NY Fed research report- a payroll tax holiday will make the economy worse


[Skip to the end]

Just read through it quickly.

Assumptions:

First, they use a full Ricardian assumption- lower taxes now ‘price in’ the higher taxes later to keep the budget balanced long term

Second, because real rates go up as nominal rates hit zero expectations are for lower prices and therefore spending goes down.

Third, as real wages go up with payroll tax cuts, the desire to work is assumed to go higher, putting downward pressure on wages and costs, reducing prices on the supply side, also raising real rates as the nominal rate can’t go any lower.

Without the Ricardian assumption it all comes apart, best i can tell so far.

And most economists reject that assumption as it means you could cut taxes all you want with no effect as people don’t spend in anticipation of higher taxes later. So that argues for cutting taxes to 0, since it won’t change spending.

So what they do is break the world into Ricardian and non Ricardian agents, and then try to determine effects of deficit changes, etc.

It gets very silly. Especially when recognizing there is no ‘natural force’ that balances the budget over time, while there are ‘natural forces’ (further influenced by institutional structure) that promote the accumulation of net financial assets in the non govt sectors which can only be supplied by govt deficit spending.

It comes from not understanding the currency itself is a (simple) public monopoly, and not just a numeraire in a relative value new Keynesian model.

A new analytical low for the cycle and a black mark for the NY Fed:

Link

Federal Reserve Bank of New York
Staff Reports
What Fiscal Policy Is Effective at Zero Interest Rates?
Gauti B. Eggertsson

Staff Report no. 402
November 2009

Abstract
Tax cuts can deepen a recession if the short-term nominal interest rate is zero, according to a standard New Keynesian business cycle model. An example of a contractionary tax cut is a reduction in taxes on wages. This tax cut deepens a recession because it increases deflationary pressures. Another example is a cut in capital taxes. This tax cut deepens a recession because it encourages people to save instead of spend at a time when more spending is needed. Fiscal policies aimed directly at stimulating aggregate demand work better. These policies include 1) a temporary increase in government spending; and 2) tax cuts aimed directly at stimulating aggregate demand rather than aggregate supply, such as an investment tax credit or a cut in sales taxes. The results are specific to an environment in which the interest rate is close to zero, as observed in large parts of the world today.


[top]

foreign dollar buying


[Skip to the end]

The possibility of announcing an exit from Afghanistan with the funds saved to pay down the deficit would be extremely popular short term and contribute to lower GDP and higher levels of unemployment over the medium term.

Those shorting dollars are selling them to foreign central banks who want their currencies weaker vs the dollar. This means it is unlikely they ever sell their dollars.

Float to lower crude prices and modestly declining us gasoline consumption would threaten the viability of the dollar shorts.

Much of this has been a reaction to the fed building its portfolio, which many presume to be an inflationary act of ‘printing money’ which it is, in fact, not.


Dollar Overwhelms Central Banks From Brazil to Korea

By Oliver Biggadike and Matthew Brown

Nov. 12 (Bloomberg) — Brazil, South Korea and Russia are losing the battle among developing nations to reduce gains in their currencies and keep exports competitive as the demand for their financial assets, driven by the slumping dollar, is proving more than central banks can handle.

South Korea Deputy Finance Minister Shin Je Yoon said yesterday the country will leave the level of its currency to market forces after adding about $63 billion to its foreign exchange reserves this year to slow the appreciation of the won. Chile Finance Minister Andres Velasco said the same day that lawmakers approved an increase in local debt sales to finance spending, a move that will allow the government to keep more of its dollar-based savings overseas and slow the peso’s rally.

Governments are amassing record foreign-exchange reserves as they direct central banks to buy dollars in an attempt to stem the greenback’s slide and keep their currencies from appreciating too fast and making their exports too expensive. Half of the 10-best performers in the currency market this year came from developing markets, gaining at least 14 percent on average, according to data compiled by Bloomberg.

“It looked for a while like the Bank of Korea was trying to defend 1,200, but it looks like they’ve given up and are just trying to slow the advance,” said Collin Crownover, head of currency management in London at State Street Global Advisors, which has $1.7 trillion under management.

The won, after falling 44 percent against the dollar in March 2009 from its 10-year high of 899.69 to the dollar in October 2007, is now headed for its biggest annual rally since a 15 percent gain in 2004. It traded today at 1,160.32, up 8.6 percent since the end of December.

‘Suffered Tremendously’

Brazil’s real is up 1.6 percent this month, even after imposing a tax in October on foreign stock and bond investments and increasing foreign reserves by $9.5 billion in October in an effort to curb the currency’s appreciation. The real has risen 33 percent this year.

“We have to be careful that our exchange rate doesn’t appreciate too much as to deindustrialize the country,” Marcos Verissimo, chief of staff at Brazil’s state development bank known as BNDES, said yesterday at a conference in Sao Paulo. “The capital goods industry has suffered tremendously.”

Russia’s Bank Rossii increased its foreign reserves by 15 percent since March 13 as it sold rubles in an attempt to cap the currency’s gain. Even so, the surge in commodities prices this year means Russia’s steps to fight a stronger ruble may “not be productive,” the International Monetary Fund said yesterday. Energy, including oil and natural gas, accounted for 69.5 percent of exports to countries outside the former Soviet Union and the Baltic states in the first nine months, according the Federal Customs Service.


[top]

Comments on Obama and the economy


[Skip to the end]

It’s like having the job of driving the bus and fixing it when it breaks, and much of the election was about who can fix the broken bus and how they are going to do it.

This bus can be immediately fixed by anyone who knows how it actually works and what it needs to get rolling again.

We suffer from a lack of demand which is easily remedied by an immediate fiscal response.

Quantitative easing, for example, is at best like installing a second battery to give the car more power. It completely misses the point.

He didn’t just show up for the job-

He volunteered for the job insisting he could fix the economy.

He pushed the TARP (as a Senator and a candidate) not recognizing giving capital to banks was nothing more than regulator forbearance and instead believed it was deficit spending.

His stimulus package came after the automatic stabilizers hiked the deficit to muddle through levels and has proven far too small to keep millions from losing their jobs and their homes.

And now the talk has turned to deficit reduction after proclaiming on multiple occasions “the US government is out of money”

which is like moving forward with the engine at idle speed not understanding that his foot on the brake is keeping the bus from getting up to cruising speed.

Obama and his administration is in this way over their heads.

Unfortunately, the mainstream opposition is probably worse.

Risking overstatement, McCain’s proposal was to not have a bus driver.


[top]