Posted by Todd Zywicki:
Hazlett & Bittlingmayer Respond to Silver:
http://volokh.com/archives/archive_2009_02_22-2009_02_28.shtml#1235442732


   I earlier posted Tom Hazlett and George Bittlingmayer's short article
   on the market response to President Obama's stimulus plan. Several
   commenters pointed to a critique by Nate Silver of Hazlett &
   Bittlingmayer. Tom has asked me to post a response to Silver's post,
   which I am happy to do for those who are interested It is below as
   hidden text:

   ([1]show)

   Nate Silver comments on our recent article using the descriptors
   �stupid� and �unapologetically idiotic,� suggesting that President
   Obama�s heralded campaign to raise the level of civil discourse is yet
   a work in progress. We�d like, however, to do our little part in that
   effort, responding to the substance of Silver�s objections that are
   not �unapologetically idiotic� but, in our opinion, wrong.

   Our article, �The Market is Shorting Obama�s �Stimulus,� reported on
   investor reaction to the recent legislation put forth, and
   successfully enacted, by the Administration. While macroeconomic
   intervention anticipated to increase economic growth should be
   reflected in positive stock returns, we find Dow Jones Index movements
   generally negative vis-a-vis the stimulus plan. Our take, based on
   this and other evidence, was that the market is looking for effective
   reform of the banking sector; stimulus-without-end is at best a
   distraction and, based on the evidence, a big fat downer.

   Silver lodges two objections. First, that the market response may as
   easily be a verdict that the stimulus was too small as that it was too
   large. Second, that we cherry-pick our data points and count only DJI
   downturns, ignoring positive reactions to the stimulus package. On the
   first point: in theory yes, but in practice unlikely. On the second
   point: Silver mis-states the positive reaction to Obama policies,
   which have been (as we stated) a reaction to good news for reform of
   the financial sector, not to the advance of the Obama �stimulus.� No
   evidence he cites undermines our conclusion that the fiscal plan has
   been met with negative movements in the DJI.

   Objection 1. Were the market shorting the stimulus because it was
   lower than expected our basic conclusion would still be correct: the
   market is shorting Obama�s stimulus. The �too little� interpretation
   is implausible, however. First, a substantially larger deficit package
   would have been unlikely to pass Congress. As it was, the most
   important news generated following the Obama plan�s introduction was
   the measure narrowly passed because three Republican Senators endorsed
   it (and refused to back a filibuster). Market investors would not
   likely have held expectations that were disappointment by the
   announcement of a plan that was �too small� when the package was
   effectively the maximum that could be obtained.

   Second, the size of the U.S. plan is extremely large by historical
   U.S. standards and by current international standards. The Obama plan
   costs about 4% of 2009 GDP and raises the deficit to about 12%. As
   noted in our article, this deficit is twice the previous largest in
   post-WWII American, and far higher than any during the Great
   Depression of the 1930s. Other leading countries are today much below
   both levels. The IMF is urging countries to enact stimulus measures
   equal to 2% of GDP, and having limited success. In terms of 2009
   deficits, France is 4.4% of GDP; Germany�s only 3%. It begs credulity
   to think that investors were expecting the U.S. deficit to exceed
   international debt financing levels by even larger margins. That a
   Democratic Party operative says that the greatest danger is in �too
   little� is fully consistent with this. When advancing a political
   agenda, one inevitably seeks to undercut the strongest
   counter-argument. The warning in the WSJ report signals that many were
   surprised by the scope of the deficit.

   Objection 2. As for sample selection, Silver�s post notes that we did
   not include the Jan. 29 event featuring House passage of the stimulus
   bill, when the DJI exhibited a large negative return (-2.7% one day
   return). We excluded this event precisely because its implications
   were ambiguous. Republicans were unified in opposition; until this
   point the bipartisan plan was afforded a reasonable chance of success.
   But, by the same token, the Democrats were almost entirely unanimous
   in support. This had also been in doubt. We did not count House
   passage a pro-stimulus event, which would support our conclusion. And
   we disagree with Silver, who claims that we should count it as a clear
   anti-stimulus event.

   Silver also states that our bias is revealed in omitting the Obama
   press conference held in Chicago:

   And how about November 24th, when Obama rolled out his economic
   advisory team and prompted the Wall Street Journal headline "Obama
   Signals Big Stimulus Plan"? Bittlingmayer and Hazlett forget to
   mention this date. And little wonder why: the Dow had closed up by
   almost 400 points.

   Here Silver misreads our paper. We explicitly take the large positive
   reaction to the news that Timothy Geithner would be named Treasury
   Secretary on Friday, Nov. 21, as evidence that the markets favorably
   viewed the choice. The three-day return for this event includes the
   400 point jump on Monday, Nov. 24. That day (Monday, Nov. 24) also
   featured the official announcement of Geithner and other members of
   the economic policy team. But the Administration�s stimulus plan had
   still to be released; neither the WSJ article cited by Silver nor
   other news reports revealed its size. Indeed, the CBS story that day
   -- Obama Introduces Economic Team � noted:

   [Pres. Obama] declined to say how big a spending package he wants to
   revive the economy, but he said, "It's going to be costly." Some
   Democratic lawmakers are speculating about a two-year measure as large
   as $700 billion.

   The fact that the ultimate magnitude of the plan was considerably
   under-estimated by the top-end estimate given prior to its
   announcement is consistent with our view that new information was
   later revealed. And, when it was, the market reacted negatively.

   There is surely room for a friendly exchange on the methods used and
   the conclusions reached in interpreting stock market reactions to the
   Obama stimulus plan. We would be happy to have one.

   George Bittlingmayer, University of Kansas Thomas Hazlett, George
   Mason University

   ([2]hide)

References

   1. file://localhost/var/www/powerblogs/volokh/posts/1235442732.html
   2. file://localhost/var/www/powerblogs/volokh/posts/1235442732.html

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