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Ideologues have destroyed the US economy
#1
Ideologues have ruined America’s economy

BERKELEY, Calif. (Project Syndicate) —

It is almost impossible to assess the progress of the United States economy over the past four decades without feeling disappointed. From the perspective of the typical American, nearly one-third of the country’s productive potential has been thrown away on spending that adds nothing to real wealth or was destroyed by the 2008 financial crisis.

Since the mid-1970s, the U.S. has ramped up spending on health-care administration by about 4% of gross domestic product and increased expenditures on overtreatment by about 2% of GDP. Countries like Canada, the United Kingdom, and France have not followed suit, and yet they do just as well — if not better — at ensuring that their citizens stay healthy.

Meanwhile, over the same period, the U.S. has redirected spending away from education, public infrastructure, and manufacturing toward providing incentives for the rich — mostly in the form of tax cuts. The U.S. spends 10% more than it used to on making it easier for the rich to accumulate wealth, but it has cut public investment in physical and human capital by roughly 4% of GDP, compared to what would have been expected if spending patterns had followed historic trends.

Forty years ago, for example, the U.S. spent roughly 4% of its GDP on finance. Today, it spends twice that. And the results have been catastrophic.Despite the plutocracy’s claims that the heads of financial companies and other CEOs deserve their increasingly outsized compensation packages, there is no evidence that they are doing a better job than they used to at running their companies or allocating capital more efficiently. On the contrary, the lion’s share of the responsibility for the economy’s continuing struggles can be comfortably laid at the feet of America’s hypertrophied, dysfunctional financial sector.

This reallocation of investment is usually attributed to efforts to boost growth. And yet, regardless of how much one tortures the baselines or massages the benchmarks, it is clear that it has failed. Indeed, it is difficult to see the decisions of the past 40 years as anything other than a profound failure on the part of the public institutions responsible for shaping the country’s economic progress.

This is a surprising development. Until around 1980, these institutions were clearly world-class. For more than 200 years, the U.S. government was highly successful at expanding opportunity and nurturing economic growth.

From Alexander Hamilton’s insistence on promoting industry and finance, to the construction of continent-spanning infrastructure and the introduction of public education, the government’s investments paid off handsomely.

Indeed, the government repeatedly pushed the economy into what were thought to be the industries of the future, resulting in economic expansion and a larger, wealthier middle class.It is only relatively recently that the bets have started being misplaced. The past 40 years of policies have failed to produce a richer society; they have produced only a richer elite.

Not surprisingly, ideologues of the left and the right disagree over what went wrong. The left, quite credibly, blames the idea that the free market is always right and needs to be unchained, and that those it rewards are always deserving. Those on the right, less credibly, attribute the decline to the survival and expansion of America’s (comparatively meager) social-welfare system.

Programs such as Medicare, Medicaid, Social Security, the earned income tax credit, unemployment insurance, and disability insurance, they argue, have turned the U.S. into a country of takers, not makers.

In a new book, “Concrete Economics: The Hamilton Approach to Economic Growth and Policy,” my co-author Steve Cohen and I show that the problem is even more fundamental. Poor U.S. economic performance is not the result of any particular ideology, but of allowing ideologues to guide public policy.

The real-world purpose of an ideology is not to provide understanding, but to offer its adherents a sense of certainty as they navigate a complex world. An ideology becomes successful not by suggesting policies that work, but by helping people feel comfortable, happy, and sure of what they are doing.

Cohen and I argue that there is a better alternative to the ideological approach: pragmatism. Rather than searching for overarching rules or a grand theory, look instead for what is likely to work — and make policy accordingly.We have named this approach after the U.S. founder who was most adept at adjusting his policy prescriptions to reality.

But it is a method of decision-making that has had numerous champions throughout the country’s history; Presidents Dwight Eisenhower, Teddy Roosevelt, Franklin Roosevelt, and Abraham Lincoln all placed pragmatism ahead of ideology.As a contribution to popular culture, “Concrete Economics” is sure to prove less popular than the hip-hop musical “Hamilton.”

But for policy makers seeking to turn around the American economy, we hope it will offer some much-needed guidance when approaching the challenges facing the country.
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#2
The U.S. Could Use a New Economic Strategy

44 MAR 1, 2016 5:22 PM EST
By Justin Fox

In his four-plus years as the country's first treasury secretary, Alexander Hamilton crafted an economic strategy that helped the U.S. rise from agrarian former colony to global economic power.

Its main elements, Stephen S. Cohen and J. Bradford DeLong write in their brand-new book, “Concrete Economics: The Hamilton Approach to Economic Growth and Policy,” were:
  1. High import tariffs to protect infant industries and pay for the infant government.

  2. High spending on infrastructure.

  3. The creation of a modern financial system, built around the assumption of state debts by the federal government and the creation of a central bank.

No U.S. leader since has articulated and then put in place an all-encompassing economic plan in quite the way Hamilton did. But the country has always followed some sort of economic strategy, even if it has seldom been clearly defined. Hamilton's plan stayed in place for decades, even under presidents who disavowed it. Then came a succession of strategies -- culled from Cohen and DeLong's book, but given titles by me -- that went something like this:

The era of free stuff. In the second half of the 19th century, a Republican-dominated U.S. government supplemented the Hamilton approach with free land for railroads and homesteaders, freer labor (the abolition of slavery and the promotion of large-scale immigration dramatically increased the available workforce) and freedom for businesses to incorporate without special government permission.

The era of intervention. From 1900 through the 1930s, trusts were busted, regulatory agencies created, taxation revamped and then various experiments undertaken to stimulate the economy during the Depression. The goal was not so much to develop the nation as to try to steer development in ways that spread the benefits more widely.

The era of investment. With the U.S. the world's dominant economic power after World War II, boosting growth abroad took priority over protecting U.S. industry from foreign competition. But huge investments in highways, housing, scientific research and military technology stimulated and shaped the U.S. economy in profound ways.

The era of financialization. Starting in the 1970s, government began to loosen constraints that had kept banks and other financial institutions in check since the 1930s. At the same time, East Asian countries following a Hamiltonian development model built export-led economies that lifted hundreds of millions of people out of poverty but also battered manufacturing in the U.S. These two forces combined to give finance a much larger role in the U.S. economy than it had ever played before, which seemed like an OK idea in the 1980s and 1990s but hasn't looked so good since the 2008 financial crisis.

It is at least possible that this last era has come to an end, with the beginning of financial re-regulation in the U.S. and a halt to the long upward trend in global trade that accompanied the rise of the East Asian export economies. It's not at all clear, though, what's going to replace it.

DeLong, an economist at the University of California at Berkeley and a prominent and prolific blogger, and Cohen, an emeritus professor of regional and city planning at Berkeley, don't offer a plan. They simply recommend that discussion of economic policy focus on the concrete -- what works -- rather than theory and ideology.

How's that been going lately? Donald Trump's economic platform, however muddled and unrealistic, is at least a break from the narrow ideological orthodoxy on economics that has held the national Republican Party in thrall for the past couple decades. On the Democratic side, Bernie Sanders and Elizabeth Warren have offered a challenge to the financial-sector-friendly approach that the party's mainstream settled on in the 1990s. Some in that mainstream have been reconsidering their stance as well -- DeLong was a deputy assistant treasury secretary in Bill Clinton's administration, and he has gone from defending the deregulatory moves of the 1990s to, in the new book, critiquing them.

Meanwhile, the economics profession's turn away from theory and toward empirical work, which I wrote about in January, will presumably offer pragmatically inclined policy makers more material to work with in the coming years.

Still, it's not easy to figure out what the U.S. should do next. Nations playing catch-up -- such as the U.S. in the late 1700s, Germany in the 1800s, and Japan and China more recently -- have concrete examples they can follow. But the U.S. of 2016 is the biggest economy on the planet, and by most measures one of the strongest. In the latest World Economic Forum global competitiveness rankings, for example, it trailed only Switzerland and Singapore. There is surely much we can learn from those (and other) well-run little nations, but in the U.S. remains largely sui generis.

I'm almost certain that more infrastructure investment would be a smart part of any new U.S. economic strategy. But I'm not so sure what should be built and where, or what else the nation should be doing. It's unlikely that any one person would have all the answers anyway. Since Hamilton, U.S. economic strategies have been the product of politicking, intellectual debate and sometimes dumb luck. Got any suggestions?
  1. Disclosure time: The book is published by the Harvard Business Review Press, of which I was editorial director when the book was acquired. That's about where my involvement started and ended, though.[/url]
  1. For an explanation of this, I recommend "[url=http://genius.com/Lin-manuel-miranda-cabinet-battle-1-lyrics]Cabinet Battle #1" from the musical "Hamilton."
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