTSTANDING STORIES OF THE WEEK

"How Did They Value Stocks? Count the Absurd
Ways," by Gretchen Morgenson in the New York
Times, March 18, 2001, Section 3, page 1.

This article reports on some of the inventive
formulas that promoters of Internet and other
tech stocks developed to rationalize their
extraordinary price to earnings ratios in recent
years.

"Drug Giant's Spin May Obscure Risk," by Deborah
Nelson in the Washington Post, March 18, 2001,
page A14.

This article discusses the efforts on
GlaxoSmithKline, one of the world's largest drug
manufacturers, to downplay evidence that a new
hepatitis drug had dangerous side effects. The
article shows how the industry sought to
misrepresent the findings of a researcher on its
payroll, noting that this is part of a more
general problem with industry funded research.

"Downturn May Dim Outlook for Surplus," by Glenn
Kessler and Juliet Eilperin in the Washington
Post, March 10, 2001, page A4.

This article examines the possibility that the
downturn in the economy and the stock market may
lead to a significant downward revision in
projections for the government surplus for this
year and next. It is the first article in the
Post or Times to call attention to this
possibility. It is worth noting the Congressional
Budget Office's (CBO) projections for capital
gains tax revenue (more than $100 billion
annually) are based on the historic relationship
between capital gains and the economy, not
projections of the stock market. If the stock
market remains flat or falls further, most of
these projected capital gains will not
materialize. But the CBO projections for capital
gains would not change even if it were known with
certainty that the market would lose half its
value over the next three years.




GERMANY

"German Confidence Is at Lowest Point Since July
'99," by Edmund L. Andrews in the New York Times,
March 22, 2001, page W1.

This article reports on the decline of an index
of business confidence in Germany. The headline
is misleading, since it implies that the index
Measures confidence levels for the nation as a
whole, rather than just among business
executives. It also is not clear that this index
is a very meaningful measure of Germany's
economic prospects, and therefore worthy of
significant coverage. While the index rose
considerably in 1999 from its 1998 level, German
GDP growth in 1999 was 1.4 percent, compared to
2.3 percent in 1998.

At one point, the article attributes recent
slowdown in German economic growth to the fact
that it has been slow to liberalize its labor
markets. The article also notes that France has
been experiencing rapid economic growth. France
has also not liberalized its labor markets, as
has been frequently noted in both the Post and
Times. In fact, France recently reduced its
standard workweek to 35 hours, which is a major
tightening of labor market regulation.

The article also comments that Europe's Central
Bank, unlike the Fed, has little room to lower
its interest rates because its inflation rate is
above its 2.0 percent target. It is worth noting
that Europe's inflation rate is approximately
1.0 percentage point lower than the inflation
rate in the United States.

THE TRADE DEFICIT AND THE DOLLAR

"As Stocks Dive and Economy Softens, the Dollar
Is Positively Robust," by Jonathan Fuerbringer in
the New York Times, March 22, 2001, page C1.

This article discusses the recent rise in the
dollar. At one point the article claims that "if
the dollar plunged, it would take higher interest
rates - not the lower interest rates a slumping
economy needs -- to attract the foreign capital
that covers the trade deficit and helps to
service the dollar." Actually, if the dollar
plunged, in theory it should take lower, not
higher, interest rates to attract money into the
country. Foreign investors always worry that the
currency in the country in which they are
investing may fall in value, reducing the
effective return on their investment. However, if
the dollar has already plunged, they might have
less reason to fear a further decline; in which
case they would demand a lower interest premium
to compensate for the risk of a falling dollar.

It is also important to note that with a lower
dollar, the US trade deficit would be much
smaller. A lower dollar would discourage imports
by making them more expensive to people living in
the United States, and it would promote exports,
by making them cheaper for foreigners.

AUSTRALIAN DOLLAR

"The Free Fall of the Australian Dollar Remains a
Mystery," by Becky Gaylord in the New York Times,
March 23, 2001, page W1.

This article discussed the sharp decline in the
value of the Australian dollar over the last
year. It claims that this drop is a mystery
because Australia has "maintained steady economic
growth and low inflation in recent years."

Actually the drop in the Australian currency is
exactly what standard economic theory would
predict. Australia has been running very large
Current account deficits, which in recent years
have exceeded 4.0 percent of GDP. (This is
equivalent to a current account deficit of more
than $400 billion in the United States.) With a
current account deficit of this magnitude, unless
the amount of money that foreigners are willing
to invest in Australia each year vastly exceeds
the amount that Australians are willing to invest
abroad, the currency will decline in value for
the simple reason that the supply (due to the
current account deficit) exceeds the demand. This
article never mentions Australia's current
account deficit.

The fact that Australia has steady economic
growth and low inflation may be good for its
citizens, but it is of little interest to
investors. Unless the returns on investments in
Australia are substantially greater than the
returns available elsewhere (e.g. interest rates
are higher), it will not attract the amount of
foreign capital needed to offset its current
account deficit and its currency will decline in
value. If there is any mystery, it would be that
the value of Australia's currency didn't fall
sooner.

ECONOMICS 2001

"Econ 2001: Tips for the Shellshocked," by
Richard W. Stevenson in the New York Times, March
18, 2001, Section 4, page 1.

This article attempts to present some basic
lessons about the economy to readers. One of the
lessons is on the virtues of productivity growth.
The article asserts that "productivity growth was
behind the regular upward revisions in
projections of the federal budget surplus."
Actually, the main factor behind the upward
revisions in projections of the federal budget
surplus was an increase in the ratio of tax
revenue to GDP, from 18.1 percent in 1994, when
President Clinton's tax increase was first in
effect, to 20.6 percent in 2000. This increase
cannot be readily explained by more rapid
productivity growth.

The article also extols the virtues of markets in
a section under the subhead "markets rule." It
asserts that "market forces create a discipline
that leads governments, companies and investors
alike to think hard about the soundness of their
financial decisions." The collapse of the tech
bubble has shown that investors have been willing
to throw hundreds of billions of dollars at half-
baked schemes (see " How Did They Value Stocks?
Count the Absurd Ways," by Gretchen Morgenson,
New York Times, March 18, 2001, Section 1, page
1). These investors were not punished for their
bad judgment, in all the years that the market
was rising. As a result, there was a huge
misallocation of resources from productive to
non-productive uses.

GLOBAL WARMING

"Bush's Shift Could Doom Air Pact, Some Say," by
Andrew C. Revkin in the New York Times, March 17,
2001, page A7.

This article reports on the status of the Kyoto
Protocol on climate change in the wake of
President Bush's decision to renounce a campaign
pledge to place restrictions on greenhouse gas
emissions. At one point the article reports that
the Kyoto agreement would have required the
United States and other industrialized nations to
reduce their emissions to less than 95 percent
of their 1990 level by 2012. Actually, the
agreement would not have required reductions
anywhere near this large within the
industrialized countries. The agreement provided
for limits that applied to groups of countries.
The group with the U.S. included Russia. As a
result of its economic collapse, Russia is
emitting far less pollution now than it did in
1990. Russia's lower emissions would go far
towards allowing the group of nations to meet its
limit under the Kyoto pact, even without anything
else being done.

The article also asserts that the limits set in
place under the treaty for the period 2008-2012
are unobtainable now because of rapid economic
growth and an increase in energy consumption. It
is also important to note that inaction has
played a major role. Because the U.S. government
failed to act in 1997 or soon thereafter, nothing
was done to promote increased energy efficiency
in buildings, cars and transportation, and other
areas. As a result, the capital stock put in
place in the last four years continues to emit
large amounts of greenhouse gases. This makes it
far more difficult to try to reach the targets
for 2008-2012.

FEDERAL HOUSING SUBSIDIES

"HUD Will Insure More Loans To Build Affordable
Rentals," by Elizabeth Becker in the New York
Times, March 21, 2001, page A21.

This article reports on a proposal by the Bush
Administration to increase the size of a program
that subsidizes the construction of moderate-
income housing in urban areas with high land
costs. According to the article, the proposed
increase should lead to an additional 3000 units
being constructed. The United States has more
than 100 million moderate-income housing units.
This proposal will therefore increase the supply
of moderate income housing for the national as a
whole by less than 0.003 percent. It is
questionable whether an initiative of this
magnitude deserved the attention devoted to it
in this article.

THE FEDERAL RESERVE BOARD AND INTEREST RATE CUTS

"Fed Rate Cut Leaves Wall St. Unsatisfied," by
John M. Berry in the Washington Post, March 21,
2001, page A1.

"Fed Lowers Rates By 0.5% and Hints Of Fuurther
Rate Cuts," by Richard W. Stevenson in the New
York Times, March 21, 2001, page A1.

Both of these articles report on the Federal
Reserve Board's decision to lower interest rates
by 0.5 percentage points. Both articles rely
exclusively on economists working at financial
firms as sources for their stories. The Times
article cites three economists at banks or
brokerage houses while the Post article cites
two. It would have been helpful to include a
wider range of sources, for example, economists
working in academia, government, labor unions,
policy oriented research institutes, or even
industrial firms. Not all experts would have the
same opinion of the Fed's monetary policy as
those representing financial firms.

THE STOCK MARKET

"Wall St. Ends an Awful Week As All Eyes Turn to
the Fed," by Jonathan Fuerbringer in the New York
Times, March 17, 2001, page A1.

"If the Fed Cuts Rates, Will History Again Be
Kind to Stocks?" by Kenneth N. Gilpin in the New
York Times, March 17, 2001, page B1.

These article discuss the likelihood that stocks
will recover if the Federal Reserve Board lowers
interest rates aggressively. Both articles report
on stock without examining the connection between
the stock market and the economy, even in the
long-run. No economist holds the view that stock
prices can consistently grow more rapidly than
corporate profits. The Congressional Budget
Office and other major forecasters project very
low profit growth over the course of the next
decade. If these forecasts prove anywhere close
to accurate, then it is very difficult to
describe a scenario in which stock prices would
bounce back and remain high.

JAPAN

"Fading Yen Casts a Shadow On Japanese Leader's
Visit," by David E. Sanger in the New York Times,
March 17, 2001, page A9.

"Japan's Economy Lurks Low on Agenda as Bush and
Prime Minister Meet," by David E. Sanger in the
New York Times, March 19, 2001, page A8.

"Bush and Japanese Leader Talk but Reach No
Agreement on Economic Growth," by David E. Sanger
in the New York Times, March 20, 2001, page C2.

These article discuss Japan's economic situation
in reference to a meeting last week between
Japanese Prime Minister Yoshiro Mori and
President Bush. At one point, the first article
presents a quote from an economist at the
Brookings Institute, that "Japan has few, if any,
easy policy options left to revitalize its
economy." All three articles are largely
presented from this standpoint.

Actually, there is at least one obvious policy
option remaining to Japan. Princeton professor
Paul Krugman, one of the world's most prominent
economists, has long recommended that Japan
pursue a course of moderate inflation (e.g. 2-3
percent annually), as a way to stimulate its
economy and reduce the debt burden of firms,
banks, and the government. This would seem far
easier and more practical than some of the other
measures that have been put forward, such as a
financial collapse (see "As Japan's Economy
Sags, Many Favor a Collapse," by Clay Chandler,
Washington Post, March 9, 2001, page A1).

After the meeting between Mori and Bush, the
Japanese central bank actually announced that it
would move in the direction of the policy
advocated by Krugman. It announced that it would
begin to expand the money supply as much as
necessary in order to end deflation.

ELECTRICITY DEREGULATION IN CALIFORNIA

"800,000 Lose Power in California As Blackouts
Roll Across the State," by William Booth in the
Washington Post, March 20, 2001, page A8.

"Rolling Blackout Affects A Million Across
California," by Todd S. Purdum in the New York
Times, March 20, 2001, page A1.

These articles report on another set of
electricity blackouts across California. Both
articles attribute California's electricity
problems to the fact that it only partially
deregulated its electricity market, allowing
wholesale prices to be determined by the market,
while retail prices were frozen.

In southern California the state actually did
completely deregulate its market. The result was
that electricity prices more than doubled and
political pressure forced the re-regulation of
electricity prices. The evidence indicates that
California's problems stem from its decision to
deregulate electricity, rather than the
particular system put in place in the northern
and central part of the state.

ENERGY SUPPLIES

"U.S. Faces An Energy Shortfall, Bush Says," by
Eric Pianin in the Washington Post, March 20,
2001, page A1.

"Energy Chief Sketches Plan To Curb Rules
Limiting Supply," by Joseph Kahn in the New York
Times, March 20, 2001, page A18.

These articles report on proposals by the Bush
administration to increase the amount of oil and
natural gas produced in the United States. The
Bush administration has repeatedly claimed that
increased oil supplies will make the U.S. more
energy independent. In fact, increased oil
production in the United States would have
virtually no visible impact on the price and
availability of oil to U.S. consumer.

There is a single world market for oil. If the
U.S. increases its domestic production then it
will have no greater effect on the world price of
oil, or the price of oil in the United States,
than if Kuwait or Kazakhstan increased their
production of oil. The only difference is that by
taking oil out of the ground now, the United
States would be eliminating a reserve that would
otherwise be available in the future, if the
country is denied access to sufficient foreign
oil at some point.

Both articles include references to a study by
the National Association of Manufacturers, which
supposedly shows that the recent rise in oil
prices reduced GDP by approximately one percent
over the last year and a half. The implication of
this study would be that the drop in oil prices
in 1997 and 1998 added approximately the same
amount to GDP. Therefore, the economy is
approximately in the same position as if oil had
remained constant at its
mid-nineties prices.


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